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Deliverance - A Movie Often Overlooked
Posted on 1/6/25 at 9:37 am
Posted on 1/6/25 at 9:37 am
The post about Burt Reynolds and Deliverance got me to thinking.
Most people know of this movie, even if they haven't seen it, for the frightening and disturbing "squeal like a pig" scene. It's even been humorized to lessen the actual horror of what the scene portrays and it's impact on the plot.
But the movie is SO much more than that scene. And I think it doesn't get the respect it deserves. The message of the film and the sheer cinematography of it is overlooked.
The theme of the movie is man versus nature, man versus man, and the "nature of man" in a civilized versus savage environment.
I pulled up the script and thought I'd throw out some of the best lines from the movie, hoping to show the masterpiece for what it is, which is much more than a joke about rapey hillbillies.
A Masterpiece
Most people know of this movie, even if they haven't seen it, for the frightening and disturbing "squeal like a pig" scene. It's even been humorized to lessen the actual horror of what the scene portrays and it's impact on the plot.
But the movie is SO much more than that scene. And I think it doesn't get the respect it deserves. The message of the film and the sheer cinematography of it is overlooked.
The theme of the movie is man versus nature, man versus man, and the "nature of man" in a civilized versus savage environment.
I pulled up the script and thought I'd throw out some of the best lines from the movie, hoping to show the masterpiece for what it is, which is much more than a joke about rapey hillbillies.
quote:
I deliver perfection...
and don't brag about it! :D
You wanna talk about
the vanishing wilderness?
Why are you so anxious about this?
Because they're building a dam
across the Cahulawasse River.
They're gonna flood a whole valley, Bobby.
They're drowning the river, man.
- We're talkin' to you.
- All right.
Just about the last wild, untamed,
unpolluted, unfricked-up river in the South.
- Don't you understand?
- We understand.
There ain't gonna be no more river.
Just gonna be a big, dead lake.
quote:
Can that Chubby boy handle himself?
Who? Bobby?
He's rather well thought of
in his field, Lewis.
Insurance?
I've never been insured in my life.
I don't believe in insurance.
quote:
You know what I was just thinking?
The first explorers saw this country...
...saw it just like us.
In a canoe.
I can imagine how they felt.
Yeah, we beat it, didn't we?
Didn't we beat that?
You don't beat it.
You don't beat this river.
Machines are gonna fail.
And the system's gonna fail.
Then...
And then what?
Then survival.
Who has the ability to survive.
That's the game:
Survive.
quote:
You got a nice job.
Got a nice house...
...nice wife...
...nice kid.
You make that sound...
...rather shitty, Lewis.
Why do you go on these trips with me, Ed?
I like my life, Lewis.
Yeah, but why do you go
on these trips with me?
You know, sometimes I wonder about that.
Here's to you, Lewis.
Hot damn, he got one!
Terrific, Lewis.
I hate him.
I'm glad we came here.
Lewis?
Lewis does not drink.
It's true, Lewis, what you said.
There's somethin' in the woods
and the water that we have lost in the city.
We didn't lose it, just sold it.
quote:
You killed somebody!
There he is!
I see him, Drew.
That's right, I killed somebody.
But you're wrong if you don't see this
as a game.
Now you listen, Ed!
Damn it, we can get out of this thing!
Without any questions asked!
We get connected up with that body
and the law...
...this thing's gonna be hangin' over us
the rest of our lives.
We gotta get rid of that guy.
Just how are you gonna do that, Lewis?
Where?
Anywhere.
Everywhere.
Nowhere.
How do you know that other guy
hasn't already gone for the police?
What in the hell is
he gonna tell 'em, Drew?
What he did to Bobby?
Why couldn't he go get
some other mountain men?
Now why isn't he gonna do that?
You look around you, Lewis!
He could be out there anywhere,
watchin' us right now.
We ain't gonna be so goddamned
hard to follow, draggin' a corpse.
You let me worry about that, Drew.
You let me take care of that.
You know what's gonna be here?
Right here. A lake.
As far as you can see.
Hundreds of feet deep.
Hundreds of feet deep.
Did you ever look over a lake...
...and think about somethin' buried
underneath it?
Buried underneath it!
Man, that's about as buried as you can get!
A Masterpiece
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:13 am to TygerTyger
The ending is the most haunting part.
You see a dead body's hand rise from the water and the main character wakes up in a terrified sweat, revealing it as a nightmare. His wife calms him and he goes back to bed and the next shot is the water again.
Showing the water again is such a brilliant thing to do. The implication being he's going to be having this nightmare a lot and the incident is likely gonna haunt him forever.
You see a dead body's hand rise from the water and the main character wakes up in a terrified sweat, revealing it as a nightmare. His wife calms him and he goes back to bed and the next shot is the water again.
Showing the water again is such a brilliant thing to do. The implication being he's going to be having this nightmare a lot and the incident is likely gonna haunt him forever.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:16 am to StansberryRules
Yep. And it's just SO unexpected. It scared the shite out of me the first time.
Perfect ending.
Or that perhaps that great big dead lake won't hide their secret forever....
Perfect ending.
quote:
The implication being he's going to be having this nightmare a lot and the incident is likely gonna haunt him forever.
Or that perhaps that great big dead lake won't hide their secret forever....
This post was edited on 1/6/25 at 10:18 am
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:17 am to TygerTyger
I have it on my VHS wall. Haven't watched it yet but will check it out soon.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:23 am to FAT SEXY
quote:
I have it on my VHS wall. Haven't watched it yet but will check it out soon.
Come back and let me know what you think.
It's become one of my top 100 movies of all time.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:29 am to TygerTyger
I enjoyed the book as well. James Dickey was a genius and an alcoholic- he apparently was barred from the set when he broke the director's nose in an altercation.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:49 am to schatman
The Rewatchables episode is a good listen.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:52 am to TygerTyger
For anyone who has rafted down the Chattooga River, you realize what a beautiful spot that is, and what a crazy time it would have been filming it with 1972 technology. It was pretty ambitious, and they knocked it out of the park.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:56 am to TygerTyger
The director John Boorman had a lot of potential. Unfortunately he followed up Deliverance with Exorcist II: The Heretic, which is one of the worst movies of all time. If anybody can make it through that movie they deserve a Purple Heart.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:57 am to madmaxvol
quote:
the Chattooga River
I thought it was filmed on the Gauley. But I never bothered to look it up.
Thanks for the info.
This post was edited on 1/6/25 at 10:58 am
Posted on 1/6/25 at 11:32 am to madmaxvol
quote:
For anyone who has rafted down the Chattooga River, you realize what a beautiful spot that is, and what a crazy time it would have been filming it with 1972 technology. It was pretty ambitious, and they knocked it out of the park.
They lucked out that Lake Jocassee Dam was being constructed also in South Carolina at the time of filming.
The cemetery and church site and whatnot they showed is all at the bottom of the lake now. You can dive down there and see the stones.
This post was edited on 1/6/25 at 11:32 am
Posted on 1/6/25 at 7:10 pm to TygerTyger
Voight, Beatty and Reynolds are incredible in the movie.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 7:41 pm to hogcard1964
Burt was on a roll in the 70's.
Deliverance, Gator, White Lightning, The Longest Yard, WW & The Dixie Dance Kings, Smokey & The Bandit.
Deliverance, Gator, White Lightning, The Longest Yard, WW & The Dixie Dance Kings, Smokey & The Bandit.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:01 pm to TygerTyger
It gets better with age.
Awesome movie.
Awesome movie.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 10:54 pm to Mizz-SEC
quote:
Burt was on a roll in the 70's. Deliverance, Gator, White Lightning, The Longest Yard, WW & The Dixie Dance Kings, Smokey & The Bandit
You forgot Hooper. The movie that became Fallguy.
Posted on 1/6/25 at 11:40 pm to pevetohead
quote:
The director John Boorman had a lot of potential. Unfortunately he followed up Deliverance with Exorcist II: The Heretic, which is one of the worst movies of all time. If anybody can make it through that movie they deserve a Purple Heart.
You forgot Zardoz. But, most people forgot Zardoz.

Posted on 1/7/25 at 2:24 am to TygerTyger
I saw that movie on a double bill with (not sure which) "Straw Dogs", or "Clockwork Orange" when I was 14. My sister and brother-in-law lived in Memphis back then and when I visited they would take me to the movies on Highland on Sat. night, then pick me up. I don't know what my sister was thinking, taking me to see that, but I was glad and it didn't traumatize me. I thought it was brilliant back then, and I think that now. They took me to see "The Excorcist" at a drive in. Maybe that's why I turned out so weird...
I'm really glad I grew up in the 60's and 70's, saw so many fantastic movies on Saturdays back then.
I'm really glad I grew up in the 60's and 70's, saw so many fantastic movies on Saturdays back then.
This post was edited on 1/7/25 at 2:26 am
Posted on 1/7/25 at 7:31 am to Mizz-SEC
Hooper in 78 and Sharkys Machine in 81. He had a great decade of movies.
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