For a film just entering its fifth decade, "
Deliverance" still maintains a real power to horrify. Based on
James Dickey's poetic novel, and adapted by the writer himself, it follows four friends (
Burt Reynolds, Jon Voight, Ned Beatty and
Ronny Cox) who go for a canoeing trip together in the Georgia wilderness, only to come into terrifying conflict with some inbred locals. And that plotline taps into very primal fears -- man vs. nature, town vs. country -- and perhaps most memorably, it preys on masculinity, thanks to film's unforgetabble rape sequence.
It's remains shocking stuff today, so we can only image how it must've marked moviegoers when it theaters forty years ago on July 30, 1972. But despite the grim nature of the drama, the film was a huge hit, winning three Oscar nominations (including Best Picture and Directing), making Burt Reynolds a star, rescuing Voight's career, introducing theater actors Beatty and Cox, and cementing director
John Boorman's position among the A-list. With the film celebrating its ruby anniversary today, it seemed like a good time to highlight five things you may not be aware of about the film. Read on below.
1. Sam Peckinpah wanted to direct the film, and actors like Donald Sutherland, Henry Fonda and Jack Nicholson were all linked to the project.
The critically acclaimed "
Point Blank" and "
Hell In The Pacific" made
John Boorman quite a hot prospect in Hollywood, and while 1970's "
Leo The Last" was a flop, it had won Boorman the Best Director award at
Cannes, so he was still very much on top. Even so, he wasn't the first choice of
James Dickey, the author and screenwriter of "Deliverance," who was adamant that
Sam Peckinpah was the man for the job. And given how much the story's theme matched Peckinpah's interests, it would have been a great choice, but the director had gone wildly over schedule and budget on 1970's "
The Ballad Of Cable Hogue," and as such, was not in the good books at
Warner Bros, who held the rights to "Deliverance." Fortunately, Boorman pulled the gig off. As for casting, a who's who of leading men were approached before the director landed his central foursome. Dickey suggested
Gene Hackman to play Ed, while Boorman wanted his "Point Blank" star
Lee Marvin for that part, with
Marlon Brando for Lewis. But Marvin, on reading, told Boorman he thought they should go for younger actors.
Jack Nicholson was actually announced as starring in the film by the LA Times (as Ed), but ultimately proved too expensive,
Robert Redford was also considered, while
Charlton Heston and
Donald Sutherland both turned down Lewis (Sutherland
considered it too violent at the time), and
Henry Fonda, George C. Scott and
Warren Beatty were also possibilities at some point. Eventually, Boorman got
Burt Reynolds (in the film that made him a star),
Jon Voight, and relative newcomers to film Ronny Cox and Ned Beatty, the latter of whom had been a stage actor for 25 years, but here made his first film appearance .
2. James Dickey and John Boorman allegedly got into a fistfight on set, in which the writer broke the director's nose and knocked out his teeth.
Dickey was a contradictory figure, a man of letters who served in the air force in both World War Two and the Korean War, an ad man who was also a college professor as well as a poet laureate. "Deliverance," which the writer hinted was based on real events (although few believe him; Boorman says "nothing in that book actually happened to him") was his first and only experience in the film industry (although after his death, the
Coen Brothers tried to make a silent version of his final book, "
To The White Sea," with
Brad Pitt). Dickey, who was also an alcoholic, clashed heavily with Boorman throughout the shoot, particularly after the director cut the first 19 pages of the shooting script.
According to Jon Voight's body double on the film,
Claude Terry, Dickey would sit in a bar saying to all and sundry "God, they’re ruining my fucking movie, ain’t they? They’re not doing my book,” while Boorman says that Dickey was drunk on set, and became "very overbearing with the actors." According to legend, things reached a peak when director and writer got into a fistfight which left Boorman with a broken nose and four teeth knocked out. Dickey was ejected from the set, but was allowed to return to film a cameo as the Sheriff in the film's conclusion (although contrary to popular opinion, it's not
Ed O'Neill as one of the other cops).
3. Although it became a worldwide hit, the composer of "Duelling Banjo" sued Warner Bros for using the track without permission.
One of the film's least likely and longest lasting gifts to popular culture (beyond the line "squeal like a pig," which
Ned Beatty claims he came up with while improvising the scene with his tormentor,
Bill McKinney, while Dickey's son Christopher says it was a suggestion from a crew member) was the scene where
Ronny Cox duets with an inbred hillbilly boy, played by local
Billy Redden. The young man actually didn't know the banjo -- a local musician played with his arms through the young boy's sleeves while crouched behind him (Redden would, however, later play the instrument, in a cameo in
Tim Burton's "
Big Fish," in 2003 -- see the clip below). A year after the film's release, a version of the track, entitled "Duelling Banjos," by
Eric Weissberg and
Steve Mandell -- the one used in the film -- became a huge international hit, spending four weeks at #2 in the Billboard Hot 100 (behind only
Roberta Flack's "Killing Me Softly With His Song"). But there was only one problem -- Weissberg had pinched the track from South Carolina musician
Arthur 'Guitar Boogie' Smith, and failed to credit him. Smith sued, and won, and was awarded ashare of the profits, and the credits of the film were amended to include him.
1 Comment
cory | July 30, 2012 3:59 PM
There's an upcoming documentary about Deliverance; it's still in production but you can see a teaser here: https://vimeo.com/46626304