![]() Its same-day, coast-to-coast rollout was both unique and hugely successful. But the excitement generated by the first movie turned the release of “The Trial of Billy Jack” into a nationwide event. Billy eventually gets out of jail and once again comes to the defense of a Native American getting kicked around by local rednecks. It’s a paean to the grassroots Nader’s Raiders ethos, which makes it feel one very long promotional reel for Laughlin’s endeavors in the Southwest U.S. ![]() This 170-minute jumble of good intentions finds Billy Jack’s Freedom School carrying on in his absence (after he’s sent to jail for involuntary manslaughter due to the āss-whuppin’ events of the previous movie). His four Billy Jack movies are sincere indictments of bigotry and corruption, and he vehemently believed in the transformative power of cinema as a means of combating these ills.
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