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IMDbPro

Ode to Billy Joe

  • 1976
  • PG
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Ode to Billy Joe (1976)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:23
1 Video
50 Photos
Drama

In 1950s Mississippi, teenager Bobbie Lee Hartley navigates her blossoming hormones as she is courted by Billy Joe McAllister, who is headed for tragedy.In 1950s Mississippi, teenager Bobbie Lee Hartley navigates her blossoming hormones as she is courted by Billy Joe McAllister, who is headed for tragedy.In 1950s Mississippi, teenager Bobbie Lee Hartley navigates her blossoming hormones as she is courted by Billy Joe McAllister, who is headed for tragedy.

  • Director
    • Max Baer Jr.
  • Writers
    • Bobbie Gentry
    • Herman Raucher
  • Stars
    • Robby Benson
    • Glynnis O'Connor
    • Joan Hotchkis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Max Baer Jr.
    • Writers
      • Bobbie Gentry
      • Herman Raucher
    • Stars
      • Robby Benson
      • Glynnis O'Connor
      • Joan Hotchkis
    • 50User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Trailer

    Photos50

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Robby Benson
    Robby Benson
    • Billy Joe McAllister
    Glynnis O'Connor
    Glynnis O'Connor
    • Bobbie Lee Hartley
    Joan Hotchkis
    Joan Hotchkis
    • Anna 'Mama' Hartley
    Sandy McPeak
    Sandy McPeak
    • Glenn 'Papa' Hartley
    James Best
    James Best
    • Dewey Barksdale
    Terence Goodman
    Terence Goodman
    • James Hartley
    Becky Bowen
    • Becky Thompson
    Simpson Hemphill
    • Brother Taylor
    Ed Shelnut
    • Coleman Stroud
    Eddie Talr
    • Tom Hargitay
    William Hallberg
    • Dan McAllister
    Frannye Capelle
    • Belinda Wiggs
    Rebecca Jernigan
    • Mrs. Thompson
    Ann Martin
    • Mrs. Hunicutt
    Will Long
    • Trooper Bosh
    John Roper
    John Roper
    • Trooper Ned
    Pat Purcell
    • Alabama Boy #1
    Jim Westerfield
    • Alabama Boy #2
    • Director
      • Max Baer Jr.
    • Writers
      • Bobbie Gentry
      • Herman Raucher
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews50

    6.62.3K
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    Featured reviews

    bbuudd403

    loved it

    I remember seeing 'Ode to Billy Joe' when I was about twelve, and just starting to deal with the fact that I was gay. Growing up in rural Wisconsin I could relate very well to the negative attitudes towards gays, and find it very believable that a young gay person in that situation would consider killing themself. I also find it very believable that a young gay person would date a person of the opposite sex, just think about how many gay people do get married. Even though Billy Joe is a tragic figure I found the movie to be comforting, I think I took comfort in the fact that at least someone was talking about homosexuality, being Catholic my family never spoke about sex much less homosexuality and I think that is the way it was in most families in the seventies. Over the years I have thought of that movie often and I think at times it helped me keep my sanity, I would love to see it again!
    Sauvin

    Not such a terrible film

    This comment is provoked by one made earlier by someone who seemed to feel the film unsalvageable. It might not be a masterpiece, or even particularly memorable, but this Southern boy had little trouble identifying with a boy trying to cope with his deepening feelings for a lovely young lady in the arch-conservative South, and of the young lady whose family opposed the union with the appalling callous intolerance and ignorance that seems epidemic in deep rural South. It's worth the rental fee if you find it at the video store.
    Mae_Will

    I recall this picture fondly

    It has been a long time since I saw this movie. I always read very negative reviews of it, but I always thought that the photography and sound were beautiful. It was my impression that Max Baer Jr. was making a movie about how beautiful the rural South is. Of course a movie based on a rather enigmatic song is doomed to storyline problems, but as a mood piece, I think it was a great success.
    codyfantabulon

    That's What I Love/Hate About the South

    If this film had been directed by Truffaut or Bergman it would have swept Cannes. The fact that many viewers find it almost impossible to understand is testimony to the film's authenticity. As a life-long Southerner I feel compelled to state that anyone from the South over the age of 35 either knows or is one of these characters. The time period represented is one which lives in the memories of those alive today. Mississippi is particularly well drawn. I lived in Mississippi for four years and this film captures that distinct Mississippi flavor of charm,vindictiveness,religious observance,and sin. The bridge scene is what Southern pride and "redneck" are all about. Daddy just WON'T back up. One of the main themes of Southern art is the fact that many of the characters are so far from introspection and so close to instinctive, impulsive, animalistic behavior. When someone is "different" tragedy and/or myth tends to happen. Tennessee Williams mined that vein. Like the characters in this film, his people often dimly understood that they needed to either leave home or accept self-revelation in the confines of their environment. Most couldn't do either. The result is usually some sort of denial,death, or sacrifice. Great films/novels/short stories about the South have a sense of yearning and fatalism which I find very honest and moving. If you are into Russian literature, you are probably into Southern literature too! My thanks to Max for this beautiful film.
    paclar

    Confused version

    If this is truly supposed to be an adaptation of the Bobbie Gentry song, it makes utterly NO sense. I'm gay, so I'm usually sensitized toward picking gay references out of pop culture, but to make Billy Joe in the film struggle with his sexuality is fairly ridiculous.

    If you read the lyrics to Bobbie Gentry's song, it seems pretty darn obvious that what the narrator and Billie Joe are throwing off the Tallahatchee Bridge is their out-of-wedlock baby.

    Just Google search the lyrics, listen to the song, and see if that interpretation doesn't make much more sense than how the movie presents the story.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The release weekend for this movie coincided with the date from the first line of the song that inspired it: "It was the 3rd of June, another sleepy, dusty Delta day"
    • Goofs
      As Papa Hartley and the three boys are battling it out in their trucks on the bridge the camera moves from inside the Hartley truck looking out to outside looking in. As they do this you see from the inside that the windshield in front of the driver is badly cracked but as they move to the outside angle it is not cracked at all.
    • Quotes

      Bobbie Lee Hartley: It's gonna be all right. We've just been waiting so long and trying so hard. Oh, it's all right Billy Joe.

      Billy Joe McAllister: It ain't all right! I ain't all right!

      [long pause as Billy Joe walks a few steps away from Bobbie Lee]

      Billy Joe McAllister: Bobbie... I have been with a man! Did you hear me? Which is a sin against nature! A sin against God! I don't know how I could have done it, I swear! I don't know how I could be wanting you and do that.

      Bobbie Lee Hartley: But you were drunk. Maybe you just imagined it.

      Billy Joe McAllister: I didn't imagine nothing!

      Bobbie Lee Hartley: But you were drunk. Everyone saw how drunk you were.

      Billy Joe McAllister: I... I knew. I knew what was happening.

      Bobbie Lee Hartley: Who was it?

      Billy Joe McAllister: I ain't gonna say.

      Bobbie Lee Hartley: Why? I wish I could understand.

      Billy Joe McAllister: I wish I could.

    • Alternate versions
      The opening Saul Bass variant of the Warner Bros. Pictures logo is replaced by the 1990 variant in the VHS and 1992 variant in the WAC DVD.
    • Connections
      Referenced in The Carol Burnett Show: Dinah Shore - Went with the Wind (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Ode to Billie Joe
      Written and Performed by Bobbie Gentry

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 4, 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sublime amor juvenil
    • Filming locations
      • Tallahatchie County, Mississippi, USA
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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