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Jun 08, 2015  action bronson, riff raff & dana coppafeel - hot shots part deux. Last of the Mobile Hot Shots is a 1970 American drama film. The screenplay by Gore Vidal is based on the Tennessee Williams play The Seven Descents of Myrtle, which opened on Broadway in March 1968 and ran for 29 performances. Sidney Lumet directed Lynn Redgrave as Myrtle, James Coburn as Jeb, and Robert Hooks as Chicken.

Last of the Mobile Hot Shots
Directed bySidney Lumet
Produced bySidney Lumet
Screenplay byGore Vidal
Based onThe Seven Descents of Myrtle
by Tennessee Williams
StarringJames Coburn
Lynn Redgrave
Robert Hooks
Music byQuincy Jones
CinematographyJames Wong Howe
Edited byAlan Heim
Distributed byWarner Bros.-Seven Arts
Release date
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
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Last of the Mobile Hot Shots is a 1970 Americandrama film. The screenplay by Gore Vidal is based on the Tennessee Williams play The Seven Descents of Myrtle, which opened on Broadway in March 1968 and ran for 29 performances.

Sidney Lumet directed Lynn Redgrave as Myrtle, James Coburn as Jeb, and Robert Hooks as Chicken. The film was made in New Orleans and St. Francisville, Louisiana. It was released as Blood Kin in Europe.

Plot[edit]

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In New Orleans, Myrtle Kane and Jeb Stuart Thorington, arrive on The Rube Benedict Show where the eponymous host selects them and another couple as contestants. Despite not knowing each other, the couple wins the competition, and decides to earn $3,500 on one condition, to have their marriage ordained by a minister on set. Using the check to restore Waverley Plantation, the couple arrives there, about 100 miles upstream from New Orleans, where Jeb introduces his wife to the decaying plantation mansion his family has owned since 1840. Sometime later, Jeb introduces Myrtle to his multiracial half-brother Chicken (Robert Hooks) – on his father's side – who earned his name for hoarding chickens to the rooftop during their childhood. Myrtle eventually shares her background in show business as the last surviving member of an Alabama female quintet named the Mobile Hot-Shots.

After Myrtle steps out, Jeb and Chicken engage in an argument where Jeb states his ownership over the mansion while Chicken states that when Jeb succumbs to terminal lung cancer, he will become the new owner as he is next of kin. Then, Jeb reveals to Myrtle in a flashback that he was discharged from the army, he engages in a 'war' with Chicken ordering his half-brother to leave the mansion, though Chicken would return to sign an agreement making him the next subsequent owner.

On her way to dinner, Myrtle grows an immediate dislike for her brother-in-law, though Jeb orders Myrtle to retrieve the agreement from Chicken's wallet in his back pocket. However, she is unsuccessful in her attempts until Jeb orders his wife to kill Chicken with a hammer and never to return upstairs without the document. When Myrtle goes downstairs once more, she engages in a conversation until she ultimately reveals she never married Jeb. Chicken refuses to believe it, and orders her to retrieve her marriage license. Myrtle returns upstairs angering Jeb for not retrieving the agreement, and then shows Chicken the marriage license.

After showing the marriage license, Myrtle engages in an extramarital affair with Chicken. Meanwhile, Jeb, who has experiences several flashbacks of his mother and multiple threesome affairs with several prostitutes, is angered that his wife has not returned with the document, and marches downstairs armed with a pistol where he ultimately burns the agreement. Subsequently after burning the agreement, Chicken reveals that he is actually the plantation's heir through his mother, rather than the 'mistake' produced from an interracial extramarital affair committed by Jeb's father, who later died in World War II. Learning of the revelation, Jeb collapses to the floor and dies.

Finally, the levee breaks forcing Chicken and Myrtle to ascend to the rooftop to escape the surrounding floodwaters for refuge and sexual fulfillment.

Hot Shots Movie Cast

Reception[edit]

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Vincent Canby, writing for The New York Times, reviewed the film as a 'slapstick tragicomedy that looks and sounds and plays very much like cruel parody—of Tennessee Williams', and he further remarked that the film 'is haunted by ghosts of earlier, more memorable Williams characters who are easily identifiable even though there have been some changes in sex and color.'[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Canby, Vincent (January 15, 1970). 'The Screen: 'Last of the Mobile Hot-Shots' Opens'. The New York Times. Retrieved March 29, 2015.

External links[edit]

Hot Shot Movie Download For Mobile
  • Last of the Mobile Hot Shots on IMDb
  • Last of the Mobile Hot Shots at AllMovie
  • Last of the Mobile Hot Shots at the TCM Movie Database
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