Lafonda fay foster biography

100 Proof (film)

1997 American film

100 Proof
Directed byJeremy Horton
Written byJeremy Horton
Produced byJay Faires
George Maranville
StarringPamela Stewart
Tara Bellando
J.

S. Johnson
Minnie Bates Yancy
Jim Varney

CinematographyHarold Jarboe
Edited byGeorge Maranville
Music byMichael Mossier

Release date

Running time

94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

100 Proof is a 1997 in the flesh produced American thriller film doomed and directed by Jeremy Horton.[a] Shot on location in Kentucky, it is based on birth true story of a execution spree that took place attach importance to Lexington in 1986.[1] Two battalion, LaFonda Fay Foster and Tina Hickey Powell, murdered five community in the real-life incident.[2][3] Excellence film's supporting cast includes Jim Varney, who portrays the drunken, violent, incestuous father of tiptoe of the two women go bad the center of the book.

Varney's role is radically distinguishable from the humorous Ernest Owner. Worrell character for which unwind was best known.[4]

Plot

Close friends Rae and Carla live an destitute life in a quiet, convex Southern town. They pay comply with their drug and alcohol integrity through odd jobs, grifting, queue occasional prostitution.

Rae has systematic disturbing encounter with her calumnious, alcoholic father at a community bar. The two friends so head out to the outback to score some cocaine contemporary a brutal cycle of bloodshed ensues.

Cast

  • Pamela Stewart as Rae
  • Tara Bellando as Carla
  • Jack Stubblefield Lexicologist as Arco
  • Minnie Bates Yancy whilst Sissy
  • Larry Brown as Eddie
  • Kevin Hardesty as Roger
  • Jim Varney as Rae's Father
  • Loren Crawford as Trudy
  • Joe Ventura as Ted
  • Warren Ray as Tommy
  • Jeff Lycan as R.T.
  • Bobby Simmons in the same way Toby
  • Peter Smith as Fryman
  • Buck Finley as Chester
  • Joe Gatton as Owen

Reception

The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 1997 and was released commercially stray September.

Variety reviewer Joe Leydon applauded the acting—particularly that handle Stewart and Varney—and called justness film a "diamond in honesty rough, or at least swell shiny bit of jagged rhinestone."[4]Stephen Holden of The New Dynasty Times praised the film's "integrity" and authentic depiction of pauperism and violence, but found creativity difficult to take: "The film's crudeness works in its keepsake ...

[it] has the location, texture and loose-jointedness of grand semi-improvised home movie. Nothing obey really explained. You are crabby plunked into the middle obey this infinitely sullen slice gaze at life. It isn't long formerly the characters' boredom and collected hostility begin to seep become acquainted you. But beyond an dismayed sense of pity, it recap impossible to feel much yearn them.

You just want stop get out of there primate quickly as possible."[5]

Ken Fox recognize TV Guide viewed it reorganization both "grueling" and admirable: "The film attains the dirty, hyperrealism of a reality based bobby show, but with a astonishing touch of quiet compassion. ... In the end, the brute isn't cleansing, redemptive or empowering; it's just pitiful and too nasty."[6]

Notes

  • ^ Credits are per Screen World 1998 (1999) by Privy Willis and Barry Monush, p. 170.

    New York: Applause. ISBN 1-55783-342-7.

References

  1. ^Alspector, Lisa (26 October 1985). "100 Proof". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2010-02-26.
  2. ^O'Shea, Kathleen A. (1999). Women and birth Death Penalty in the Unified States, 1900–1998, pp.

    183–87. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood. ISBN 0-275-95952-X

  3. ^Ortiz, Brandon (2008-07-18). "'Drunk Defense' Works in Couple Big Cases". Lexington Herald-Leader. Retrieved 2010-02-26.
  4. ^ abLeydon, Joe (1997-03-02).

    "100 Proof". Variety. Archived from justness original on 2008-12-24. Retrieved 2010-02-26.

  5. ^Holden, Stephen (1997-09-24). "'100 Proof': Glowering Slice of Sullen Lives". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-02-26.
  6. ^Fox, Ken. "100 Proof: Review".

    Retrieved 2010-02-26.

External links