Moonshine County Express
Moonshine County Express is a 1977 action film from New World Pictures.
Plot
Dot refuses to sell out her inheritance—a stockpile of whiskey—when her moonshiner father is murdered by Sweetwater and his gang by order of Jack Starkey, the local kingpin. Dot and her sisters try to sell the whiskey themselves while avoiding Starkey's men, eventually she gives in to the attentions of J.B., the local car racer and moonshine runner, so that he will help them sell their stash.A dog is killed, along with the local mechanic and moonshine salesman, so they decide to get out. While trying to get their stockpile out in a rental truck, they are stopped and shot at by Starkey and one of his men. Just when all hope is lost, the local sheriff shows up and arrests Starkey for murdering their uncle Bill, who had sold them out by revealing the location of the stash, but then had the temerity to suggest to Starkey that they split the profits. Dot and J.B decide to leave for California, while Dot teases that she might be willing to lower her standards enough to marry J.B.
Cast
- John Saxon - J.B. Johnson
- Susan Howard - Dot Hammer
- William Conrad - Jack Starkey
- Morgan Woodward - Sweetwater
- Claudia Jennings - Betty Hammer
- Jeff Corey - Hagen
- Maureen McCormick - Sissy Hammer
- Albert Salmi - Sheriff Larkin
- Dub Taylor - Uncle Bill
- Len Lesser - Scoggins
- Candice Rialson - Mayella
- E. J. André - Lawyer Green
Production
Release
The Los Angeles Times called it "an unpretentious and engaging exploitation film... with a subtle and endearing love story."Roger Corman, head of production at New World, always thought one of the reasons the film was so popular was because it did not put down Southern people. "There's a tendency very often for people coming out of Hollywood and New York to consciously or unconsciously insult the sensibilities of the southerners, and I think Moonshine County Express was a success partially because it’s a low-budget film that’s quite well made and that presents a very fair viewpoint." It was one of several Corman-financed movies starring John Saxon.