BY LEE PFEIFFER
The character of Billy Jack, played by Tom Laughlin, was introduced in the 1967 biker movie "The Born Losers". In the 1971 film "Billy Jack", Laughlin's reappeared as the martial arts expert who defended the downtrodden while spouting progressive values. The film flopped badly at the boxoffice but Laughlin and his wife (and co-star) Delores Taylor secured the rights to the film and re-released it in 1974 with a creative advertising and distribution campaign. The movie struck boxoffice gold and paved the way for a 1975 sequel, "The Trial of Billy Jack". Young people responded to the liberal-leaning film, as it was released while the Watergate scandal and the resignation of President Richard Nixon were still foremost in the minds of the American public. It seemed natural that Laughlin would make another film in the series. "Billy Jack Goes to Washington", a modern remake of Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington", was to be released in 1976 but production delays ensued and the film received a only a few theatrical test screenings in April, 1977 and a three-week "pre-release" run in the Milwaukee area in November of that year. Poor word-of-mouth and critical notices dissuaded studios from offering distribution deals and the movie faded into oblivion. Writing in the Washington Post, columnist John Kelly explores some other obstacles the Laughlins had to contend with: namely barriers that were in place at the time that made it difficult to film politically-oriented movies in Washington, D.C. Laughlin would later become a political gadfly and espoused many different conspiracy theories demonizing big government and big business. But John Kelly posits that in the case of "Billy Jack Goes to Washington", Laughlin may indeed have been victimized by an effort to make life difficult for him in terms of filming on location. Kelly says other politically-themed movies of the era met the same fate, resulting in the formation of the Office of Motion Picture and Television Development, which was designed to be more accommodating to filmmakers. That aside, the primary reason for the film's fate appears to be the opinion in the industry that the series had simply run out of steam.
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