Casting Casting was by
Lynn Stalmaster. Dickey had initially wanted
Sam Peckinpah to direct the film. A scene was also shot at the Mount Carmel Baptist Church cemetery. This site has since been flooded and lies under the surface of
Lake Jocassee, on the border between
Oconee and
Pickens counties in South Carolina. The dam shown under construction is
Jocassee Dam near Salem, South Carolina. During the filming of the canoe scene, author
James Dickey showed up inebriated and entered into a bitter argument with producer-director
John Boorman, who had rewritten Dickey's script. They allegedly had a brief fistfight in which Boorman, a much smaller man than Dickey, suffered a broken nose and four shattered teeth. Dickey was thrown off the set, but no charges were filed against him. The two reconciled and became good friends, and Boorman gave Dickey a cameo role as the sheriff at the end of the film. The inspiration for the Cahulawassee River was the
Coosawattee River, which was dammed in the 1970s and contained several dangerous whitewater rapids before being flooded by
Carters Lake.
Stunts The film is infamous for the cost cutting by the studio in an effort to kill it and having the actors perform their own stunts, such as Jon Voight notably climbing the cliff himself. Reynolds requested to have one scene re-shot with himself in a canoe rather than a dummy as it tumbled over a real waterfall. Beatty almost drowned and Reynolds cracked his tailbone. Regarding the courage of the four main actors in the movie performing their own stunts without insurance protection, Dickey was quoted as saying all of them "had more guts than a burglar". In a nod to their stunt-performing audacity, early in the movie Lewis says, "Insurance? I've never been insured in my life. I don't believe in insurance. There's no risk".
"Squeal like a pig" Several people have been credited with the phrase "squeal like a pig", the now-famous line spoken during the graphic rape scene. Ned Beatty said he thought of it while he and actor Bill McKinney (who played Beatty's rapist) were improvising the scene. James Dickey's son,
Christopher Dickey, wrote in his memoir about the film production,
Summer of Deliverance, that because Boorman had rewritten so much dialogue for the scene, one of the crewmen suggested that Beatty's character should just "squeal like a pig". Boorman, in a
DVD commentary he made for the film, said the line was used because the studio wanted the male rape scene to be filmed in two ways: one for cinematic release, and one that would be acceptable for television. As Boorman did not want to do that, he decided that the phrase "squeal like a pig", suggested by Rabun County liaison Frank Rickman, was a good replacement for the original dialogue in the script. Reynolds later recalled the scene as so uncomfortable cameramen avoided watching, and Reynolds opted to interrupt the filming. Reynolds said, "I asked John Boorman, the director, 'Why did you let it go that long?' He said, 'I wanted to take it as far as I could with the audience, and I figured you'd run in when it got too far.'" ==Soundtrack==