Starring Johnny Knoxville, Seann
William Scott, Jessica Simpson, Burt Reynolds and David Koechner
The TV original of the Dukes of
Hazzard went for 147 episodes and ran from 1979 to 1985. It was simple and fun
American TV and relied on a fast orange Charger doing endless burnouts, slides,
and jumps as well as a classic American bombshell in short shorts (Catherine
Bach) supported by a number of Southern rednecks in a plethora of silly plots.
It was the Beverly Hill Billies for car nuts. In fact the General Lee was the
most famous member of the cast.
The General Lee is a 1969 Dodge
Charger 500, a true "muscle car" set-up for NASCAR racing, and
moonshine running. It has a 01 painted on the side, was named “The General”,
after the one and only General Robert E. Lee. The General always outran the
local law, delivering its contraband moonshine to thirsty buyers in the remote
badlands of Georgia.

Just like the original John
Schneider and Tom Wopat series, this film focuses on two carefree good-ol-boys,
Bo and Luke Duke (Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville), who with their
confederate-flag emblazoned orange hot rod stay one step ahead of the local
Hazzard County law.
However, after a planted still sees
the family farm seized by Boss Hog, played by Burt Reynolds, the boys step up
from selling bottles of Moonshine with their Uncle Jesse, played by Willie Nelson,
to robbing the site office safe of one Boss Hogg, the corrupt official who
plans to strip-mine the county. The situation gets a little complicated, and
the county roads are going to get a lot more hazardous as a result.
Seann and Johnny fill the shoes of
their TV counterparts reasonably well, and certainly seem to have fun doing it,
but it’s the long legged Jessica Simpson, who plays it up in the role of the
cousin’s hotter-than-a-hemi Daisy Duke, that we will most remember. Jessica
plays the luscious Daisy well, and by golly, her shorts fit her very well. This
part is going to set her fame soaring.
The first hour of the film is set in
Hazzard County, a backwater of Georgia that seems to lack any black people. Bo
and Luke Duke are cousins who are closer than brothers (Seann William Scott and
Johnny Knoxville), who deliver their Uncle Jesse’s (Willie Nelson) moonshine
managing to elude the local incompetent cops led by Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane
(M.C. Gainey). The corrupt local politician, Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds), dressed
in signature white suit and hat, plans their downfall.

Bo and Luke drive to Atlanta to be with the core samples recovered from the liberated safe to discover Boss
Hogg's plot. In transit they are abused by some and cheered by others for
having the politically incorrect Confederate flag on their roof. "Hey,
you're late for your Klan meeting," from one black woman in an adjacent
car. While a truck driver cheers them with “May the South rise again brothers!”

They pick up two beauties from a
college dorm, one an old flame, the other an Aussie, who suggests the geology
lab could help. Bo and Luke are accidentally covered in soot at the geology lab
while impersonating Japanese professors to find out the samples are coal. And of
course they work out Hogs strip mining plan.
Leaving town, they are spotted by a
black street gang that don't much like their blacked-up faces and rebel flagged
General Lee. "Why don't you two hillbillies join us out here," one
gangster suggests. "Actually, we prefer Appalachian Americans," says Knoxville, in one of the funniest lines in the show.
It’s clear this scene is planned to
get to this line. It shows us that the Dukes have come a long way, in their
cultural evolution, from the good ol' boys of the TV show. When you have a
director named Jay Chandrasekhar, I don’t think this is surprising.

Daisy Duke makes good use of those
skimpy shorts, and though not required to do much she pouts, poses, flashes the
whitest teeth in America, takes off her shirt and models a bikini to help the
boys win the day. Each scene for her is a set-up to make her look like a bimbo,
except her introduction, where she kicks the butt of a guy who assumes she is just
that and then insults her womanhood. Perhaps we’ll see her in a Xena remake; it
seems Daisy has discovered her inner warrior.
They save the day in the end by
getting everyone to the court house on time. Boss Hog’s caddy is a little worse
for wear in the process.


The Dukes of Hazzard is made up of
three key elements: car chases, Daisy flashes and comic skits for Bo and Luke.
These are hit and miss, but funnier than I remember in the original show.
The
General Lee gives the film's best performances. Breathtaking stunts and jumps
that just go on and on and on. This film could rival the original Gone in 60
Seconds for total car time on film, but it is certainly not monotonous, with
one jump eluding the police onto the freeway bettering Eleanor’s bridge jump in
the remake
Unfortunately the director seems to
lose his way when there are no jokes and he has no idea of how to use the great
line-up of his actors in the film. Willie Nelson is reduced to telling stupid
jokes as he has nothing else to play and Burt Reynolds, who is one of the most
natural funny-men of his era, has to leave the comedy to his white suit. Lucky
for Mopar fans the General, with no lines to read, gives the film's best
performance.

If you want to test the brain cells
then The Dukes of Hazzard will not be for you. If you love good old fashioned
car chases, no plot and a big helping of fun then you will definitely enjoy the
movie. Don’t expect a brilliantly crafted plot or you will be very
disappointed. But you know, as I recall, there was rarely a fetching plot in
the original television series.

While Johnny Knoxville and Seann
William Scott portray cousins Bo and Luke Duke well enough, it is the General
Lee that is the star of this tale and the character with the most screen time.
Of the cousins Johnny Knoxville is refreshingly charismatic as Luke, the brains
of the two, but that is not saying much, and Sean William's Scott lays the
American Pie dumb blonde on a bit too thickly to be believed.