Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

Rolling Thunder

R 1977 1h 39m Action Drama List
80% Tomatometer 15 Reviews 77% Audience Score 1,000+ Ratings
A Vietnam veteran who returns home after years in a POW camp, Maj. Charles Rane (William Devane) is treated as a hero, but his family proves to be distant. When thugs invade his home to steal silver coins that Rane received for his service, they mangle his hand and leave him, his wife and son for dead. Rane survives and becomes obsessed with getting revenge. Aided by his loyal friend Johnny Vohden (Tommy Lee Jones), Rane, now wielding a hook for a hand, sets out on his mission of vengeance. Read More Read Less
Watch on Fandango at Home Buy Now

Where to Watch

Rolling Thunder

Fandango at Home Prime Video

Watch Rolling Thunder with a subscription on Prime Video, rent on Fandango at Home, or buy on Fandango at Home.

Critics Reviews

View All (15) Critics Reviews
Gary Arnold Washington Post Flynn's crisp, laconic direction and evocative use of Southern Texas locations transorm Rolling Thunder, now at area theaters, into a more distinctive exploitation movie than it deserves to be. Dec 21, 2015 Full Review Nick Pinkerton Village Voice Performances are made crystalline through a sixth sense for camera placement and curt cutting from director John Flynn, whose 2007 passing was little noted, though his no-BS way of laying down a story is a rare commodity in any era. Aug 1, 2012 Full Review Variety Staff Variety In sum, it neither rolls nor thunders. Mar 26, 2009 Full Review Matt Brunson Film Frenzy Basically an inferior version of Death Wish, with a thudding simplicity that makes the Charles Bronson hit look as complex as All the President’s Men by comparison. Rated: 2.5/4 Apr 23, 2024 Full Review Naila Scargill Trebuchet The film should be viewed by any pondering war and its psychological consequences. And, if not made clear enough already, the acting on offer is simply fantastic. Feb 28, 2019 Full Review Eric Melin Scene-Stealers.com The connection to an emotional truth is key to its success, because as the plot starts moving and the elements of the violent revenge flick start rearing their head, the movie feels grounded in Rane's reality. Rated: 3/4 Jul 22, 2013 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (225) audience reviews
Jelisije J A slow standard revenge movie of a veteran returning home who cannot adjust to society and witnesses his family murder he then seeks revenge....well he also has a hook for a hand so its quite interesting watch. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 07/06/24 Full Review Scott M Fascinating story about a Vietnam veteran who has flashbacks about being tortured during the war and how it affects his family life. I enjoyed the story a lot. What I hated was the choice for leads. There was no chemistry between Devane and Haynes. I think they hated each other. The producers should have picked Tommy Lee Jones to play the lead and then found a young Signourney Weaver. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 05/21/24 Full Review AlphaSnail N Amazing concept, setup, and even climax of the movie but the acting is insanely wooden. William Devine and Tommy Lee Jones are great but almost every other actor is very stilted, especially the young lady who befriends the main character. The movie is worth the bad acting all for the scene where he hooks the guys hand, and the climactic shootout. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 05/20/24 Full Review Eric B I was 21 when the film was released. The film captures the time, the awkward reunions, the loss of innocence, the thin-ice we all walked on, when welcoming home the soldiers. The movie was of it’s time, but doesn’t hold up now. Direction was “OK” at best and casting missed in a few roles. The actor playing “Cliff” was really bad, and distracting. His whole arc mad little sense, and his scenes added nothing. Budget, no doubt, preventted hiring better actors. Plot was thin, but struck a chord then, only a couple years after fall of Saigon. Like Taxi Driver, it focused on returning soldiers wildly damaged from the war. But there were holes in the plot, a few things didn’t make sense, and it just poor storytelling. Shrader’s final draft, I get the feeling, is not what we see. Shrader wrote “Taxi Driver”, and this film is the same animal, but lacked the connective tissue that made TD a much richer story. If you want to get a feel for the time, watch it. But if you want to see a great film, pass. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 05/19/24 Full Review B P One of the best lean & mean revenge thrillers ever made Rated 4 out of 5 stars 04/29/24 Full Review Ben D Major Charles Rane (William Devane) can't catch a break. After spending seven years in a Vietnamese prison during the war, he comes home to a wife (Lisa Blake Richards) who's engaged to another man (Lawrason Driscoll), is robbed at gunpoint, has his hand mutilated in a garbage disposal, and then has his son (Jordan Gerler) shot to death in front of him — they also kill his wife, but he doesn't really care about that. Somehow, Major Rane, somehow, keeps his cool in both the face of death and the young, hot, "Southern Belle" (Linda Haynes) who is throwing herself at him. However, Major Rane may be cool, but he isn't going to go out without a fight. He takes his bright red Cadillac, a gift from the city of San Antonio, and the pretty young thing — for no other reason than that she'll "do anything for [him]," south of the border looking to get even. Rolling Thunder is a "revengeomatic," a term I just learned after reading Quentin Tarantino's book, Cinema Speculation — it's also why I viewed this movie. We're taken on a tour of seedy bars and brothels as Rane and an increasingly frustrated Linda hunt down his son's killers. Did I mention after the home invasion Rane acquires a hook hand? And following the Chekov's Gun principle, he uses that sumbitch in close-quartered combat. But Rane didn't spend those seven years in the Vietcong prison alone. Master Sargent Johnny Vahdon (Tommy Lee Jones), a fellow Texan from El Paso, like Linda, will do seemingly anything for Major Rane, even if it means spelunking into the maw of certain death. When Rane tells Johnny he's found the men who killed his son, Johnny responds, "Well, I'll just get my gear" — I've never given a harder "fuck yeah" in my life. There's a sense of happiness on Johnny's face that is childlike and horrifying as the combat veterans move, from room to room, through the brothel gunning down their targets and anyone else who gets in their way. I read in Cinema Speculation that the original script had Rane and Johnny speaking to each other in Vietnamese during the assault — I wish this detail had been included. The final moments and ending credits were perfect. After viewing, I immediately looked up more William Devane movies. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 03/13/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Rolling Thunder

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW
The Dogs of War 70% 53% The Dogs of War The Delta Force 15% 49% The Delta Force Double Impact 33% 42% Double Impact Blue Thunder 78% 53% Blue Thunder Lockdown 58% 78% Lockdown Discover more movies and TV shows. View More

Movie Info

Synopsis A Vietnam veteran who returns home after years in a POW camp, Maj. Charles Rane (William Devane) is treated as a hero, but his family proves to be distant. When thugs invade his home to steal silver coins that Rane received for his service, they mangle his hand and leave him, his wife and son for dead. Rane survives and becomes obsessed with getting revenge. Aided by his loyal friend Johnny Vohden (Tommy Lee Jones), Rane, now wielding a hook for a hand, sets out on his mission of vengeance.
Director
John Flynn
Producer
Norman T. Herman
Screenwriter
Paul Schrader, Heywood Gould
Production Co
American International Pictures (AIP), TBC Filmproduktion, Lawrence Gordon Productions
Rating
R
Genre
Action, Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Streaming)
Sep 16, 2008
Runtime
1h 39m
Most Popular at Home Now