There’s
no question that the ’80s—meaning the concept, rather than simply the
chronological period—were well underway at America’s movie theaters by the
beginning of 1981. Whereas 1980 was a transitional year during which trends
from the ’70s began to wane, 1981 saw some of the best and worst narrative
concerns and stylistic tropes of the new decade take hold of the public’s
attention.
Michael
Crichton’s prescient thriller Looker anticipated not only the
aesthetic and moral quandaries associated with computer-generated imagery, but
also the rise of ads so slick they have the power to mesmerize. The loathsome
slasher-movie genre continued to grow in popularity with the sequels Friday
the 13th Part 2 and Halloween II, as well as such
viscera-strewn stand-alone films as Happy Birthday to Me and My
Bloody Valentine. Meanwhile, Sam Raimi’s outlandish The
Evil Dead, a gorefest with a wicked sense of humor, left the slasher
genre behind and ventured into parts unknown. Elsewhere in the realm of shock
cinema, Canadian fantasist David Cronenberg edged closer to the mainstream with
Scanners,
and a mini-trend for werewolf movies came and went, leaving in its wake the
brilliantly eccentric An American Werewolf in London, the
enjoyably campy The Howling, and the woefully underrated Wolfen. Fun fact: Wolfen is, to date, the only fictional
feature directed by Michael Wadleigh, helmer of the classic rock-music doc Woodstock (1970).
Another
mini-trend that surged in 1981 was a vogue for sword-and-sorcery pictures,
presumably stemming from the rise of the role-playing game Dungeons &
Dragons. Memorable medieval epics from 1981 include Dragonslayer, a
gorgeously rendered grown-up adventure story from Walt Disney Pictures that
features one of the most spectacular monsters in movie history, and John
Boorman’s gloriously overwrought King Arthur saga Excalibur. (The
sword-and-sorcery genre entered its self-parody phase a year later, with the
male-fantasy epic Conan the Barbarian
and the cartoonish duo of The Beastmaster
and The Sword and the Sorcerer all
hitting screens in 1982.) Kinda-sorta riding the sword-and-sorcery trend was
the 1981 kiddie fantasy Clash of the Titans, featuring Harry
Hamlin fighting monsters created by stop-motion wizard Ray Harryhausen. For
imaginative people of a certain age, Clash
of the Titans was an irresistible guilty pleasure during the glory days of
HBO and Cinemax. Release the Kraken!
Mainstream
hits from 1981 covered a broad spectrum of subject matter, with Dudley Moore
playing an endearing drunk in Arthur, British runners soaring over
hurdles to the accompaniment of Vangelis music in Chariots of Fire, Brooke
Shields playing yet another beautiful young woman exploring sexuality in Endless
Love, Alan Alda playing yet another sensitive middle-aged man exploring
sexuality in The Four Seasons, the Fondas (Henry and Jane) sharing the
screen with the legendary Katharine Hepburn in the well-crafted weepie On
Golden Pond, and primitive men and women embarking on a wordless
adventure in the evocative Quest for Fire. If there’s a
commonality bonding these pictures, it might be a dispiriting shift toward
slickness in terms of presentation and storytelling—in other words, early
fodder for the endless style-over-substance laments that critics and fans made
about mainstream movies throughout the mid- to late 1980s. Yet not every
successful film of 1981 adhered to the principle of glossy aesthetics. Viewed
in retrospect, Louis Malle’s all-talk dramedy My Dinner With Andre
seems like a crie de couer against
where big-budget Hollywood was headed.
Speaking
of Malle, he directed another 1981 release that gets to the heart of the
matter—the following highly subjective survey of the 25 movies from 1981 that
have the strongest connections to the 1970s. Some of these pictures sprang from
development processes that began in the 1970s, and some were direct sequels to
1970s hits. Others were spiritual cousins to the great New Hollywood pictures
of the early 1970s.
1. Atlantic City. An
original screen story written by playwright John Guare and masterfully directed
by Malle, Atlantic City is akin to
the grungy stories about desperate losers and misguided strivers that John
Huston made in the early ’70s. Set in the titular New Jersey town, which Malle
captured at a moment of metaphorically rich blight, the movie features the
unlikely romantic pairing of aging gangster Burt Lancaster and lissome casino
worker Susan Sarandon. Beautiful and sad in equal measure, this is the movie
that made it impossible for some fans to think about lemons without their
temperatures rising.
2. Blow Out. Even with
its operatic finale, this conspiracy thriller—shades of Alan J. Pakula’s
anxious masterpieces—is one of Brian De Palma’s most disciplined films. Riffing
on a concept from Antonioni’s Blow Up
(1966), this picture is also a movie about movies, because John Travolta plays
a film-industry soundman who accidentally records audio of a murder, then
tries, unwisely, to discover the truth about what happened. De Palma’s onetime
on- and offscreen muse, Nancy Allen, is the sexy leading lady, and future stars
Dennis Franz and John Lithgow excel in supporting turns.
3. The Cannonball Run.
Yes, it’s dumb and pandering and sexist, approaching the nadir of Burt
Reynolds’ various car comedies and reaffirming why director Hal Needham was
better suited to stunt work than storytelling. Still, The Cannonball Run is so ’70s it hurts. Burt’s moustache. Costar
Farrah Fawcett-Majors’ gleaming hair and teeth and—well, the lady was never shy
about showcasing her attributes. Roger Moore playing a character who acts like
James Bond and thinks he’s the actor Roger Moore. And then there’s the story
itself, a jacked-up version of the real-life illegal road race that inspired a
number of ’70s flicks. Come for the kitsch, stay for the blooper reel during
the end credits.
4. Cutter’s Way. Perhaps
more than any other 1981 movie, this offbeat character study/thriller captures
the ennui-drenched zeitgeist of the mid- to late ’70s. Jeff Bridges, doing amazing
work, plays a gigolo who can’t get it up, while John Heard, giving his
career-best performance, plays a physically and psychologically shattered
veteran desperately looking for someone to blame. Lisa Eichorn, quietly
heartbreaking, is the woman caught between them. Magnificently photographed by
Jordan Cronenweth, a year before he achieved cinematic immortality by shooting Blade Runner, this strange little movie
has significant narrative problems, but it more than compensates with
intoxicating style and simmering intelligence. You simply haven’t lived until
you’ve been transported by Jack Nitzsche’s eerie musical score.
5. The Dogs of War.
Despite giving acclaimed supporting turns in hit films and being the nominal
protagonist of a weird Western called Shoot
the Sun Down (1978), Christopher Walken didn’t get his name above the title
until this mercenary-themed combat movie. Playing a soldier of fortune who
experiences a crisis of conscience after getting embroiled with African
politics and the corruption of international business interests, Walken
channels his famous otherworldly quality into a grim saga of betrayal and
revenge that echoes the UK actioner The
Wild Geese (1978). Alternately exciting and soulful, the movie has more in
common with the bleeding-heart combat movies of the ’70s than the jingoistic
macho spectacles of the ’80s, even though a key scene involves Walken blasting
away with a massive grenade launcher that’s like a handheld Gatling gun.
“A Glimpse at 1981” continues tomorrow . . .
9 comments:
The original title of "Cutter's Way" was "Cutter and Bone" which went through a mismanaged mainstream release by MGM before positive critical response from a handful of prominent film critics convinced the studio to re-release through their specialty UA Classics division with the title change.
I'm a Cutter's Way fan myself, Peter, so thank you. I would add that, if we're peering as far ahead as 1981, Rollover might be worth a look -- not because it's particularly great (although Hume Cronyn is permitted to pretty much walk away with it in what I consider to be a nifty role), but because I sort of lump it together with The Formula, which you already have, as a part of a time capsule of a an era when we actually cared about our oil supply and its ramifications.
Great start to an essay Peter! I'm exceptionally happy since one of my all time favorite movies, 'Thief,' should be getting a little exposure for this 4 part series. I can't imagine you not mentioning it.
I seriously contemplated sending you an email for a special 1981 Thief film review. I didn't bother since I figured that would open pandora's box and this would no longer become a 70's blog. Even if you aren't a fan of Thief I look forward to whatever write up it recieves. Now if only 'Runaway Train,' was released in 1981.....
Considered Rollover for this week but it didn't make the cut. Way too sleepy in all regards, though, yes, William, the treatment of oil as a social issue seems quaint in retrospect. (And Cronyn never did badly by Pakula, as evidenced also by Parallax View and Pelican Brief.) If memory serves, one scene in Rollover was filmed in Albany, NY, where I lived for many years. Interesting parallel to the theme of corporate chicanery. Gov. Rockefeller razed blocks and blocks of low-income housing to create a huge state office complex, sometimes criticized as a wrong-headed edifice to his ego, called the Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza. To this day it dominates the Albany skyline. The symbolic victory of rapacious wealth over the struggling class makes the location an appropriate backdrop for that particular film...
And, yes, Thief is on the way. A sort of masterpiece, IMHO.
Awesome!!!
The Cannonball Run does get a few (very few) gender points by having the female team win the race at the end...
If there really is such a thing as movie magic, Atlantic City would qualify.
Warner Bros. really, inexplicably fucked over WOLFEN. It came from a best-selling book, had a terrific cast led by Albert Finney, and it got both strong initial reviews and started off doing good business in New York. But the studio for some reason didn't like the film and cut its release and advertising support to just about zero, and it didn't last long in theatres after that. It's a smart, scary and very R-rated horror drama that deserved better than it got, but I'm glad that it has a good reputation historically amongst the people who know it ever existed.
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