Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] Deliverance (1972) is a film that for generations has shaped how Americans imagine rural danger. For many viewers, the film is remembered for its famous dueling banjos sequence and its brutal sexual assault scene. But what does Deliverance actually tell us about crime, justice, fear, and rural America? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler explores one of the most influential portrayals of rural crime and violence in American film history. This episode examines Deliverance's depiction of environmental loss, cultural misunderstanding, masculinity, survival, and moral decision-making. Along the way, we explore the competing worldviews of characters Lewis, Ed, Bobby, and Drew, and consider how the film portrays rural residents, outsiders, local knowledge, law, and social order. We also examine the enduring figure of the rural degenerate (the mountain man), the legacy of the film's famous dueling banjos scene, and the ways Deliverance helped shape popular culture's understanding of the American countryside. More than a wilderness thriller, Deliverance offers a powerful cultural narrative about fear, place, and the relationship between urban and rural America. Join us as we ask what happens when outsiders enter a landscape they do not fully understand, why perceptions of place matter, and how one controversial film became one of the most influential stories ever told about rural crime, justice, and survival. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.
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