During the early years of his career,
before he discovered the joys of motion-capture effects and ponderous drama,
Robert Zemeckis was an expert manufacturer of zany comedy. He made his directorial
debut with the zippy I Wanna Hold Your
Hand (1978), about crazed Beatles fans, and he cowrote Steven Spielberg’s
over-the-top World War II farce 1941
(1979). Yet Zemeckis’ next project arguably marked the apex of his cinematic
apprenticeship. Used Cars, which Zemeckis
cowrote and directed, is an adrenalized super-comedy filled with wall-to-wall
action, jokes, plot twists, and youthful energy. The movie is gleefully crass
and merrily overwrought, but for viewers who encounter Used Cars in the right mood, it’s a total blast.
Conceived as a broad
satire linking consumerism with politics and salesmanship, Used Cars stars Kurt Russell as salesman Rudy Russo. Working at
decrepit New Deal Used Cars, which is run by amiable geezer Luke Fuchs (Jack
Warden), Rudy decides to run for a state Senate seat. Meanwhile, Luke’s twin
brother, the dastardly Roy Fuchs (also played by Warden), schemes to put Luke
out of business by opening Roy L. Fuchs Pre-Owned Automobiles directly across
the street from New Deal. Eventually, Rudy finds himself in the middle of war
between the brothers—even though Luke dies fairly early in the movie’s running
time, and even though Luke’s daughter, Barbara (Deborah Harmon), emerges as
both a challenging X-factor and Rudy’s potential love interest.
As they later
demonstrated with their Swiss-clock script for Back to the Future (1984), Zemeckis and longtime writing partner
Bob Gale were highly adept at creating outrageously complicated storylines. The
writers juggle literally dozens of major elements in Used Cars, from a superstitious
mechanic (Gerrit Graham) to a pair of sleazy video pirates (played by Michael
McKean and David L. Lander, better known as “Lenny and Squiggy” from TV’s Laverne & Shirley). The storyline also features Jimmy Carter, a live-TV wardrobe malfunction, a Mexican car
salesman, professional football, and student drivers. Much of what happens
onscreen is clever, and much of what happens onscreen is juvenile. It all coalescences
into a jubilant brand of high-octane comedy, and gentle pokes at real-world
issues keep the movie from becoming pointlessly silly.
Russell is fantastic,
blending oily charm with dunderheaded confidence; his character comes across as
a reprobate version of a Frank Capra hero. Warden is wonderful, too, portraying
Luke with avuncular likeability and Roy with devilish intensity, while Costar Graham
is endearingly maniacal, freaking out whenever he realizes he’s near a red car.
Zemeckis never pushed the boundaries of good taste this far again, opting for a
family-friendly style in Back to the
Future and other pictures, so the R-rated Used Cars remains his most grown-up yukfest, which is ironic given
that so much of the film’s content is deliberately infantile. At its best, Used Cars is like a manic Warner Bros.
cartoon, only with cursing and T&A.
Used
Cars: GROOVY
One of the most quotable comedies of all time too, with more than a few of those memorable quotes improvised by Warden.
ReplyDeleteGraham's shining moment is the wonderfully overblown commercial in which he literally murders high prices. In keeping with the WB cartoon theme, he looks a lot like Yosemite Sam in it.
To sum it up, one of the funniest movies ever made.
This was the film I took my first adult date to--a sneak preview in fact. We had no idea what to expect. My eventual verdict was that it was, "A Disney film gone bad."
ReplyDeleteI think this is one of the most underrated comedies ever made, in a perfect world it would be as well remembered as Back to The Future is.
ReplyDeleteAnd as much as I love Back to The Future I can't help but wish Zemeckis hadn't toned his style down and kept some of the Used Cars style raunch in his later career.