A wandering ballad singer in the Appalachians meets an ugly bird-type creature, is transported back in time, finds himself involved in the Devil's work.A wandering ballad singer in the Appalachians meets an ugly bird-type creature, is transported back in time, finds himself involved in the Devil's work.A wandering ballad singer in the Appalachians meets an ugly bird-type creature, is transported back in time, finds himself involved in the Devil's work.
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Hedges Capers
- John
- (as Hedge Capers)
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Hampered by a tiny budget and a lack of subtlety, Hillbilly John does an earnest job of bringing Manly Wade Wellman's silver-stringed guitar hero's adventures to the screen. Nice use of music by Hoyt Axton and some effective moments in two of the stories directly adapted from Wellman's fantasies. The last third of the film departs from its source material and grows tiresome. Definitely good enough to justify someone releasing it on DVD.
Sorry Merk, but Severn Darden played Mr. Marduke. The wandering folksinger (John, no last name ever given in the movies or the stories.) was played by Hedges Capers. And it wasn't "Dirty Bird" but Ugly Bird (from the short story "Oh, Ugly Bird!' by Manley Wade Wellman. Admittedly, the film isn't the greatest, but the stories and books about Silver John are classics by an author with a genuine love for the mountains and their people and of the folk music of the area.
To call this film "oddball" is a bit of an understatement. The story follows a guitar-strumming kook (the titular Hillbilly John) as he roams through the mountains of Appalachia. The episodic tale begins with a quest to vanquish an evil entity who has been menacing the community along with his companion - the aptly named Ugly Bird. About an hour into the story that narrative is resolved and we abruptly shift to a storyline concerning a group of black laborers being taken advantage of by the people who are overseeing their work in a cotton field. Like I said at the beginning: "oddball" is an understatement.
The stage curtains open ...
Years ago, when I was about 10 or 11 years old (around 1978 or so), my Mom dropped my brother and I off at the local movie theater for a matinee showing of this film. There we sat in the darkened theater, candy and soda in hand, expecting another Walt Disney type movie ... this was anything but. After the movie was done, we walked out of the theater a bit red-faced. It was a story that involved the Devil, a Witch, a pre-historic bird, a magic guitar with silver strings, a boy and his girl who liked to sneak away for a little nookie, and the use of a divining rod. Had my Mom known what we had just watched, she would've been upset to say the least, since our parents did their best to keep us away from such "subjects". When we got into the car and she cheerfully asked how the movie was, we both shrugged it off as "just okay" and hoped she never brought it up again. Truth was, we both loved it and felt like we had just gotten away with something.
We join our hero, simply known as John, in the Appalachian Mountains where he has just finished having sex with his girl, Lily. Of course, in a "G" Rated movie, it is implied, but we got the picture. On the way home, he finds out that his grandfather, also named John, has announced his intention to defy the Devil himself with the use of what he believes to be true silver strings on his guitar. When his grandfather dies, because the strings did not have silver in them after all, he vows to avenge him with his own silver strings. He embarks on a weird journey to seek out the Devil, testing the power of his strings on an ugly bird (just to make sure) before the final showdown.
The film featured folk singer, Hedges Capers (who clearly could NOT act), singing and strumming his guitar throughout the entire story. We were also treated to early sightings of some relatively larger name actors, or actors who would go on to bigger things, such as Denver Pyle, R. G. Armstrong, and Harris Yulin (who outshined them all in his bit role). This film consisted of 4 different stories by pulp fiction author, Manly Wade Wellman, featuring his character, John the Balladeer (otherwise known as Silver John) that were fused together in the movie for the overall story. And, if you've seen this film, it certainly does have that feel to it.
For years, I could never remember the name of this movie, because I wanted to find and revisit it again - and finally, by chance, I stumbled across a copy of it on YouTube. Someone had uploaded a ripped laser disc copy of it to their channel. Smiling from ear to ear, I watched it again tonight for the first time in years, and yeah ... it IS pretty bad. But, it also came with a bunch of sentimentality and memories for me and took me back to a good time as a youth first discovering movies. I had to laugh when I saw what I was so worried about as a kid, but hey ... I was only 10. I would actually recommend this movie, if you can find it. There are a lot worse things you could spend your time doing.
Years ago, when I was about 10 or 11 years old (around 1978 or so), my Mom dropped my brother and I off at the local movie theater for a matinee showing of this film. There we sat in the darkened theater, candy and soda in hand, expecting another Walt Disney type movie ... this was anything but. After the movie was done, we walked out of the theater a bit red-faced. It was a story that involved the Devil, a Witch, a pre-historic bird, a magic guitar with silver strings, a boy and his girl who liked to sneak away for a little nookie, and the use of a divining rod. Had my Mom known what we had just watched, she would've been upset to say the least, since our parents did their best to keep us away from such "subjects". When we got into the car and she cheerfully asked how the movie was, we both shrugged it off as "just okay" and hoped she never brought it up again. Truth was, we both loved it and felt like we had just gotten away with something.
We join our hero, simply known as John, in the Appalachian Mountains where he has just finished having sex with his girl, Lily. Of course, in a "G" Rated movie, it is implied, but we got the picture. On the way home, he finds out that his grandfather, also named John, has announced his intention to defy the Devil himself with the use of what he believes to be true silver strings on his guitar. When his grandfather dies, because the strings did not have silver in them after all, he vows to avenge him with his own silver strings. He embarks on a weird journey to seek out the Devil, testing the power of his strings on an ugly bird (just to make sure) before the final showdown.
The film featured folk singer, Hedges Capers (who clearly could NOT act), singing and strumming his guitar throughout the entire story. We were also treated to early sightings of some relatively larger name actors, or actors who would go on to bigger things, such as Denver Pyle, R. G. Armstrong, and Harris Yulin (who outshined them all in his bit role). This film consisted of 4 different stories by pulp fiction author, Manly Wade Wellman, featuring his character, John the Balladeer (otherwise known as Silver John) that were fused together in the movie for the overall story. And, if you've seen this film, it certainly does have that feel to it.
For years, I could never remember the name of this movie, because I wanted to find and revisit it again - and finally, by chance, I stumbled across a copy of it on YouTube. Someone had uploaded a ripped laser disc copy of it to their channel. Smiling from ear to ear, I watched it again tonight for the first time in years, and yeah ... it IS pretty bad. But, it also came with a bunch of sentimentality and memories for me and took me back to a good time as a youth first discovering movies. I had to laugh when I saw what I was so worried about as a kid, but hey ... I was only 10. I would actually recommend this movie, if you can find it. There are a lot worse things you could spend your time doing.
Based on a series of stories by American author Manly Wade Wellman, this folk horror/fantasy stars Hedges Capers as John, a ballad singer who wanders the Appalachians battling evil with a magical silver-stringed guitar as his weapon. As John roams the land, he encounters a gold-hungry man who makes a deal with a witch, battles an 'ugly bird' (a shonky stop-motion creature), and defeats a nasty cotton plantation owner who is cheating the black folk toiling in his fields.
I suspect that all of the positive reviews here on IMDb have been written by Appalachians who have a sense of romantic nostalgia about where they live and who are willing to turn a blind eye to the fact that the plot is a scattershot load of old twaddle, with a main character who randomly wanders from scene to scene with no real sense of purpose. Add to the fact that Capers is a terrible actor (this is his one and only movie) and what you have is an often incomprehensible piece of low budget garbage unlikely to appeal to anyone who wears shoes and doesn't have an outhouse.
Amazingly, the cast features some fairly impressive names: Susan Strasberg (The Manitou, Rollercoaster), Denver Pyle (Bonnie and Clyde, The Dukes of Hazzard), Harris Yulin (Scarface, Ghostbusters II) and R. G. Armstrong (Predator, Dick Tracy), with Hoyt Axton (Billy Peltzer's dad in Gremlins) singing one of the songs.
2/10. As bad as the animated ugly bird is, I quite enjoyed it, so the film narrowly escapes getting the lowest possible rating.
I suspect that all of the positive reviews here on IMDb have been written by Appalachians who have a sense of romantic nostalgia about where they live and who are willing to turn a blind eye to the fact that the plot is a scattershot load of old twaddle, with a main character who randomly wanders from scene to scene with no real sense of purpose. Add to the fact that Capers is a terrible actor (this is his one and only movie) and what you have is an often incomprehensible piece of low budget garbage unlikely to appeal to anyone who wears shoes and doesn't have an outhouse.
Amazingly, the cast features some fairly impressive names: Susan Strasberg (The Manitou, Rollercoaster), Denver Pyle (Bonnie and Clyde, The Dukes of Hazzard), Harris Yulin (Scarface, Ghostbusters II) and R. G. Armstrong (Predator, Dick Tracy), with Hoyt Axton (Billy Peltzer's dad in Gremlins) singing one of the songs.
2/10. As bad as the animated ugly bird is, I quite enjoyed it, so the film narrowly escapes getting the lowest possible rating.
Did you know
- TriviaSilver John is a fictional character from a series of fantasy stories by American author Manly Wade Wellman. Though fans refer to him as Silver John or as John the Balladeer, the stories call him simply John. He is an example of the loner hero. The stories are set in the Appalachian mountains of North Carolina. The historical period is never explicitly indicated, but appears to be the middle 20th century. The film's plot incorporates two of the John stories: "The Desrick on Yandro" and "O Ugly Bird".
- ConnectionsFeatured in Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021)
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- Who Fears the Devil
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- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
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- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was The Legend of Hillbilly John (1972) officially released in India in English?
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