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The Dukes of Hazzard is a 2005 film loosely based on the American television series of the same name. The film was directed by Jay Chandrasekhar and released to theaters in the US on August 5, 2005 by Warner Bros. Pictures. The Dukes of Hazzard depicts the adventures of cousins Bo, Luke, Daisy and their Uncle Jesse as they outfox crooked Hazzard County commissioner Boss Hogg and Sheriff Rosco P.

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Quotations
I think something bounced up into my undercarriage.
Jesse Duke has been to two places in his life: Hazzard County and Korea.
(actor Willie Nelson)
The only way I'm leavin' the ranch is in a wooden box!
(actor M.C. Gainey)
(To Cooter) Boy, you couldn't fix an election if your brother was the governor!
(actress Jessica Simpson)

Encyclopedia
The Dukes of Hazzard is a 2005 film loosely based on the American television series of the same name. The film was directed by Jay Chandrasekhar and released to theaters in the US on August 5, 2005 by Warner Bros. Pictures. The Dukes of Hazzard depicts the adventures of cousins Bo, Luke, Daisy and their Uncle Jesse as they outfox crooked Hazzard County commissioner Boss Hogg and Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane. It was followed by a prequel, titled The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning, that was released to television and DVD in March 2007.
Plot Summary
The movie revolves around the cousins, Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) Duke, who run moonshine for their Korean War-veteran Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson) with the help of their bombshell cousin, Daisy (Jessica Simpson) in the fictional Georgia county of Hazzard. The cousins primary mode of transportation is an orange 1969 Dodge Charger whom the boys affectionately refer to as "The General Lee." Along the way the family is tormented by corrupt Hazzard County Commissioner, Jefferson Davis Hogg, widely known as "Boss Hogg" (Burt Reynolds), and his willing but dimwitted right hand man, Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane (M.C. Gainey).
After Sheriff Coltrane has the General Lee wrecked, just in time to ruin Bo's chances of winning his fifth consecutive Hazzard Road Rally, a personal and county record, breaking the one previously held by Hazzard county hero Billy Prickett (James Roday), now a famous stock-car driver, we learn that Billy is in town to participate in this year's Rally to defend his record. Meanwhile the Sheriff plants a fake moonshine still ("'cause he's too damn dumb to find the real one") in Uncle Jesse's barn and seizes the Duke property in the interest of eminent domain for Boss Hogg, forcing the family to temporarily reside with neighbor and Uncle Jesse's love-interest, Pauline (Lynda Carter). Pauline informs the Dukes that Rosco seized another farm on trumped up charges so Bo and Luke investigate a local construction site and find geologic core samples with the help of bait-shop owner, Sheev (Kevin Heffernan). While this is going on the Sheriff makes arrangements to seize the General Lee as "evidence" from the local auto body shop run by the Dukes' friend Cooter, (David Koechner), who instead turns the car into a hot-rod and applies a new paint-job and horn, in return for finally getting payment for all the work he's done ("...'cause that's how this works.") for the boys in the past, when Bo wins the Rally.
After retrieving the General Lee before Rosco can, the boys head to Atlanta, GA to visit a university geology lab, meeting up with an Hazzard county girl and her Australian roommate on campus, where they discover Boss Hogg intends to turn Hazzard county into a strip coal-mine. Along the way they get arrested after running from campus police. Back in Hazzard county, Daisy learns, with the help of Sheriff Deputy Enos Strate (Michael Weston), that Billy Prickett has been hired by Boss Hogg to participate in the Rally as a ringer. Boss then heads to Atlanta where he informs the Duke boys, in lock-up, that they are too late to stop him and reveals that the vote on Hogg's proposition is at the same time as the rally, explaining Billy Prickett's involvement. During a transfer from jail, Daisy helps the boys escape and they speed home to try and inform the townsfolk.
Upon returning home the boys discover that Rosco has taken Uncle Jesse and Pauline hostage, an obvious trap for the boys, and that Billy is in on the scheme because he's ashamed of the town's low status. The boys race to the farmhouse to cause a distraction while Daisy and Cooter rescue Jesse and Pauline. Meanwhile the college girls head to the rally with Sheev to inform the townsfolk of vote on the strip-mining ordinance. Because of Sheev's lack of pants and armadillo helmet no one listens so Bo takes off to enter the rally and beat Billy while Luke and Jesse team-up to foil the police who are tailing Bo, interfering with the race. Upon crossing the finish line first, neck and neck with Billy, the two continue jostling back and forth all the way into town, leading the townsfolk to the courthouse just in time to vote against Hogg's proposed ordinance. At the courthouse Daisy takes advantage of the governor of Georgia's presence and TV cameras to con him into pardoning the boys, so Uncle Jesse takes the opportunity to knock out Boss Hogg and gets a pardon for assaulting a county commissioner at the same time.
The film culminates with a good, old-fashioned cook-out at the Duke farm where Pauline convinces Uncle Jesse, who couldn't be found because he was (in stereotypical Willie Nelson fashion) "using the meat smoker," to get up and play some music for everyone, the well-known TV-theme "Good Ol' Boys". Bo and Luke are otherwise occupied with the girls in the General Lee when they are caught by Luke's love-interest from the intro of the film.
Reception
Box office
The film was #1 at the box office its opening weekend and grossed $30.7 million on 3,785 screens. It also had an adjusted-dollar rank of #14 all-time for August releases.
The film eventually collected $110.5 million world-wide, although it was much less successful financially in the US.
Critical reception
The Dukes of Hazzard was panned by most professional film critics. Roger Ebert gave the film one star, calling it a "lame-brained, outdated wheeze" and suggesting that Burt Reynolds' part in the film is "karma-wise... the second half of what Smokey and the Bandit was the first half of". Ebert also named it the second worst film of the year. Richard Roeper named it the worst film of 2005.
Only 14% of critics gave the film positive reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 154 reviews. The film received an average rating of 33% on Metacritic based on 36 reviews.
Controversy
Ben Jones, who played Cooter Davenport in the original series, criticized the movie for its emphasis on sexual content, suggesting that the original series was more family oriented and not as sexualized. He called for fans of the TV series to boycott the movie "unless they clean it up before the August 5th release date."
Some have countered that the original series also contained sexual themes, primarily Catherine Bach (Daisy Duke)'s much-displayed "short shorts" (which have become so ubiquitous in American culture that skimpy blue jean cutoff shorts are now often simply called "Daisy Dukes"). In an August 5, 2005 review of the movie, a New York Daily News entertainment columnist said the movie's sex humor is "cruder" than the TV series, but that it is "nearly identical to the TV series in ... its ogling of the posterior of cousin Daisy Duke."
John Schneider, who played Bo Duke in the original TV series, was asked if he saw the film and said: "My gosh...it was terrible! It wasn’t Dukes. It was true to whatever it was; I just don’t know what that was!"
Awards and nominations
At the 26th Golden Raspberry Awards, the film received seven nominations, but didn't win any. The nominations included:
At the People's Choice Awards, Jessica Simpson won the "Favorite Song from a Movie" award for her cover of the Nancy Sinatra hit, "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'".
The film was nominated for two MTV Movie Awards, including Best On-Screen Team (Johnny Knoxville, Sean William Scott, & Jessica Simpson), and Sexiest Performance (Jessica Simpson).
Jessica Simpson won the Choice Breakout Female award for her role in the film at the Teen Choice Awards.
Trivia
- All five members of the comedy film troupe Broken Lizard make appearances in the film, classified cameos except for Kevin Heffernan who had a larger speaking role (Sheev), likely because member Jay Chandrasekhar directed it. Additionally, Lynda Carter's appearance could also be attributed to Broken Lizard's involvement after her cameo in Super Troopers.
- In the climax scene at the courthouse, Burt Reynolds' facial hair noticeably differs from the rest of the film.
- In a deleted scene on the DVD we learn that Boss Hogg used to also run moonshine, a theme that played a large role in the original TV show and was expanded in the prequel DTV (direct-to-video) movie: The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning.
- M.C. Gainey is one of two actors in the movie to have also appeared in the original TV show in a very minor role.
Broken Lizard Cameos:
- In the openeing scene Steve Lemme, as the son of a client of Uncle Jesse, shoots up the inside of his father's truck while trying to shoot at the Duke boys during a high-speed chase, after Luke is caught fooling around with the client's daughter.
- In a scene ripped directly from the movie Super Troopers, two campus police officers played by Jay Chandrasekhar and Erik Stolhanske who reprise their roles, though uncredited, as "Ramathorn" and "Rabbit" respectively, stop the boys for going under the speed limit.
- A TV newsman, Rick Shakely, played by Paul Soter who's covering the Hazzard Road Rally makes a pun regarding the General Lee when he is informed that the car that just entered the Rally is the same car that evaded authorities in Atlanta earlier.
- An additional cameo from an actor in "Super Troopers" featured Charlie Finn (the Dimpus Burger employee who gets attacked by Farva), as the dim-witted geology student who assisted the Duke boys, posing as Japanese scientists, with the coal samples.
Other Notable Cameos
- While the end credits roll, a blooper reel plays, with one blooper featuring Rip Taylor interrupting a bedroom scene with Luke and the two college girls, likely because of his appearance in Johnny Knoxville's other feature film Jackass: The Movie.
- At the police barricade in front of the courthouse during the film's climax, the police officer that attempts to rally all of the other officers to help Daisy is played by Ritchie Montgomery, the second of two actors to appear in the original TV show, as radio DJ Elton Loggins for Hazzard County radio station WHOGG.
Setting
The majority of the movie was filmed in and around Clinton, Louisiana.
The street scenes supposedly set in Atlanta were filmed in the New Orleans Central Business District, and the University scenes on the campus of Louisiana State University.
Prequel
A prequel to the film, titled The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning, was released to television on March 4, 2007, and released to DVD on March 20, 2007.
External links
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