Big and Little Enos are opening a sea food restaurant. They bet Sheriff Buford T. Justice that he cannot drive from Miami to the Enos ranch in Texas in a given amount of time. If Buford lose... Read allBig and Little Enos are opening a sea food restaurant. They bet Sheriff Buford T. Justice that he cannot drive from Miami to the Enos ranch in Texas in a given amount of time. If Buford loses he has to give up his badge.Big and Little Enos are opening a sea food restaurant. They bet Sheriff Buford T. Justice that he cannot drive from Miami to the Enos ranch in Texas in a given amount of time. If Buford loses he has to give up his badge.
- Purvis R. Beethoven
- (as Raymond Bouchard)
- Local Tough Guy
- (as Dave Cass)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEarly publicity announced in the media declared that Burt Reynolds, Sally Field and Jerry Reed would not be appearing in this movie. In the end, Field was the only one not to appear, Reed had a major role and Reynolds made a brief cameo, in the final scene.
- GoofsIn the first two films, Big & Little Enos Burdette are referred to as "The Burdettes". But in this film they're referred to as "The Enoses". Additionally, wherever the Enos name is written in the film, on the shark prop, the milk truck, etcetera, it's misspelled as "Enis".
- Quotes
[Buford walks up to Bandit's car, but in his mind, he sees "The Real Bandit" - Burt Reynolds - behind the wheel]
Buford T. Justice: I gotcha!
The Real Bandit: [looks up and smiles] Hello, Buford. Well, you caught me with my pants down.
Buford T. Justice: [taken aback] I did?
The Real Bandit: It's a... figure of speech.
Buford T. Justice: I gotcha!
The Real Bandit: Yeah. It's over for the ol' Bandit.
Buford T. Justice: Yeah, you're gone.
The Real Bandit: It's gone. Buford?
Buford T. Justice: Yes?
The Real Bandit: I just wanna say one last thing before you... haul me off in the cuffs.
Buford T. Justice: Go right ahead.
The Real Bandit: There's kind of a... a kindred spirit we have, you know what I mean?
Buford T. Justice: Yeah, I think I feel the same way.
The Real Bandit: No, I mean, it's special. I can almost read your thoughts.
Buford T. Justice: Is that so?
The Real Bandit: Yeah.
Buford T. Justice: What am I thinking now?
The Real Bandit: You're thinking right now that possibly you... no sense in sending me off to prison where I'd lose all my friends and everything. I mean, you could give a five-minute head-start and chase after me...
Buford T. Justice: Oh, no. I'm sorry. I'm a law-and-order man. I gotcha and I'm gonna keep ya.
The Real Bandit: Yeah, you're right. I was silly to even think that. You're too tough for that.
Buford T. Justice: That's right.
Buford T. Justice: I'm upright, straightforward...
[Buford begins having flashbacks to the beginnings of his miserable retirement and realizes he's nothing without the Bandit to chase]
Buford T. Justice: ...I'll give you a five-minute head-start.
The Real Bandit: [smiles] Bye-bye!
[the Bandit's car pulls away quickly]
- Crazy creditsDuring the end credits, a cast montage consisting of the movie's footage appear on the right side of the screen, with a still photo of Buford T. Justice saluting. After the credits and the picture fade out, the "This Motion Picture" disclaimer appears on the left side of the screen, even though there is nothing else taking up space.
- Alternate versionsThe nudist camp scene has Buford fall at the picnic site from the same angle, but when he lands at the site, he is shown landing on the picnic blanket to cover up the nude scenes.
- ConnectionsFeatured in At the Movies: The Stinkers of 1983 (1983)
- SoundtracksTicket For The Wind
Written and Performed by John Stewart
Like with most bad movies, the whole central thesis of this film is wrong. Here, the crime is screwing around with story continuity. Sheriff Buford T. Justice (Jackie Gleason) is entertaining as a foil for the Bandit, but making him the main character is just insane.
The "plot" to this little travesty is that Justice and his simpleminded son Junior (Mike Henry) must transport a plastic shark cross country that's going to be the mascot for Big and Little Enis Burdett's new fast food franchise in exchange for $250,000. However, the Enises intend to make his life miserable by impeding his progress at every turn, and even enlist the help of Cletus "The Snowman" Snow (Jerry Reed) to impersonate the Bandit and try to steal the fish away.
Along the way, Justice acquires a big, ugly female admirer, gets involved in motor hijinks, and tries to steal back the fish from Cletus and Dusty Trails (Colleen Camp), a former used car salesman who hooks up with the faux Bandit for no discernible reason other than it's in the script.
All right, at this point you're going "WTF?" and rightly so. This whole film is a mess. How can a movie filled with stunts and action scenes be so boring? Very, very easily. Just put together filmmakers with no talent or vision, give them a script that's hackneyed at best, and let 'er rip!
The movie is filled with stupid and pointless scenes. A long sequence feature Ku Klux Klan members attacking two black truck drivers is tasteless and poorly realized, and is indicative of the movie's general theme -- crude sequences thrown together with little rhyme or reason.
The only part of the movie that made me laugh was a brief sequence where Buford and Junior Justice are in a hotel room filled with sexual deviants, and each time they open door Buford comments on the situation. "Looks like a union meeting," he mentions, followed by "Get away from that or you'll get the herpes!" which are both just as stupid as anything else in this movie. An opening sequence spoofing "Patton" made me crack a smile, but that was all.
Reed is simply awful in the role of the Bandit, and plays the role like a third grader who got the part of a lifetime and can't stop gleaming. Maybe someone should have told him that being proxy to a legend isn't a compliment.
And of course, the big question is: WHERE IS BURT REYNOLDS? The answer? AS FAR AWAY FROM THIS MOVIE AS HUMANLY POSSIBLE! Heck, compared to this, "Cannonball Run 2" is a masterpiece. And yes, it did hurt to say that.
Gleason should have known better, but still, any moment he's on screen is a welcome relief in this turkey. His Southern-baked comments are old hat but this time, but at least they remind of you of a time when his character was actually entertaining. And he sure beats the endless amount of screen time eaten up by Paul Williams and Pat McCormick extra corny dialogue as the Enises. They're just bad. Really bad.
In the only inspired moment of the movie, Reynolds shows up in a brief cameo dream sequence near the end, almost like a bone being tossed to the audiences who stuck it out through the whole film. The scene isn't funny, but it shows that there is some sort of epic relationship between Smokey and the Bandit. The sequence belonged in a better movie, but sadly, that will never happen now.
What else? Oh yeah, what can you say about a race movie so bad that even Hal Needham won't direct it? His replacement, Dick Lowry, seems to have no particular talent of his own, and justly returned to directing television shortly after. Screenwriters Stuart Birnbaum and David Dashev worked on one more movie together, the 1987 comedy "Summer School" which is actually pretty good, but never wrote another script. I suppose it's best to bow out with something good on your resume.
One final note -- there is apparently a whole different version of this film where Gleason plays both Justice and the Bandit that test audiences were not very fond of. Reed was added for new footage to fill the gaps, which explains why he doesn't even show up until half an hour into the movie. I doubt the first version could have been worse than the finished product.
The first "Smokey and the Bandit" was at least a fun experience. This is just a third rate rip-off, even going so far as to shamelessly steal scenes from the first movie, only redoing them in horrible fashion. This whole movie is a lifeless, by-the-numbers effort, and completely devoid of any true redeeming qualities. Unless you really enjoyed the first two movies and have some sort of sick curiosity, I suggest you avoid this abortion of a movie at all costs.
Two out of ten stars. A sad waste of Gleason's talent in the final years of his life, and now thankfully a largely forgotten motion picture.
- filmbuff-36
- May 20, 2004
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Smokey and the Bandit III
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $9,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $5,678,950
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,728,060
- Aug 14, 1983
- Gross worldwide
- $5,678,950
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1