J.J. 'Jumpy' Belk
Dub Taylor
J.J. 'Jumpy' Belk

“Young and in love, she broke the law... the law broke her.”
Bobby Lee (Jack Conrad) has just been released from jail and wants to make a better life for he and girlfriend Ruthie (Rita George).
J.J. 'Jumpy' Belk
Dub Taylor
J.J. 'Jumpy' Belk
Bobby Lee Dixon
Jack Conrad
Bobby Lee Dixon
Ruthie Chalmers
Rita George
Ruthie Chalmers
Arneda Johnson
Mildred Brown
Arneda Johnson
Arlo Belk
William F. Conrad
Arlo Belk
Angus Wages
David Huddleston
Angus Wages
J.W. Workman
Wayne Stewart
J.W. Workman
U.S Marshal
Richmond Johnson
U.S Marshal
Girl in Jail
Peggy Day
Girl in Jail
Girl in Jail
Joan Rue
Girl in Jail
Jailer
Chuck Burley
Jailer
Bank Teller
Jim White
Bank Teller
This is a Bonnie and Clyde-type film, though done in then-present-day 70's Deep South. It has a gritty feel, and one feels the angst of the stars, Bobby Lee (who just got out of the slammer on parole, having been inside for a year for an attempted grocery store robbery) and his girlfriend, Ruthie (married to another guy, but can't afford a divorce), trying to get their lives back on track in a dead-end hick-town he can't stand and is tired of just two days later. It's certainly watchable and is in no way as bad as reviews tend to give it. This is Jack Conrad's filmmaking debut, but it's not a monstrosity. After negotiations with Jeff Bridges and Robert Blake broke down for the main part of Bobby Lee, Conrad was forced to play the role himself, and he's no embarrassment. Though it tends to be ridden with cliché, and the main characters are extremely unintelligent in their bank-robbing and getaway approaches, it's still a fun ride and worth checking out if you have the opportunity.
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