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The Dukes Of
Hazzard
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Bucking the trend of film adaptations of old television shows that
feel compelled to place a post-modern twist on the material, the new
big screen adaptation of the early 80s southern-fried series The
Dukes Of Hazzard is as empty-headed as it’s source- an hour and
forty minutes of car cashes and crashes, punctuated with a bit of
sexual titillation and laid back humor.
The plot here is a trifle. Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny
Knoxville) Duke are cousins who deliver moonshine acrfoss mythical
Hazzard County, where we are tols that people "are never too busy to
stop and say 'Howdy!', for their Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) in
their souped up Dodge Charger, the General Lee. After crooked county
commissioner Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds) manages to get the Dukes
evicted from their farm, the Duke boys discover that Hogg has secret
plans to stripmine a large portion of Hazzard County. Of course, it
is up to them, added by their other cousin Daisy (Jessica Simpson)
and their friends Cooter (David Koecher) and Heev (Kevin Heffernan),
to stop Hogg.
The story here is virtually non-existent, just a weak excuse to hang
numerous car chases and automotive stunt work for which the Dukes
seem to have an affinity. Director Jay Chandrasekhar tries to work
the material into some sort of coherency, but fails. Chandrasekhar,
along with his cohorts from the Broken Lizard comedy troop for whom
he helmed their features Puddle Cruiser (1996), Super
Troopers (2001) and Club Dread (2004), took an uncredited
stab at the film’s script but to no avail. (Broken Lizard fans might
want to watch the film just for the cameos from the group, including
one that recalls a great moment from Super Troopers.) He does
do a good job filming the automobile action, specifically a car
chase through downtown Atlanta and a climactic dirty road rally race
through Hazzard.
Headlining the cast, Scott and Knoxville manage to bring a bit of
charm to their roles of the Duke cousins. Sadly, these are
performances that deserve a better film. The rest of the main cast -
Nelson, M. C. Gainey as Sheriff Coltrane and singer Jessica Simpson
as hottie Duke cousin Daisy – turn in uniformly bad performances.
Reynolds’s performance is especially disappointing as he built a
career on playing good ol’ boys like the Duke cousins. It would have
been interesting to see him turn that Southern charm towards a more
nefarious agenda. Instead, he tries to go for a cold and menacing
vibe for his version of Boss Hogg, an acting decision that feels
wrong for both the character and the actor. |