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Murder In Coweta County

RBH

Bartender
Just got this off of OFAS. I remember watching back when it first aired.
Johnny Cash as Sheriff Potts, was very good , and Andy Griffith was deliciously evil as John Wallace.
Does anyone else remember this one.

murderok6.jpg


"It is the late 1940's. In Merriwether County, Georgia, John Wallace (Andy Griffith) is "King." He has almost total control of agriculture and the illegal whiskey trade. Wallace's rule is assured by intimidation, bribery and bloodshed. When Wallace decides to make an example of a farmhand who challenges his power by executing him, he secures his own downfall. By committing the crime in Coweta County, he has entered the territory of Sheriff Lamar Potts (Johnny Cash), a man of determination and unquestioned integrity who swears he will convict the arrogant Wallace. A true story of ruthless corruption."
 

Earp

One of the Regulars
Messages
135
Location
West Michigan, USA
Hey!! I sure do remember this one. In fact I've been trying to find it for years. It seems like they're going for a pretty penny on the used video market. I thought they would re-release the DVD after Mr. Cash passed away but I'm not aware that it's happened. It's a shame too. It's a good movie and a great performance by June Carter Cash as a kind of bayou "soothsayer."

I always enjoyed watching Johnny Cash as an actor. He was also really good in an episode of Columbo. Nice find RBH.
 

RBH

Bartender
jake_fink said:
....
How's the quality of the DVD?
I have just won it and it hasnt arrived yet. I will try and let you know when it gets here.

p.s. the photo in this thread is one I found on the net and is not the DVD cover.




Earp said:
Hey!! I sure do remember this one. In fact I've been trying to find it for years. It seems like they're going for a pretty penny on the used video market. I thought they would re-release the DVD after Mr. Cash passed away but I'm not aware that it's happened. It's a shame too. It's a good movie and a great performance by June Carter Cash as a kind of bayou "soothsayer."

I always enjoyed watching Johnny Cash as an actor. He was also really good in an episode of Columbo. Nice find RBH.

I got the DVD [new] for the buy it now price of $14.99 plus $4.99 shipping, not too bad for a film I have wanted for a long time.
 

Earp

One of the Regulars
Messages
135
Location
West Michigan, USA
So that's weird. I was looking for a DVD of this not more than a month ago and nothing available except used copies going for about $90.00. Now I see on OFAS there are some copies available for about $12.00. I wonder if these ones are copies ripped from the originals. I wonder what the quality is. It looks like the cover is slightly different though. Hmmmm ...
 

RBH

Bartender
Earp said:
So that's weird. I was looking for a DVD of this not more than a month ago and nothing available except used copies going for about $90.00. Now I see on OFAS there are some copies available for about $12.00. I wonder if these ones are copies ripped from the originals. I wonder what the quality is. It looks like the cover is slightly different though. Hmmmm ...
I will let you about mine when I recieve it.
Here is the cover that should be with my DVD.

murder1yo9.jpg
 

RBH

Bartender
This I found on THE COLUMBIA STAR web page from Feb. 10 2006


It would seem the film was pretty true to life.

By Natasha Whitling
In 1982, Rev. Lamar Potts Jr. opened the door to a hotel room in Griffin, GA to find the Man in Black. Johnny Cash was getting a pedicure and enjoying a steak dinner with his family. He invited Potts, his family, and sister Harriet Edge and her family to join him and his wife, June Carter Cash.
“He told me he wanted to give me a book of poetry, but first he wanted to read one poem,” Potts said. “So he just sat there on the bed and read The Sandal Maker of Babylon to us.” The book, City Legends , is a collection of poetry by Will Carlton given to Cash by his wife. The inscription in the cover reads “To John – because you love the beautiful and the plain – I love you, June Carter Cash.” Johnny Cash gave Rev. Potts the book as a gesture of thanks for a special gift Potts had given him earlier that day – his father’s pistol
Potts’s father, Sheriff Lamar Potts Sr., was the basis for a character Cash would portray in the made–for–television movie Murder in Coweta County which aired on CBS February 15, 1983.
Murder in Coweta County
The movie recreated the events surrounding the 1948 murder of Wilson Turner in Coweta County, GA. Unfortunately for the murderer, the crime took place in Sheriff Potts’s jurisdiction, and he was relentless in pursuing the person responsible for the violent crime. John Wallace (played by Andy Griffith), a person best described as a Southern thug, presided over Merriwether County in GA, an area known by local people as “The Kingdom.” Rev. Potts referred to Wallace and his family and friends as, “a mean tough crowd of folks. They ruled that area with an iron hand.”
The victim, Wilson Turner, was employed by Wallace as a share cropper and occasional liquor runner. Turner made the mistake of trying to swindle Wallace out of liquor money and as a result was ousted from his sharecropping position. In retaliation, Turner stole one of Wallace’s prized cows and was caught and sent to Merriwether County jail.
Not a man to take such an insult lightly, Wallace arranged for the sheriff (whom he had in his pocket) to release Turner with a bogus excuse of lack of evidence. When Turner was released, Wallace and his associates were waiting.
Turner’s truck was parked in front of the jail, conspicuously missing most of its gasoline. Turner saw Wallace and said “Did you hear Mr. Wallace? The sheriff released me on lack of evidence.” To which Wallace responded, “No he didn’t. You’re escaping.” Realizing what had happened, Turner took off in his truck and was pursued by Wallace and his gang.
The chase ended at the Sunset Tourist Court in Coweta County where several residents witnessed Wallace pistol–whip Turner, shove him into his car, and drive off.
The residents called Sheriff Potts to report the incident, and he arrested Wallace.
It was discovered, through a series of strange events and the visions of a local soothsayer, Mayhayley Lancaster (played by June Carter Cash), that Wallace had dumped Turner’s body down a well. He later brought the body up and with the help of two black farm hands burned it and distributed the ashes in a creek.
The two farm hands, Albert Brooks and Robert Lee Gates, turned state’s evidence, and as a result Wallace was convicted of murder and, subsequently, put to death by electrocution.
“That was the first time a white man was ever convicted based on the testimony of two black men,” Rev. Potts said. Rev. Potts was 14 years old at the time and recalls his father taking him to the jail to visit Wallace before he was executed. “I remember thinking he was so polite, how could he kill anyone?” That was part of Wallace’s charm, a ruthless criminal with a soft spot. He once paid for all new pews in his church.
Johnny Cash
In 1976, Atlanta author Margaret Anne Barnes published a book based on the famous crime, Murder in Coweta County . According to an article in the February 1983 edition of Atlanta magazine, Cash was fascinated with Sheriff Potts and immediately began plans to buy the screen rights.
“This film is important,” Cash said, “because Potts was a great American hero.” Upon hearing the book would be made into a movie, Rev. Potts, who was minister at Spring Valley Presbyterian Church in Columbia, was skeptical of how his father would be portrayed on the small screen. He wrote a letter to Cash explaining his concerns. In his response, Cash agreed with Potts that his father should be faithfully portrayed, and he welcomed any help Potts could give him.
“I knew things about my daddy that no one else could have known,” Potts said. “Like he always whistled a tune called ‘Maggie’ and chewed on the tip of his thumb. He was very observant. If he saw that someone had a need, he would find a way to help them.”
Cash incorporated the whistling into his portrayal but also brought at bit of what Potts calls his “swagger” to Sheriff Potts. Throughout the movie Cash carried a gun, something the real Sheriff Potts rarely did. His persona was enough to elicit compliance from most of the area folks.
One thing Cash did relay extremely well was Sheriff Potts’s unique driving. “Daddy sure did drive dog gone fast,” Rev. Potts said.
Unfortunately, Sheriff Potts was unable to see his most famous case brought to life on the small screen. He died in 1971 leaving behind a great legacy. When he retired, he left no unsolved felony cases in Coweta County.
 

BegintheBeguine

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Man oh man, RBH, I was just thinking about the few things left that frighten me and the last scene of this movie is one of them! I got a chill just looking at the picture of the cover you posted! (I like to be frightened. ;) ) This is one of my favorite movies. TV movies back then had a good knack of casting beloved comedy stars in serious, important roles.
Ashley
 

RBH

Bartender
BegintheBeguine said:
Man oh man, RBH, I was just thinking about the few things left that frighten me and the last scene of this movie is one of them! I got a chill just looking at the picture of the cover you posted! (I like to be frightened. ;) ) This is one of my favorite movies. TV movies back then had a good knack of casting beloved comedy stars in serious, important roles.
Ashley
Ashley, I know what you mean... that WAS what I remembered most about this film.
Another thing I remember, Cash was really good in this. I also thought the mood of the times seemed right to me.
Anyway, I hope it lives up to what I remember .....
 

Miss Roulette

New in Town
Messages
26
Location
England
My boyfriend picked the video up in a charity shop earlier this year and we watched on a rainy Sunday afternoon. Perfect matinee film, I really enjoyed it.
 

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