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The Legend Of Black
Thunder Mountain
(1979)
Director: Tom Beemer
Cast: Glen Porter, Ron Brown, Dick Albertson
Ah, the 1970s family wilderness movie.
Previously I've expressed a personal fondness
for these movies, though to be honest I'm not
sure what I find so appealing about them. Maybe
it's because the outdoor settings and the
characters going through actions in a decidedly
less-technical fashion remind me of the many
westerns I have seen and loved. I know I'm not
the only one even in this day and age that enjoy
them, and I'm not just talking about regular
people who watch films. There are a lot of film
producers who love these movies as well, though
their main enjoyment of these movies comes not
from an artistic viewpoint, but more on a
financial level. After all, when you think about
it, these family wilderness movies can't cost
very much to make. You don't need expensive
special effects to take the audience's breath
away - all you have to do is find a spectacular
view in the wilderness, and film it for several
seconds. Animals can bring in some instant
charisma and "awwww" factor, and while you'll
have to hire an animal trainer, it won't take
much money to pay him to get the animals to walk
in front of the camera for a few seconds. Though
you do ultimately have to hire some actors, you
don't have to spend much there as well. With
kids being the principle players most of the
time, you can get away by paying them the
minimum amount the SAG requires. Even if you
have to hire a "star", you can easily cut costs
by not only hiring someone who's pretty washed
up, but save even more money by shooting his
scenes in just a few days.
Knowing all this, it's kind of surprising
that not more family wilderness movies have been
made. Even in the 1970s, the amount of these
kind
of movies wasn't exactly a bombardment.
Still, there have certainly been several
instances when the low-cost factor of family
wilderness movies has encouraged people with the
dream of making a movie to finally make a movie
- even if the "low cost" that they ultimately
claim is substantially lower than the one that's
associated with relatively stable filmmaking and
production values.
The Force On Thunder Mountain is one
such movie that was strained for resources, and
I couldn't help but think back on that movie
when I came across The Legend Of Black
Thunder Mountain stuck in the video
section of a secondhand store. Still, the movie
didn't seem to be a sequel or a prequel, so I
decided to give it a chance, despite the nagging
that began in my head when the box revealed it
was put out by the good folks at Goodtimes Home
Video. Sometimes you need to approach a movie
with faith, just like the front of the box asked
("If you believe with your heart...
The Legend Of Black Thunder Mountain
...really happened!") I believed,
believed enough to plunk down several dollars to
buy it. Believed in it hard enough to take it
home with me over several hundred miles when
subsequently returning back from vacation.
I kept believing when I finally sat down to
watch it, even when my VCR immediately told me
the movie was transferred into LP mode. The
movie then began and... well, many beliefs that
I have trusted for years were shattered,
starting with just the first two minutes. The
movie opens with various shots of a volcano
erupting, and sparks and lava spewing. I used to
think that when lava was flowing and leaving a
long and fiery trail behind, it had to be on the
ground. But in one shot, we clearly see it
flowing in the sky, hundreds of feet above a
ridge. Then as we get more volcanic footage, the
credits start. After reading "A Tom Beemer Film"
and getting the title, I believed the next
credits would be the actors. But instead, we
first get the executive producer (Harriet
Bullett), then next credits for the movie's
narrator (Dick Albertson) and vocalist (Don
Brown). Then we get the most prominent credits.
No, not actors, but several lines of credit
concerning - get this - the volcano photography,
among the credited parties being two television
stations, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the
Royal Ontario Museum. More shots of volcanic
footage (none of which matches) follow, two
instances of which have two badly-imposed
silhouettes of children running from the left
side of the screen to the right. Judging by how
close these children are to the lava in each
shot, you'd think they'd be instantly overcome
by the extreme heat coming from the lava. But I
believe, I believe.
We then get the writing credits (two
screenwriters, and three additional people
credited with "additional material"), credits
for the animal handlers, sound, editing, etc.,
ending with a credit for the direction. Still no credit for the
actors, though even at this point of the movie I
was starting to suspect possibly why. But I kept
telling myself I had to believe, darn it,
so my thoughts quickly drifted to the then
unfolding story, taking place sometime in the
land and the time of the cowboy. I could believe
that there was a violent lava-spewing volcanic
eruption back then - I haven't read every
history book, after all. As two cowboys poke
around the spread-out wreck of a covered wagon,
we hear the thoughts of one of them. "Black
Thunder Mountain - I'll never forget that name!
'Black thunder', you know, is the Indian name
for 'earthquake'. They say its the earth
speaking from inside her soul. And that fire and
smoke from a volcano is a warning, that the
earth is angry with man. Well, it turns out the
earth had good reason to be angry." (I won't
joke, won't joke... I believe, I believe) "It
all started when an army captain named Ingalls
found a valley full of gold. And of course,
other people started looking for it. Then one of
the wagons of our wagon train wandered off, so
me and Sodbuster set off to find it." Lesser
people might ask questions like: Who is this
guy? What does this wagon train have to do with
a valley of gold? Isn't all this excessive
narration an extremely cheap and lazy attempt to
set up the situation without actually having to
show it? Not me - I'm a believer.
Some vague link between the wagon train and
the valley is at least made before the narration
ends, and we find out that the two men are
looking for the missing Mr. Parrish and his two
children. The nameless man who narrates
concludes that it was actually white men who
tore apart the wagon, reasoning, "All these
rocks, hot sun, rattlesnakes, and mountains
brings out the meanness in a man." Sodbuster
mentions that if the missing Mr. Parrish makes
it out alive, his wife will kill him for not
letting his children "stay by her fire, eating
donuts." Somehow concluding Mr. Parrish and his
children are separated, the narrator hopes none
of them are headed up to the volcano, even
though it's now quiet, mentioning there are
cougars, bears, and wolves up there. Well, even
though the children were running away from the
volcano and the lava earlier, when we return to
them they are climbing the surprisingly green
and lush side of the volcano again. And during
their climb, stock footage wolves and cougars
look on the struggling brother and sister. Their
dialogue at least explains why they are risking
the volcano again - to escape from the men
pursuing them. What men? Why are these men
pursuing them? What the hell is going on
here? (Believe, believe...)
The children, who are named Anna and Jamie,
come across a small cave. Anna calls in, "Hello?
Is anyone there? Any bears or anyone else?"
Getting no answer, they crawl in and settle for
the night. "We can sleep like spoons!" Anna says
enthusiastically, though Jamie is clearly
preoccupied by his recollection of his father
being bloodily bashed in the head by a rifle. As
they go to sleep, I believed then their dreams
would flash back to just exactly how they got in
this situation. But once again a belief of mine
was shattered by this movie; instead, we get a
montage of stock footage and a song:
Lost in the new dawn
With just a wind song
And the sun in the sky
I face the new day
Horizons ever-changing
And forget how to cry
Maybe I'll find my way back home tomorrow
My way back home
Way back home
Maybe I'll find my way back home tomorrow
Lost on a mountain
Watching the birds
Flying far over me
They know where I'm going
Where I am and where I've been
I wonder what they see
(But you just said...)
Maybe I'll find my way back home tomorrow
My way back home
Way back home
Maybe I'll find my way back home tomorrow
Lost after sundown... (ENOUGH!)
We then cut to another location, where we
find that Mr. Parrish is alive, though that bash
in the head has him drifting in and out of a
comatose state, and he is being held captive by
two men that assumedly are the two men
that have
been previously mentioned. Describing the two
men as Laurel & Hardy types is pretty accurate,
though Ollie never put a razor to Stan's throat
when Stan pissed him off. The scene does at
least answer the remaining lingering questions
by revealing Parrish had a map of the gold from Ingalls, the map was in his notebook, and that
the children now have the notebook. I believed
this... though at this point I was starting to
believe that the movie had taken far too long to
explain every who and what. Anyway, the next
morning the children have pretty much forgotten
what happened the previous day and that they are
being pursued, and look for breakfast while the
shotgun-toting L&H pursue them. Coming across
some stock-footage raccoons, Jamie tells Anna
they should introduce themselves - maybe the
raccoons will invite them to their place.
Ultimately, they decide to watch some more stock
footage of animals, then shuck off their clothes and
take a bath together in the river, afterwards looking in
their father's notebook to see what plants are
edible. Exciting stuff, especially the
subsequent scene of them eating blueberries
because of dramatic music playing on the
soundtrack. Believe it or not.
Actually, it seems the dramatic music might
have been placed there because all of a sudden a
slow-moving and unferocious grizzly bear
staggers out of the blueberry bush. You know, at
this point I truly believed my internal
feelings, that the music would have been
appropriate if some danger was hinted at before
the bear staggered out. Anyway, a bear is a
bear, and understandably the kids run. Jamie
drops down and plays dead - smart kid. Jamie
then says out loud, "Oh please, old bear, please
don't be hungry!" - stupid kid. Apparently this
bear doesn't like ham, for after sniffing Jamie
the bear opts for the berries instead. Though
when the kids walk off in order to engage in the
excitement of a slow stroll in a forest full of
stock-footage animals while another insufferable
song plays, the bear decides to tag along so
that there is something of real interest
in this sequence. Ultimately the bear takes the
lead, and leads the kids into a stock footage
valley. While the bear cools off in a creek, the
kids engage in a particularly deranged
conversation, part of which follows:
JAMIE: Why are we following this bear?
ANNA: Because we are!
JAMIE: We're lost, aren't we?
ANNA: Nope!
JAMIE: Are you sure?
ANNA: Yep!
JAMIE: Well, where are we?
ANNA: We're right here, and you're not lost
when you know where you are!
Soon afterwards, the kids go and hide in the
bushes when they hear the equally deranged
ranting of a passing mountain man, one who is so
schizophrenic that when walking with his back
towards the camera, his arm movements never
match with what he is saying. Meanwhile, the
Laurel & Hardy duo, upon realizing the children
must be good and lost, decide the best course of
action to take would be to pretend they are a
rescue party. This doesn't involve them changing
their appearance or voices, but hey, no plan can
be perfect. Time passes, another deranged
conversation, and the kids decide to name their
bear benefactor "Mrs. Mullen". (The end credits
state that "Mrs. Mullen" was played by a "Bozo",
so the only conclusion I can come up with is
that all female bears offered this role turned
it down flat.) Then... well, let me get back to
that key word "believe". But more exactly: Do
you believe? That is, do you believe after
all this padding, the movie is not even halfway
through? Do you believe it's necessary for me to
further describe what happens? Your answer
doesn't really matter, because I don't believe I
will waste any more of my precious time on this
movie.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See also:
Against A Crooked Sky,
The Force On Thunder
Mountain, White
Wolves
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