Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot Thunderbolt and Lightfoot

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot

Thunderbolt And Lightfoot →

What starts as a lighthearted road trip shifts gear when Thunderbolt’s old partners, the brutal Red Leary (George Kennedy) and the bumbling Eddie Goody (Geoffrey Lewis), catch up to him. Convinced Thunderbolt double-crossed them in a previous robbery, the group eventually forms an uneasy alliance to rob the same high-security Montana vault once more—this time using a phallic anti-tank cannon to breach the walls. Performance and Recognition

The supporting cast is a "who's who" of 1970s character actors, including: Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges's Modern Western Thunderbolt and Lightfoot

The film is widely cited as the breakthrough for , whose performance as the carefree, sexually uninhibited Lightfoot earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Eastwood, meanwhile, delivered a more vulnerable performance than his usual "Man with No Name" persona, displaying a tender side that critics noted was equally Oscar-worthy. What starts as a lighthearted road trip shifts

The film begins with an eccentric premise: (Eastwood) is hiding in plain sight as a country preacher. After a hitman interrupts his sermon, he is unintentionally rescued by Lightfoot (Bridges), a drifter in a stolen Trans-Am. Their chemistry forms the heart of the movie, evolving from an aloof mentorship into a genuine, if tragic, friendship. Their chemistry forms the heart of the movie,

Thunderbolt and Lightfoot