This remake of a classic piece of manipulative '70s cheese serves only to make the original revenge fantasy look like Fellini by comparison.
Walking Tall (2004)
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Reviews Counted:128
Fresh:31
Rotten:97
Average Rating:4.4/10
Consensus: The Rock makes a competent hero, but the movie is content to let a 2x4 do all the talking.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sequences of intense violence, sexual content, drug material and language
Runtime: 86 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:Apr 2, 2004 Wide
Box Office: $45,860,039
Synopsis: The first big screen version of Walking Tall, starring Joe Don Baker as real-life Tennessee Sheriff Buford Pusser, debuted in 1973 and was a huge grassroots hit with moviegoers. Its two sequels,... The first big screen version of Walking Tall, starring Joe Don Baker as real-life Tennessee Sheriff Buford Pusser, debuted in 1973 and was a huge grassroots hit with moviegoers. Its two sequels, Walking Tall Part II (1975) and Final Chapter: Walking Tall (1977), starred Bo Svenson as Sheriff Pusser and were also popular, memorable versions of the lawman's heroic stand against crime in his small, rural Southern town. In the new Walking Tall, the original theme remains - one man standing up for his beliefs and vowing to do what's right against great odds - but the story itself gets an update. Buford Pusser is now Chris Vaughn (played by The Rock), a man who returns to his boyhood home in the Pacific Northwest after leaving to pursue a decorated career in the U.S. Armed Forces after high school. Slipping back into town unannounced, Chris is shocked and saddened by what he sees. His beloved town has been ravaged by poverty and corruption, its vital lumber mill is closed, and a crime-ridden casino is now the town's biggest employer. It seems Chris's well-heeled high school rival, Jay Hamilton (Neal McDonough), has become the new robber baron of Ferguson, Washington. His wealth and influence have allowed him to open the casino, a gambling mecca called the Wild Cherry. Even Chris's high school girlfriend, Deni (Ashley Scott) is one of the casino employees; she dances there as a stripper. Upon Chris's return, he and some old friends, including best friend Ray Templeton (Johnny Knoxville), visit the Wild Cherry on Jay's "good will" invitation. But Chris discovers cheating at the craps tables, and a fight erupts with Hamilton's security guards that ultimately leaves Chris overpowered, savagely beaten, and left for dead. Chris's family - dad Chris, Sr. (John Beasley), mom Connie (Barbara Tarbuck), sister Michelle (Kristen Wilson), and her son, Pete (Khleo Thomas) - help him recover and plead for him to leave things as they are. But Chris is a man who won't back down. He decides to run for sheriff and rid his hometown of crime with the law as his main weapon. With Ray as his deputy, Chris sets out to clean up the mess Hamilton has made. Now Sheriff Chris Vaughn, he wields a huge stick fashioned from lumber mill pine. He's one man against many - but he is Walking Tall. [More]
Starring: Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Johnny Knoxville, Neal McDonough, Kristen Wilson
Starring: Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Johnny Knoxville, Neal McDonough, Kristen Wilson, Ashley Scott, Khleo Thomas
Director: Kevin Bray
Director: Kevin Bray
Screenwriter: Channing Gibson, David Klass, Brian Koppelman, David Levien
Producer: Jim Burke, Lucas Foster, Paul Schiff, Ashok Amritraj, David Hoberman
Composer: Graeme Revell
Studio: MGM/UA
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Reviews for Walking Tall
Walking Tall is absolutely terrible, dumb beyond fun, truncated, ludicrous and completely disconnected from reality.
With at least two or three plot threads left dangling, the film sprints to a climax that is undercut by its abruptness.
You don't exactly expect brilliance from a remake of a '70s action thriller, especially when the remake stars a professional wrestler. But Walking Tall still manages to exceed any and all expectations regarding its dumbness.
The original Walking Tall was about the triumph of an ordinary man over the forces of evil. Near as I could tell, this one's about the triumph of The Rock.
It's yet another dumb-as-dirt revenge story, in which the basic rules of government -- and plain horse sense -- have been repealed.
Walking Tall doesn't measure up. Hopefully, next time The Rock will pick a role that stretches more than his biceps.
I clapped, too, under the momentary hope that The Rock might somehow be able to reach through the screen and slam me over the head, thus ending my misery.
Walking Tall's one-note vigilante action won't serve The Rock's star ambitions.
...could have used more intelligent storytelling and less wrestlemania; it reeks of SmackDown!, but it never fully exploits its champ, The Rock.
The Rock walks softly and carries a big stick (to WHOMP on some bad guys)...If it wasn't for The Rock, Walking Tall would be very run of the mill
Each successive cliche is dutifully checked off the list, but done so crisply and with a minimum of extraneous stupidity.
[A]ll about vigilantism being Okay as long as you really, really know you’re right and there’s no one bigger than you around to stop you...
Goes to hell in its second half, getting bogged down in cop movie nonsense and a stunningly retarded romantic subplot.
Remake of the '70s vigilante smash is a low-grade meat-and-potatoes action flick with The Rock and Johnny Knoxville providing a little gravy.
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