Cool Hand Luke Movie Review
Cool Hand Luke Review
"Cool Hand Luke" Overview

Rating: NR
1967
Cast and Crew
Director : Stuart RosenbergProducer : Gordon Carroll
Screenwiter : Frank Pierson,Donn Pearce
Starring : Paul Newman,George Kennedy,Strother Martin,Harry Dean Stanton
A half-dozen months after its 40th anniversary and just over a year after it's star's
for-real-this-time retirement from acting, Stuart Rosenberg's Cool Hand Luke sti
ll stands as the quintessential cool movie, despite its reality. That is to say:
The lines and the character have survived the film's oft-forgotten actual message.
I surmise that summary is an act of redundancy but let's do it one more time for
the cheap seats. The man is introduced as Lucas Jackson (Paul Newman), a Vietnam
vet who takes to cutting heads off parking meters while on a bender. Sent to a hotter-than-a-s
mokehouse prison camp in the south (it was mainly shot near and around San Joaquin
and Stockton, California), Lucas has the smirk of a troublemaker but doesn't show
his hand til a solid 30 minutes in. It's a boxing match between Luke and alpha-con
Dragline (the great George Kennedy) that queues up the prisoners, the guards, and the Captain
(Strother Martin, pure menace), proving that Luke may be the true pied piper of the
prison camp. Even with his drunken mother, a role originally offered to Bette Davis th
at eventually went to Jo Van Fleet, the con's cocky grin cannot be dissuaded.
The scenes are monuments of pure rebellion and every single one has a line: "She
knows exactly what she's doin'," "Nobody can eat fifty eggs," "I'm shaking, boss!,"
"What we've got here is a failure to communicate," "He grins like a baby but bites
like a gator." Besides the fraternal bonding, the chronicles of Cool Hand Luke's
("Sometimes 'nothing' can be a real cool hand") escapes and returns are peppered
with nods to the restlessness of America, the Vietnam War and, ultimately, the paradox
of being cool for no good reason.
Like its obvious brother-in-law One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (and to a lesser extent,
John Schatzberg's unheralded classic Scarecrow), Cool Hand Luke is unencumbered by plot
mechanics and would seem like a string of vignettes if Rosenberg hadn't let it all
ride on Newman. The constant cool, Newman, at the peak of his form, shook off metaphor
and coerced Luke into a realm not of wild indignation, like Nicholson's McMurphy
or Hackman's Max Millan, but a force of inebriated sedition. Cool Hand's goal never
seems to be rebellion, but he permeates with it. He just wants some reckless fun,
and that's swallowing 50 eggs when you're stuck in a prison camp.
The film, produced by the Jack-Lemmon-owned Jalem Productions, is a character study
where the character remains elusive, a trick that somehow emerged in cinema on January
1, 1960 and dissipated as soon as New Year's Day, 1970 hit. Rosenberg never had anot
her major hit, although two years later he directed The April Fools, the American premiere
of an actress named Catherine Deneuve. In Luke, one can see a young Dennis Hopper
and Harry Dean Stanton amongst the inmates but Newman's only real co-star is Kennedy,
who won the film's only Oscar. Kennedy plays Dragline with a bellowing laugh to hide
his fear (and deep love) of Luke. Dragline had followed a code of hushed disobedience.
He can't help but fall for the real thing. The straight man role suits Kennedy: He
would later play it again against Leslie Nielson's meta-moronic Lt. Frank Drebin
in the Naked Gun series.
But what is Cool Hand Luke if not the study of Paul Newman taking the reins of Hollywood
from its snobby elite. Surrounded by liberal blowhards that touted the same causes
he did at ten times the decibel level, the then 42-year-old was the one who never
had to raise his voice off camera. The constant comparisons of George Clooney to
the now 83-year-old should be obvious. Newman already had a name by the time the
film came out, after The Hustler, Sidney Lumet's Exodus, and Alfred Hitchcock's Torn Curtain, but Cool Hand
Luke was what made Newman the unassailable vibe of mellow insurgency.
The new DVD adds a commentary track and a making-of documentary.
Still shakin' it, boss.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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