Jack Nicholson’s post-Easy Rider ascension to Hollywood’s
A-list continued with The Last Detail,
a crowd-pleasing road movie of sorts dominated by the raunchy Navy sailor whom
Nicholson portrays with manic intensity. Written by Robert Towne from Darryl Ponicsan’s novel, and directed by the peerless humanist Hal Ashby, The Last Detail begins when enlisted men
Buddusky (Nicholson) and Mulhall (Otis Young) get assigned to a demeaning task:
They’re to escort a sailor named Meadows (Randy Quaid), who has been sentenced
to eight years in jail for petty theft, across several states so he can
commence his incarceration.
Buddusky is a heavy-drinking troublemaker who
peppers nearly every sentence with some variation of the word fuck, and Mulhall is a savvy
African-American whose strategy for survival is flying below The Man’s radar.
Buddusky convinces Mulhall to drag out their transport duty so they can pocket
extra per-diem money, and once they meet Meadows, both men become sympathetic
to the kid’s pathetic circumstances. A simple-minded stooge whose real crime
was pissing off a superior officer, Meadows is so green that he’s never had
booze, cigarettes, or sex. Buddusky decides to ensure Meadows experiences all
three before hitting the brig, so the trio’s journey becomes a hell-raising
odyssey.
Some of the episodes are exactly what one might expect, like a brawl
with a group of Marines, but others exude pure early-’70s quirkiness. The sailors
meet a hippie chick who meditates with Far East chanting, so Meadows picks up
the habit, and the sailors make a pit stop at Meadows’ home to discover the
bleak reality he left behind when he joined the Navy. The Last Detail walks a fine line between comedy and drama, often
pivoting instantaneously from raucous to somber and back again. While
Ashby’s masterful control of tone anchors the storytelling, the picture rises
to an even higher level on the strength of the performances.
Quaid works the
weird gentle-giant vibe that characterized many of his early roles, and it’s to
his great credit that Meadows keeps surprising us right through to the final
scene. As for Nicholson, his flamboyant turn in The Last Detail cemented his cinematic persona. And while he’s
probably over the top in many respects, exaggerating his character’s volatility
almost to the point of seeming insane, excess seems like an appropriate acting
choice since Buddusky’s supposed to represent the male animal cut loose from decorum and propriety. (Young is fine, by the way, but his
character is so underdeveloped that he’s regularly eclipsed by his costars.)
The Last Detail isn’t perfect, given its
weakness for clichés like the hooker with the heart of gold (Carol Kane plays
this thankless role with a blend of cynicism and sweetness). Nonetheless, by the time the movie reaches its downbeat
finale, Ashby and his collaborators have delivered a potent statement about the
limitations that bureaucracies—and, really societies in general—place upon
individuality.
The Last Detail: RIGHT ON
1 comment:
One of my fav Jack N's and 70's films, but I would definitely say it's a guy film for sure. Btw, the making of this classic was not without some very major headaches- it took four years to get green lit, there were major casting nightmares, Ashby got busted while scouting locations, then insisted on shooting chronologically, shot way too much footage and originally turned in an almost four hour cut. Then it was tied up in post for 6 months while Ashby and Columbia had a battle over all the profanity used.
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