Macon County Line

They're on the bad side of the wrong man.

5.7
19741h 29m

A vengeful Southern sheriff is out for blood after his wife is brutally killed by a pair of drifters. Low-budget film set in Georgia in 1953 and at the time of release, purported to be based on a true story.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Macon County Line (1974) - HD Restored Trailer [1080p]

Macon County Line (1974) - HD Restored Trailer [1080p]

Cast

Photo of Alan Vint

Alan Vint

Chris Dixon

Photo of Cheryl Waters

Cheryl Waters

Jenny Scott

Photo of Max Baer Jr.

Max Baer Jr.

Deptuty Reed Morgan

Photo of Joan Blackman

Joan Blackman

Carol Morgan

Photo of Jesse Vint

Jesse Vint

Wayne Dixon

Photo of Sam Gilman

Sam Gilman

Deputy Bill

Photo of Timothy Scott

Timothy Scott

Lon Hawkins

Photo of James Gammon

James Gammon

Elisha Gibbons

Photo of Leif Garrett

Leif Garrett

Luke Morgan

Photo of Jay Adler

Jay Adler

Impound Yard Man

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

6/10

_**Redneck drama/thriller from 1974**_

"Macon County Line" belongs to the redneck car/thriller genre, which overlaps with Southern Gothic (e.g. "The Fugitive Kind") and redneck car/comedies (e.g. "Smokey and the Bandit"). Many of these films take place in the South, but not always; there are tons of rednecks all over, even in the most "progressive" states, like California and Washington.

The plot revolves around two brothers in 1954 traveling through North Carolina. After picking up a lone female, their car breaks down in Macon County where they encounter a bigoted Sheriff. A crime takes place and the sheriff blames the trio.

The film only runs 89 minutes and the first hour is all small town tedium, which is part of the movie's low-budget charm, but the third act livens things up.

The screenplay was written by Max Baer Jr., best known as Jethro on the Beverly Hillbillies TV series; he also plays the redneck Sheriff in the story. Max, incidentally, directed another redneck classic, 1976's "Ode to Billy Joe".

The film has a good back country vibe and effectively shows how bigotry and racism are learned traits and not innate. It also shows how easy it is to blame the wrong person due to coincidence. Beyond this, the film has little depth. It's a light drama about mundane events in a small Southern town that turn to tragedy.

The movie purports to be based on a true story and offers details to this effect, but this was merely fabricated in order to hype the picture. It worked, as "Macon County Line" became a drive-in hit in the mid-70s.

My main beef with the film, other than its mundaneness, is that the story takes place in Macon County, North Carolina, but the picture was shot in the Big Valley of California (around Sacramento). It goes without saying, if you're going to film a Southern Gothic thriller that takes place in the South, shoot it in the REAL South, not friggin' California. That said, the filmmakers do a decent job of making it SEEM like the South, dry as California is.

GRADE: C+ or B-

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