The River Rat (1984)
On the lazy banks of the Mississippi, a young girl is reunited with her time-served but innocent father. But the reunion is tainted with the whereabouts of the stolen loot, and those who come looking for it...
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Admirable film.
I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.
It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
It's a shame that this movie has not made it to DVD. The 3 main characters are well cast and developed. I like the sensitive handling of the father's attempts to build a relationship with a daughter he has never known. Dennehy, whom I have seldom seen playing a villain, seems almost an incarnation of pure evil (shades of Cape Fear).I hope that,over time,it will get the recognition it deserves. It is an interesting example of a well-made film that isn't trying to be a blockbuster and shows the interesting alternative side to American film making.Great settings and a good soundtrack which I would like to have been able to purchase. It looks like a portrait of a way of life, with its close association with living on and beside the river, that has probably disappeared now. A simple tale,well told.
Since this movie listing seems to be missing a plot / synopsis of the movie i'm commenting one : An entertaining tale of a father (Tommy Lee Jones) and daughter (Martha Plimpton) who run a bait/fishing shop on a river. They build a fishing boat together and is christened "The River Rat". The father is meanwhile harassed by his parole officer for information due to the father being the only survivor of a childhood crime involving a large sum of lost money. The father served time but the money was never recovered. After some history and character building has taken place, the movie transforms into a coming of age story combined with a competitive treasure hunt.
The 'River Rat' was a surprisingly better film than I expected. If you have seen 'Square Dance' or 'Shy People,' you learn to be weary of Deep South small-town dramas, especially those about broken relationships between parents and their children, as they usually turn out to be quite depressing if nothing else. But not 'River Rat,' what starts out as a decent drama about the reunion of a young girl (Martha Plimpton) and her father (Tommy Lee Jones), who was recently released from jail, almost immediately turns into a Deep South caper when someone from the jail tracks down the father looking for some loot. And this is where the real fun begins.The father was in jail for a crime he committed as a kid when he, another boy, and a young girl (who bears his child) decide to break into an old woman's house and steal a load of money that she was rumored to keep by her bedside. Only, things go wrong, and the other boy winds up killing the women while both boys take off, on the run from the cops. The father, as a boy, is eventually caught and incarcerated. To get his parole, he didn't have to show remorse, but he did have to tell all to the prison doctor (Brian Dennehy) who would give the recommendations (or not) to the parole board. Promised a cut of the money, the father agrees and is released. Only the doctor wants his money now, and is willing to kill the father and anyone else who stands in his way to get hold of that money. So, the father, the doctor, the daughter, and the daughter's young neighborhood friend, all hop aboard the 'River Rat,' and sail down to Memphis to retrieve the finds if all goes well.It seems unbelievable at points in the film, especially throughout the climax, when the doctor doesn't seem entirely dangerous or much like any kind of adversary, since he goes about things (sometimes) rather more civilly than one expects. So, that kind of detracts from the mood, but otherwise, it is a pretty decent movie. If you're in the mood for a good mix of drama and adventure (they're almost like two distinct halves of the same movie with the drama part being resolved first), then this is probably good for you. Or, if you want to see the cast since it has both a young pre-Goonies Martha Plimpton and Tommy Lee Jones (who never really looks young).
"The River Rat" is too good a movie to lie in a corner without comment. Good grief, this was Martha Plimpton's first major role. For that reason alone it has a place in motion picture history. What a terrific talent, and what great contributions she has made to the art in roles both small and large. In this movie she combines with such recognized stars as Tommy Lee Jones and Brian Dennehy, and takes a back seat to neither. Her father-daughter scenes with Mr. Jones are warm and real. The depth all three of the lead actors brought to their characters was truly remarkable. In sum, the beautiful background of the mighty Mississippi River, an interesting story, some great acting turns, and, of course, Martha Plimpton make "The River Rat" a must-see picture.