Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaJimmy Dean's popular song (released in 1961) is translated into a feature length movie about a young couple who elopes to escape the girl's evil stepfather.Jimmy Dean's popular song (released in 1961) is translated into a feature length movie about a young couple who elopes to escape the girl's evil stepfather.Jimmy Dean's popular song (released in 1961) is translated into a feature length movie about a young couple who elopes to escape the girl's evil stepfather.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Romy Walthall
- Marie Mitchelle
- (as Romy Windsor)
Danny Kamin
- Jacque
- (as Dan Kamin)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Doug English as Big Bad John steals the movie. He definitely deserved more recognition but as one of only 4 men to hold the record for most career safeties in the NFL (4) I think he did all right! As far as the plot, direction, and sound effects this movie was very middle of the road for it's day. The love scenes were cut for budgetary reasons but rumor has it all the females on set were totally into Big Bad John, often referring to Doug English as Big Good Dougie Doug, way before Dougie Doug was even a thing.
So in summary, good luck finding this movie on DVD. Supposedly it's a cult classic in the North Korea but Kim Jong Un has all the copies locked up in his palace.
So in summary, good luck finding this movie on DVD. Supposedly it's a cult classic in the North Korea but Kim Jong Un has all the copies locked up in his palace.
My review was written in June 1990 after watching the film on Magnum video cassette.
An insipid song-into-film feature, "Big Bad John" arrives nearly 30 years late with a whimper. Released in February in Tennessee, it's a minor video title.
Jimmy Dean topped the charts in 1961 with the gold record he penned and sang. He's comfortably cast as a lawman (given to aphorisms) in this movie, but material has no substance.
The morbid song lyrics paid homage to a "mountain of a man" who became a hero saving his co-workers in a mining disaster. Patchy screenplay creates an irrelevant chase motif of Dean as well as hired killer Bo Hopkins and a feuding clan all pursuing John Tyler (Doug English), who's run off with young Romy Windsor.
Poorly paced film has action crosscutting between the pursuers and the young couple getting married, setting up a home and English going to work in the mine. Time frame and logic of the story is nonsensical -it plays like two separate films spliced together.
Hectic final reel delivers the mine disaster; a survivor chalking the final song lyric sentimentality on the mine's facade and then a very phony happy ending of Windsor becoming reconciled with her real father (Dean) and pregnant with Big John's child.
Filmed on location in Texas, Colorado and New Mexico, pic looks all right but has no momentum.
Director Burt Kennedy, whose Budd Boetticher scripts and own films in the '60s were superior Westerns, seems to have succumbed to a low-key, enervating tv style.
Dean shows potential to be a tv series regular, perhaps in the Andy Griffith mold. English is miscast as the title character, way too cuddly and bland to fit the song's description.
Supporting players, mainly good old boys, have all been better elsewhere. Title song is esayed here not by Dean, but a more modern rendition by the Charlie Daniels Band, with guest artists Oak Ridge Boys.
An insipid song-into-film feature, "Big Bad John" arrives nearly 30 years late with a whimper. Released in February in Tennessee, it's a minor video title.
Jimmy Dean topped the charts in 1961 with the gold record he penned and sang. He's comfortably cast as a lawman (given to aphorisms) in this movie, but material has no substance.
The morbid song lyrics paid homage to a "mountain of a man" who became a hero saving his co-workers in a mining disaster. Patchy screenplay creates an irrelevant chase motif of Dean as well as hired killer Bo Hopkins and a feuding clan all pursuing John Tyler (Doug English), who's run off with young Romy Windsor.
Poorly paced film has action crosscutting between the pursuers and the young couple getting married, setting up a home and English going to work in the mine. Time frame and logic of the story is nonsensical -it plays like two separate films spliced together.
Hectic final reel delivers the mine disaster; a survivor chalking the final song lyric sentimentality on the mine's facade and then a very phony happy ending of Windsor becoming reconciled with her real father (Dean) and pregnant with Big John's child.
Filmed on location in Texas, Colorado and New Mexico, pic looks all right but has no momentum.
Director Burt Kennedy, whose Budd Boetticher scripts and own films in the '60s were superior Westerns, seems to have succumbed to a low-key, enervating tv style.
Dean shows potential to be a tv series regular, perhaps in the Andy Griffith mold. English is miscast as the title character, way too cuddly and bland to fit the song's description.
Supporting players, mainly good old boys, have all been better elsewhere. Title song is esayed here not by Dean, but a more modern rendition by the Charlie Daniels Band, with guest artists Oak Ridge Boys.
Can't find this on DVD yet, still got old VHS tape. Love Jack Elam, can tolerate Dean, and Bo Hopkins is great. He tells that punk; "Don't mess with me boy i've had a very rough day i'll jerk them lips off your head and whistle Dixie." Best line. When they are driving the truck and Elam flips a switch - hilarious. Is good all in all. The song, somehow you never forget it.
The popular song by Jimmy Dean in the 1950s leads to this really terrible motion picture that never does make a whole lot of sense. Two young people decide to elope to escape her abusive step-father in this cut-and-paste mess that looks like it was thrown together on a boring weekend for the film-makers. The film includes the likes of Doug English (in the titled role), the usually dependable Ned Beatty (I don't know what he is doing in this film) and of course Jimmy Dean himself. Do anything other than sit and watch this. Turkey (0 stars out of 5).
I was expecting the plot to follow the song, but it didn't. Decent cast, but they did not deliver. The plot was thin, weak, slow, and the acting was mediocre at best. If you are not expecting much it is passable, but, in my opinion, it is a waste your time. It had potential but did not deliver. It may have gotten better after the halfway point, but I don't know because that was all I could take. If you have not heard the song, it might be watchable, but I was expecting a movie that followed the song. Even for a "red neck" movie, it was bad. There are many movies of this genera that I like, but this is not one of them. Do not waste your time.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesJimmy Dean's lead role in this film, based on his popular crossover hit song, would become his last appearance in a theatrical feature film.
- Erros de gravaçãoAt 9 mins 36 seconds, a boom mic hovers above Jimmy Dean's head.
- ConexõesReferenced in Star Attraction (1995)
- Trilhas sonorasBig Bad John
Written by Jimmy Dean and Roy Acuff
Produced by James Stroud
Performed by Jimmy Dean and The Charlie Daniels Band
Principais escolhas
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- How long is Big Bad John?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 32 min(92 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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