Along with the conspiracy
thriller and the downbeat character study, the road movie is among the genres
that are most crucial to the story of American cinema during the ’70s. The concept
of rootless nobodies forming surrogate families while traveling through the
heartland says volumes about disaffected national identity in the era of Nixon,
Vietnam, and Watergate. That’s why it’s tempting to cut a lot of slack for a
picture along the lines of Rafferty and
the Gold Dust Twins, even though the most objective critical assessment
reveals Rafferty to be a travelogue
of uninteresting people doing uninteresting things. The dignity and novelty of Rafferty and pieces of the same ilk can
be found in the humdrum foibles of the unsophisticated characters. After all,
some of the best New Hollywood movies broke new ground by giving voices to the
voiceless. In other words, Rafferty and
the Gold Dust Twins contains many small pleasures for fans of a certain
type of scruffy ’70s movie—while those seeking big laughs, heroic characters,
and a memorable storyline should look elsewhere.
Alan Arkin, working at the
apex of his chilly oddness, stars as Rafferty, a former USMC gunnery sergeant
now working a pointless job at a DMV office in Hollywood. Drinking heavily,
living in squalor, treating his job contemptuously, and wallowing in regret
after years of being a passenger in his own life, Rafferty is ready for a
change. While on a lunch break one afternoon, he’s kidnapped at gunpoint by two
drifters—grown-up Mac (Sally Kellerman) and teenaged Frisbee (Mackenzie
Phillips). The ladies demand that Rafferty drive them to New Orleans. Rafferty
manages to escape, but he soon realizes that he doesn’t want to resume his old
life, so he rejoins the women as a willing traveling companion. Escapades
ensue. Most of what happens in Rafferty
is contrived in the extreme, even though some moments of gentle character work
reflect sensitivity and thoughtfulness on the part of the filmmakers. A long
sequence set in Mac’s hometown, for instance, feels credible thanks to the
parade of rural dreamers and schemers who interact with the protagonists.
Unfortunately, Arkin’s character never quite clicks as a believable human being,
while Kellerman’s drifts in and out of realistic behavior. Grotesques played by
Alex Rocco, Charles Martin Smith, and Harry Dean Stanton (who is especially
wonderful here) resonate more strongly, perhaps because the filmmakers simply
parachute into the lives of these low-rent fools for quick, purposeful
vignettes. As for Phillips’ character, picture a second-rate version of the
many precocious girls Jodie Foster played in ’70s movies, and you’re almost
there—Phillips plays a one-note role well. From start to finish, writer John
Kaye and director Dick Richards struggle to fill the movie’s slight 91-minute
running time with a sufficient number of events, occasionally resorting to such filler as a
chase scene and a musical number. Like the precious powder in its title, Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins is so wispy that it’s forever at risk of blowing away.
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins: FUNKY
1 comment:
Looking at it recently, I agree with all you say, but 16 year old me loved it when it was new. Paid to see it 3 times! Even named it my "Best Picture of 1975!"
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