Boxcar Bertha
Boxcar Bertha (1972), one of acclaimed director Martin Scorsese's earliest films, is an extremely loose adaptation of "Sister of the Road," the fictionalized autobiography of radical and transient Bertha Thompson as written by physician Dr. Ben L. Reitman. One of producer Roger Corman's infamous Exploitation films, the movie was made with a minuscule $600,000 budget and taught Scorsese how to make films quickly and economically.
Related Topics:
Martin Scorsese - Autobiography - Roger Corman - Exploitation film
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Besides the name of the heroine and her freight riding, very little of the film bears any resemblence to the original story written in "Sister of the Road". The film tells the story of Bertha Thompson (played by Barbara Hershey) and "Big" Bill Shelley (played by David Carradine), two train robbers and lovers who are caught up in the plight of railroad workers in the American South. When Bertha is implicated in the murder of a wealthy gambler, the pair also become fugitives from justice. While this story adheres to certain conventions of exploitation narrative, it also offers a surprisingly frank look at race and gender issues in the 1930s.
Related Topics:
Barbara Hershey - David Carradine - Train - American South - 1930s
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The character Bertha Thompson, long popularly thought to have been a real person, was actually the creation of Reitman combining his own life story with those of various female acquaintances, including former lover, Emma Goldman.
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