The Blue Lightning (TV Movie 1986) Poster

(1986 TV Movie)

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5/10
Opals In Oz
bkoganbing4 May 2009
The best thing about The Blue Lightning is the nice location cinematography of the outback of Australia. The second best thing are the scenes with the aborigines giving foreigners like us Yanks an opportunity rarely granted to see folks we don't know about. Other than that the film is basically a modern western.

Though it begins like a detective story. Millionaire Max Phipps in San Francisco hires private eye Sam Elliott to either get his $400,000.00 back or a rare opal found in the Australian outback called The Blue Lightning. It's in the possession of a former IRA gunman fled to the Australian outback where he's taken over the frontier town of Opal Ridge backed by as scurvy a lot of villains as he is.

From the minute Elliott sets foot in Oz he's pursued by the hirelings of Robert Culp who plays the former IRA man with style. Elliott joins forces with Rebecca Gilling whose husband went missing in Culp's territory and later with Jack Davis and his tribe of aborigines who have been exploited by Culp and company.

The Blue Lightning maybe set in Australia, but I know a western when I see one. Elliott and Culp and the rest of the cast of Australians perform their roles admirably, but it isn't anything you haven't seen before.
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5/10
No spark in this "Lightning"
dinky-429 May 2004
Sam Elliott's name might attract viewers to this made-in-Australia production but they're likely to be disappointed. He's no more than "adequate" in a script which has a tired, trite feel to it and which soon settles for "going through the motions." Some "Outback" locations around Broken Hill provide a bit of interest but not nearly enough to make this worth a look. Robert Culp is curiously cast as the villain and he occasionally rises above the material. (Sadly, despite all the heat and dust, Sam Elliott doesn't get to do a shower scene even though, at about age 42, he'd still look good walking around with just a towel knotted around his waist.)
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4/10
Of you're up for action and not much else, this is for you.
mark.waltz30 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I've never met a villain as kind as Robert Culp. Someone who would rather shoot someone rather than see them eaten up by dingoes. That's what starts this very violent film set in Australia where San Francisco detective Sam Elliott goes up against Gulp to find a ruby and ends up in so much more trouble, aided by the pretty Rebecca Gilling. There are plenty of crashes, chase sequences and shootouts, so the film is guaranteed to keep you awake. But this is not a film about character development, although there are some interesting segments involving those indigenous Australians known as the Aborigines.

I've never found Sam Elliott's really be appealing. He's a B version of Burt Reynolds, nowhere near the class of rising star Tom Selleck, closer to the macho but unsexy Richard Boone. This film rips off both James Bond movies and Indiana Jones, and doesn't have the appeal of either outside of the constant noise of Bang Bang, Crash Crash. Culp is definitely a Bond villain rip off, one-dimensional and infrequently funny, and Gilling is desperately generic as the stock heroine. I actually preferred some of the calmer moments where the photography shows the beautiful landscape, but those moments come so rarely here.
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Some good performances, funny at times, kind of violent
vchimpanzee2 October 2008
At the movie's start, the villain Lester McInally is about to leave a man in the Australian desert to die a horrible death. The man with him pleads for McInally to show mercy, which McInally does, in his own way. How kind of him.

San Francisco businessman Brutus Cathcart wants the opal known as "The Blue Lightning" no matter what it costs. He calls on private detective Harry Wingate, who hates to leave the boat where he lives without a good reason. Wingate knows how much Cathcart wants that opal and, pretending not to be interested, keeps driving up the price Cathcart will have to pay him. Eventually, Wingate makes the trip to Australia because, if he lives through the experience (sometimes you doubt he will), he can make close to $100,000.

In Australia, Wingate gets plenty of help from the pretty Kate McQueen. McInally won't just hand over the opal, and his goons chase Wingate and Kate all over Australia. Fortunately, Wingate is smarter than they are.

Wingate meets Aborigine rancher Jahrgadu, who teaches Wingate a lot about his people. Wingate can relate, since he is one-eighth Oglala Sioux, and Jahrgadu declares Wingate to be an honorary Aborigine. There may have been a specific name for the tribe, but I don't remember it.

The scenes showing Aborigine culture may be the best reason to watch the movie. Jack Davis does a very good job in the role of Jahrgadu. Judging from Davis' name, and the fact he is light-skinned, I'm guessing the character was only part Aborigine. There is not a lot of detail, but most people outside Australia, and perhaps even some in Australia, would not have this much exposure to the ways of these people. There is even a funeral conducted partly in the native language.

This is not a comedy, but it is funny at times. Sam Elliott does a very good job and shows a sense of humor.

On the other hand, it is violent, as action movies often are. It's not that bad.

I suppose this is worth seeing.
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2/10
Some action through the Australian desert.
RodrigAndrisan9 March 2021
If you want to see a mustache (Sam Elliott) who fires his gun many times until he hits the target, this is the movie for you. You will also see a lady (Rebecca Gilling) who helps the mustache, because the lady feels an acute need to be taken in his arms. There are also villains in the film, who will fall to the ground like flies, led by the "ruthless" Robert Culp, who, talented as an actor, should not be taken too seriously, because he does not fit the role of a villain, it's a parody of a bad man. There are two more successful scenes, the two most dynamic, the chase with the cars and then the one with the planes. Everything around a gemstone, an opal, that a guy wants. Not completely bad but not great either!
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