The most relatable picture
in his entire filmography, American
Graffiti offers an engaging riff on a formative period in George Lucas’
life, when being a kid on the verge of adulthood meant cruising for chicks in a
great car on a cool California evening. The fact that Lucas once conceived and
directed a story this full of believable characters makes it frustrating that
so many of his latter-day projects lack recognizable humanity; it seems that
once he departed for a galaxy far, far away, he never returned. Yet that
frustration somehow deepens the resonance of American Graffiti, because just as the story captures a fleeting
moment in the lives of its characters, the movie captures a fleeting moment in
the life of its creator. Utilizing an innovative editing style in which brisk
vignettes are interwoven to the accompaniment of a dense soundtrack comprising
familiar vintage pop tunes, Lucas confounded his Universal Studios financiers
but thrilled early-’70s moviegoers by conjuring the cinematic equivalent of
switching the dial on a car radio. As soon as any given scene makes its
statement, Lucas jumps to the next high point, repeating the adrenalized cycle
until it’s time to call it a night.
Set in Lucas’ hometown of Modesto circa 1962,
American Graffiti follows the
adventures of four recent high school graduates trying to figure out the next
steps in their lives. They interact with a constellation of friends and
strangers during a hectic night of romance, sex, vandalism, and vehicular
excess. Some of the characters and relationships have more impact than others,
but the various threads mesh comfortably and amplify each other. For instance,
the melodramatic saga of Steve (Ron Howard) and his girlfriend Laurie (Cindy
Williams) resonates with the obsessive quest by Curt (Richard Dreyfuss) to find
a mysterious dreamgirl (Suzanne Somers). Moody greaser John (Paul Le Mat) and
tough-guy drag racer Bob (Harrison Ford) add danger, while precocious Carol
(Mackenzie Phillips) and hapless Terry (Charles Martin Smith) add humor. With
wall-to-wall tunes expressing the characters’ raging hormones, Lucas weaves a
quilt of adolescent angst and teen longing that simultaneously debunks and
romanticizes the historical moment immediately preceding John F. Kennedy’s
assassination. It’s a testament to Lucas’ craft that audiences fell in love
with the exuberant surface of the movie despite the gloom bubbling underneath. The
picture’s success did remarkable things for nearly everyone involved, helping
Howard land the lead in the blockbuster sitcom Happy Days (1974–1984)
and giving Lucas the box-office mojo to make Star Wars (1977).
More
American Graffiti is a very
different type of film. Written and directed by Bill L. Norton under Lucas’
supervision, the picture explores what happened to several characters after the
events of the first film. Howard, Le Mat, Smith, and Williams reprise their
roles, and Ford makes a brief appearance. (Dreyfuss is notably absent.) A dark,
experimental, and provocative examination of the tumultuous years spanning 1964
to 1967, More American Graffiti would
have been nervy as a stand-alone film, so it’s outright ballsy as a major-studio
sequel to a crowd-pleaser. Norton follows three storylines, giving each a
distinctive look. Scenes with Howard and Williams are shot conventionally,
accentuating the everyday misery of a couple drifting apart. Scenes with
Smith’s character in Vietnam are shot on grainy 16mm with a boxy aspect ratio (even
though the rest of the picture is widescreen). Trippiest of all are scenes with
Candy Clark (whose character in the first picture was relatively minor); set in
hippy-dippy San Francisco, these sequences use wild split-screen techniques. LeMat’s
character appears in an extended flashback to which Norton frequently returns,
like the chorus of a pop song. Tackling antiwar protests, draft dodgers, drug
culture, women’s liberation, and other topics, the film is a too-deliberate
survey of ’60s signifiers. That said, More
American Graffiti has integrity to spare, bringing the shadows that hid
beneath the first movie’s shiny surface to the foreground.
American Graffiti: RIGHT ON
More American Graffiti: FUNKY
1 comment:
I really like what you said here about the sequel Peter, spot-on!!
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