Lamar Potts
Johnny Cash
Lamar Potts

“"The Kingdom" a backwoods dynasty of moonshine and murder. This is the story of the man who ran it, and the man who crushed it.”
Wallace a wealthy landowner in Meriwether County, Georgia, has virtually unlimited power in the county, including having the sheriff under his control. When he murders a share cropper he thinks that he is powerful enough to get away with it. Because the act of murder took place in Coweta County, it is under the jurisdiction of the Coweta County sheriff who hunts the murderer without trepidation.
Lamar Potts
Johnny Cash
Lamar Potts
John Wallace
Andy Griffith
John Wallace
J.H. Potts
Earl Hindman
J.H. Potts
Huddleston
Ed Van Nuys
Huddleston
Wilson Turner
Robert Schenkkan
Wilson Turner
Josephine Wallace
Jo Henderson
Josephine Wallace
Elzie Hancock
Daniel Keyes
Elzie Hancock
Sheriff Hardy Collier
Danny Nelson
Sheriff Hardy Collier
Albert Brooks
Norman Matlock
Albert Brooks
Robert Lee Gates
Brent Jennings
Robert Lee Gates
Mayhayley Lancaster
June Carter Cash
Mayhayley Lancaster
A. L. Henson
James Neale
A. L. Henson
**_Crime drama set in Georgia of the late 40s with Andy Griffith and Johnny Cash_** In 1948, a wealthy landowner in Meriwether County (Griffith) controls the Sheriff and the citizens, but when he flaunts his power in neighboring Coweta County, the no-nonsense Sheriff comes after him (Cash). “Murder in Coweta County” (1983) is a well-done period piece based on the true story, also called “Last Blood.” It’s similar to “Mississippi Burning,” which came out five years later (and no doubt influenced it), just with the television budget of “Murder in Mississippi” (1990), which is the unofficial prequel to that more famous theatrical film. Johnny’s wife, June Carter Cash, has an interesting role as a backwoods Christian seer. John Wallace (Griffith) visiting her in desperation is reminiscent of King Saul going to the witch of Endor in the Bible (1 Samuel 28). Griffith is effective in the rare role of the antagonist, which he proved he could do 9 years earlier in another worthwhile TV production, “Pray for the Wildcats.” The movie runs 1 hour, 40 minutes, and was shot in the heart of Georgia in areas south of Atlanta; specifically, Monticello (street scenes, exterior scenes and the historic downtown square), Zebulon (courthouse exterior) and Greenville. GRADE: B
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