After making his name with
the incendiary screenplay for Taxi Driver
(1976), Paul Schrader capitalized on his Hollywood heat by setting up his
directorial debut, Blue Collar.
(Schrader co-wrote the script with his brother, Leonard, from source material
by Sydney A. Glass.) A tough morality play about corruption worming its way
through an auto company and the labor union supposedly protecting the company’s
workers, Blue Collar echoes the 1954
classic On the Waterfront, but it has
an unmistakably ’70s patina of drugs, racial tension, sex, and vulgarity.
The
story follows three friends whose frustration with their working conditions at
an auto plant reaches a boiling point when they realize their disreputable
union reps are making side deals with management. The trio breaks into the
union office, hoping to steal several thousand dollars they believe is hidden
there, but all they get is petty cash. And that’s when the story gets really interesting: Union officials
claim tens of thousands of dollars were stolen, setting an insurance-settlement
scam in motion, so the workers-turned-thieves realize they have an opportunity
to blackmail their oppressors. How this bold maneuver affects the three men
leads to a climax of unusual complexity and intensity.
Considering this was his
first movie, Schrader is remarkably assured behind the camera, using a
classical camera style that’s neither showy nor timid; abetted by
cinematographer Bobby Byrne, Schrader gives the picture a look as gritty as the
assembly line on which the main characters labor every day. The blues-inflected
soundtrack, including original music by the great Jack Nitzsche, suits the
material perfectly, and in fact the whole movie feels like a raw soul record
come to life: When characters sit around a local dive, swigging beer and
bitching about their troubles, Blue
Collar offers a window into a secret world.
Yet Schrader’s two-fisted
storytelling would be for naught if the movie lacked powerhouse performances,
and, luckily, the three leads deliver. Yaphet Kotto, working his singular mix
of blazing anger and world-weary sarcasm, is compelling in every scene. Harvey
Keitel, slickly translating his Noo Yawk edge to a volatile Midwestern vibe, is
equally potent as the conscience of the group. And Richard Pryor is explosive,
leaving any idea that he’s merely a funnyman in the dust. Never this good in a
movie before or afterward, he channels deep veins of indignation and resentment
into an unforgettable characterization. (Available as part of the Universal Vault Series on Amazon.com)
Blue Collar: RIGHT ON
One of my favorite flicks of the era. Fantastic final scene too!
ReplyDeleteWonderful essay, sir.
ReplyDeleteI saw this movie when it was first released at a times square theatre and yes a very good review, only one correction ,Taxi Driver was released in 1976 not 1974.
ReplyDeleteThis film had not just only one of Richard Pryor's best roles, but it's one of his best movies too. Unfortunately, it flopped because it was promoted as a comedy simply because he was starring in it---which it's not, thought it does have its funny moments.
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