No More Posts Available.

No more pages to load.

    • Source: Breaker! Breaker!
    • breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! is a 1977 American action film directed by Don Hulette and starring Chuck Norris in his first lead role. The co-stars include George Murdock, Don Gentry and Michael Augenstein.
      J.D. (Norris), a trucker from California, learns that his old friend was assaulted and paralyzed by Sergeant Strode (Gentry), a policeman in Texas City, California. J.D. discovers that Strode has a history of "trapping" truckers for a corrupt judge named Trimmings (Murdock), who is running various rackets. Eventually J.D.'s younger brother (Augenstein), who is starting a trucking career, is deceived by Strode and goes missing. J.D. sets out to find him.
      The film was a box-office success, grossing $12 million at the box office, but received generally negative reviews from critics.


      Plot


      J.D. (Chuck Norris), a trucker from California, returns from the road to learn that an old friend was assaulted and paralyzed by Sergeant Strode (Don Gentry), a policeman in Texas City, California. He makes inquiries into Texas City and learns that its policemen Strode and Deputy Boles (Ron Cedillos) have a history of "trapping" truckers for a corrupt judge named Trimmings who is running various rackets in the so-called "City".
      When his younger brother Billy (Michael Augenstein) begins working as a trucker, J.D. warns him to stay away from Texas City. But Billy is easily fooled by an officer (Strode) on a CB radio, who pretends he is a fellow trucker.
      After Billy disappears, J.D. sets out in search of him. He goes to Texas City and barges in on a city council meeting, wherein Trimmings' stooges boast of their speed traps. He befriends a waitress named Arlene, a single mother, working at a diner which overcharges outsiders. After getting into a fight with the owner of the local wrecking yard and accidentally killing him, J.D. is arrested and sentenced to death by Judge Trimmings.
      Arlene escapes from Trimmings corrupt lawmen on a motorcycle and contacts J.D.'s fellow truckers about what has happened via CB radio. They come to rescue J.D. and Billy, knocking Strode into a ditch before tearing the town down with their big rigs. J.D. finds Billy in a local barn, and then fights Deputy Boles in a horse corral, knocking him out. One of the truckers drives his rig into Judge Trimmings house while he is in bed with his lover, presumably killing them, as the rest of the corrupt town burns.


      Cast




      Production


      Norris said he was paid $5,000 to do the film. "I didn't know anything when I made that movie", said Norris. "We shot it in just 11 days. But it was amazing, people loved it anyway. It's a down-home kind of movie. It's still my dad's favorite."
      "I want to become as big in the movie industry as I've been in the karate industry", said Norris in 1977. "I know I can do it because I have the faith to do it."


      Reception




      = Critical response

      =
      Norris was not particularly proud of the film but in 1981 said it was his father's favorite of his movies and "made a lot of money".
      The New York Times called it "shoddy" with "wooden direction" and a "sophmoric cast". The Los Angeles Times called it "a talky, melodramatic exploitation hybrid."


      Other media




      = In popular culture

      =
      The film was referenced on the May 24, 2007 episode of Late Night with Conan O'Brien, when O'Brien used a breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! lever to showcase random scenes from Walker, Texas Ranger.
      The film was a subject of good-natured ridicule in a March 21, 2013 video-on-demand release by Rifftrax.


      See also


      breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! breaker" target="_blank">Breaker! at IMDb
      Chuck Norris filmography


      References

    • Source: Breaker-Breaker
    • "breaker" target="_blank">Breaker-breaker" target="_blank">Breaker" is a song by the American Southern rock band Outlaws. Written by Hughie Thomasson it is the opening track and lead single from the band's 1976 album Lady in Waiting. It peaked at number 94 on the Billboard Hot 100 and peaked at #19 in July 1976 in the Netherlands. The lyrics capitalize on the 1970s CB radio fad. Brett Adams of Allmusic called it "bright, easygoing country-rock".


      Track listing


      7" Vinyl
      "breaker" target="_blank">Breaker - breaker" target="_blank">Breaker" (Thomasson) 2:55
      "South Carolina" (Henry Paul) 3:04


      Personnel


      Hughie Thomasson - lead guitar, vocals
      Billy Jones - lead guitar, vocals
      Monte Yoho - drums
      Frank O'Keefe - bass guitar
      Henry Paul - electric and acoustic guitar, vocals


      Chart performance




      Notes

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: