A Real American Hero (1978 TV Movie)
7/10
Despite Buford Pussers untimely death his legend lives on
4 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
(Slight Spoilers) Somewhat fictional account of the life and times of Sheriff Buford Pusser, convincingly played by Brian Dennehy. The film "A Real American Hero" Brings out both the courage combativeness as well as the sensitivity of the late and legendary sheriff of Tennessee's's McNairy County and what he was faced with both the bad guys and the law, that in most cases protected them in, fighting crime. Keeping the violence in check we get to see Buford's attempt to stamp out crime in McNairy County but soon realizing that when you take the law into your own hands you end up, instead of enforcing, breaking it.

Sheriff Pusser is incensed at the deaths of two local teenage boys and the blinding of their two girlfriends, whom he caught speeding. Finding out that they were served bootleg whiskey, or rat gut hooch, at the nearby Danny's Disco. Buford goes there not for a drink or to dance but to takes the place apart. Hauled into court like a common criminal for a number of violations of the law, like destroying private property, Buford promises the judge that he'll be a good boy from now on. Going the letter of the law Buford attempts to get Danny Boy Mitchell, Ken Howard, the owner of Danny's Disco and top hood in McNairy County and put him behind bars by doing it.

Danny Boy who at first felt safe from Sheriff Pusser with the law and courts being on his side soon becomes a paranoid nut-case as his enterprise, of bootlegging and being a night club disco entrepreneur, was in danger of going bankrupt. With Pusser finding the most obscure laws on the books, some over 100 years old, to fine Danny Boy he's in danger of being put him out of business. Getting desperate Danny has his hoods try to run and gun down Buford and his two kids only to get him really pi**ed off at them and work twice as hard, in finding violations on Danny Boy's business ventures, to put Danny not only out of business but behind bars. Which leads in Danny now really losing it, after Buford worked him over in a "friendly" boxing match, and has his hoods set sheriff Pusser up for the kill, with the help of his girlfriend who works in Buford's office. This action his his part in the end spells curtains for Danny Boy not Sheriff Pusser.

Nowhere as violent and brutal as the previous two "Walking Tall" or "Buford Pusser" movies but more interesting though according to the movies epilogue the story is fiction. Actor Brian Dennehy heroic as well as sensitive portrayal of the legendary sheriff made him far more human, and not being a mindless and unstoppable one man wrecking crew. Besides being a loving father and husband Buford also goes out of his way in a side plot that had really nothing to do with the movie to help beautiful ex-convict Carrie Todd played by Sherre North.

With the self-righteous and stuffed up women of McNairy County wanting to run Carrie out of town Bufrord invited her to go the big dance, with him of course, in order to stick it to the overlay concerned women in town. Carrie herself won over their respect by saving the life of Eunis', the head of the righteous squad, daughters life when she was chocking on a chicken bone using the Heinrick maneuver. You see Carrie studied being a nurse while spending time behind bars.

P.S The theme song in the movie "A True American Hero" aptly titled "Walking Tall" was sung by Don Williams.
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