Thunder and Lightning (1977 film)
1977 film by Corey Allen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thunder and Lightning is a 1977 action comedy film directed by Corey Allen, and starring David Carradine and Kate Jackson.[3]
| Thunder and Lightning | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Corey Allen |
| Written by | William Hjortsberg |
| Produced by | Roger Corman |
| Starring | Kate Jackson David Carradine Sterling Holloway Roger C. Carmel Eddie Barth Charles Napier |
| Cinematography | James Pergola |
| Edited by | Anthony Redman |
| Music by | Andy Stein |
Production company | 20th Century Fox |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $3 million[1] or $3.1 million[2] |
Plot
The plot involves moonshine runners in Florida who are trying to stay independent in the face of attempts by organized crime to take over their business.
Cast
Main
- David Carradine as Harley Thomas
- Kate Jackson as Nancy Sue Hunnicutt
- Sterling Holloway as Hobe Carpenter
- Patrick Cranshaw as Taylor
- Charles Napier as Jim Bob
- George Murdock as Jake Summers
- Ron Feinberg as Bubba
Supporting
- Roger C. Carmel as Ralph Junior Hunnicutt
- Hope Pomerance as Mrs. Hunnicutt
- Eddie Barth as Rudi Volpone (credited as Ed Barth)
- Malcolm Jones as Rainey
- Charles Willeford as Bartender
- Christopher Raynolds as Scooter
- Claude Earl Jones as Carl (credited as Claude Jones)
- Emilio Rivera as Honeydew Driver
Cameo appearance/uncredited
- Richard Holden as Race Announcer
Production
At one stage the film was reportedly going to star Susan George and Roger Corman met with Jimmy Connors about playing the male lead.[4] Carradine signed in March 1976.[5] Kate Jackson was known for The Rookies and made the film while on hiatus from that series. She had also just made the pilot for Charlie's Angels.
The script was originally set in Georgia but was relocated to the Florida Everglades in order to take advantage of the beauty of that area.[6]
It was Sterling Holloway's final film role.
Charles Willeford worked as location manager.[7]
It was Roger Corman's last of four films produced for 20th Century Fox (the others were Fighting Mad, Capone and Moving Violation).
Lewis Teague did second unit.
Reception
The film was popular and Corey Allen worked for Corman again on Avalanche (1978).[8]