Thursday 5 January 2012

The Last Picture Show (Peter Bogdanovich, 1971)

"Being crazy about a woman like her is always the right thing to do. Being an old decrepit bag of bones, that's what's ridiculous. Gettin' old"

Introduction

"Anarene, Texas, 1951. Nothing much has changed..." is the tag line attached to the poster. The Last Picture Show, a story that could easily be summarised as a teenage-drama based in small-town America, is so much more than that. Like Saturday Night Fever is so much more than urban teenagers dancing and Rumble Fish is so much more than rebellious youth. This is a film that, by charting the changes of primarily two-characters, we see the challenges of life itself.

It is slightly unnerving when the better teenage-drama's in the last decade are Easy A and Mean Girls. I am sure their success and critical acclaim will attest to success on their own terms, but the difference is the use of the marketing term "target audience". Rather than merely targetting the teenage-audience members, The Last Picture Show is a profound and intelligent story. In black-and-white, it is shot almost as a Western. We see tragedy, sadness, loss and regret in the characters that surround our two teenage-leads. Though we visit, unlike teenage-dramas, we are not stuck in a high-school or restricted to the confines of bedrooms and house-parties. In The last Picture Show, we see the owners of the pool-club and the operators of the cinema projectors. We see the wife of the gym-teacher and we see the owner of the factory that employs half-the-neighbourhood. You could argue that Sonny (Timothy Bottoms) and Duane (Jeff Bridges) are possibly the most unimportant characters in the story - what we are restricted to, is small-town life.
 
An Exploration of Life - and not just the Teenage Years

What is brilliant about The Last Picture Show is how profound the story is. On the surface it is a love-triangle between Sonny, Duane and Jacy (Cybill Shepherd) but this bland summary does no justice to the scope of the film. Initially a case of unrequited love between one boy and his best friends girlfriend, it then becomes more complicated as Sonny is involved with Ruth Popper (Cloris Leachman) - the wife of his gym-teacher. We then see the social separation between Jacy and Duane and how, though initially an issue of sex, parties and high-school crushes (with an unforgettable Randy Quaid as Lester), it later becomes a tragic and definitive separation between economic circumstance. Jacy is a girl from money - and she will only find a man with money. Duane and Sonny have neither.

Many more issues are raised; The conflict between the boys friendship - and the dramatic shift between the two following Jacy's interference; The need for escape from the small town - and the one's who make it, whilst there are those who don't; The mourning and loss of a pillar in the community - and how his faith in the community is what ties many to the small town; High-school bullying dramatically changes as Joe Bob (Barc Doyle) is found attempting to molest a child - despite his upstanding position and assumed moral-highground as the Preacher's Son. The fact that Joe Bob was given $1000 prior to this may underpin an attitude to money - and how money can corrupt and destroy someone. Hardly the trials and tribulations of youth.

The Inevitable Class-Divide

I am beginning to see an emerging interest I have in the depiction of class in cinema (my opinion's on Home Alone, Great Expectation's and Sleuth are a testement to that) and so this dimension to The Last Picture Show, I shall explore further.

Jacy is initially the "girl everyone loves" but, over the course of the film, we see her tragic change in character (or maybe a reveal of who she really is). Though a child of affluence, her Mother is first generation - having "scared" Jacy's Dad into being rich. But her Mum does not see the same in Jacy - indeed, she is not "scary" enough. With or without this knowledge, her attitude towards Duane is hurtful and cruel - teasing him in the back seat of a car and pushing him off as he places his hand between her legs. Then, shortly afterwards, she joins Lester at the [naked] pool party of a wealthy neighbour. She has no problem in revealing everything to everyone. She see's the divide and is happy to consent and "join" them. This attitude appears again as she marries Sonny - only to reveal that she left a note for her Father to find. In true unresponsible fashion, she is inevitably "saved" from a poorer lifestyle and the marriage is annulled. Despite Jacy's unhappiness and her need to be accepted - she is too uncomfortable on her own and she needs someone to take care of her.

 
Bogdanovich-Perfection

Like Martin Scorsese, Bogdanovich is obsessed with cinema - even today you will find him presenting many documentaries about Alfred Hitchcock, Marilyn Monroe and John Ford - so it is no suprise that technicially, Bogdanovich has created a work of Art. His use of soundtrack alone is haunting as radios and televisions are always playing in the background. I would assume this subtle choice of sound shows how life goes on around this community. It doesn't matter on the grand scale of things, because life just carries on regardless. The TV's will still be watched and the radio's will continue to be heard.

Even the opening and closing shots as the camera pans across the isolated village connects this film to the John Ford Westerns - the small community and the inhabitants we get to kow during the course of the film.

The Inevitable Reference

The Last Picture Show is in the 1001 Films to See Before You Die and upon releasing the remastered version in April 2011, it became a part of an extended run at the BFI Southbank in London. But neither of these are what brought me to this film. It was way back in 2000, watching an episode of Dawson's Creek whereby The Last Picture Show became one of the most important films in Dawson's life. The love-triangle between Dawson, Pacey and Joey clearly an echo of the triangle between Duane, Sonny and Jacy (notice how the names almost sound the same). Both groups of friends within small towns, both film and show include storylines of a high-school student engaging in a relationship with an older woman (Pacey/Tamara Jacobs - Sonny/Ruth Popper) and both created by film-fans - Kevin Williamson and Peter Bogdanovich.

Akin to Dawson and Pacey, Sonny and Duane are the centre-point of the story as both boys change dramatically due to their teenage experiences of sex and relationships. What is truly remarkable is how it shows characters who are young and desperate to get out of the situation they were born in. In one stand-out sequence, the boys leave town to visit Mexico (Bogdanovich doesn't show us their holiday, but teases us as they return, sombrero included and hangover to fend off) and when they return, the town has dramatically changed. The boys have seen the wide-world and tasted a little of what it is to be free ... but only one can take the jump and leave town ...
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6 comments:

  1. Always with the Dawsons Creek reference... Any comparison between Peter Bogdanovich and Kevin Williamson ends with the number of vowels in their names.

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  2. C'mon! Williamson was hugely influenced by THE LAST PICTURE SHOW and, like Williamson know's his horror films (writing self-referential SCREAM...) Bogdanovich equally reguarly is involved in art history documentaries. Shall I lend you Seasons 1-6 of DAWSONS CREEK to help? he he

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  3. Williamson was influenced by Bogdanovich, doesn't make their products comparable. The qualities necessary to understand art history are mildly different to those for processing modern horror films.

    I'll pass on the Season 1-6 offer, you can keep the magic of being a Dawsons Geek to yourself.

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  4. You guys need to read Roger Ebert's "Great Movies" review of the Last Picture Show and actually LEARN something about this film. You completely misread the entire point, and it's distressing.

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  5. Ironically, I have got the third edition of Ebert's "Great Movies" but I don't believe the analysis is in the book. It's more distressing that a post-structural anlaysis is too much for you to consider - why is my interpretation wrong? And Roger Ebert is right? It is merely a discussion of a film we all enjoy - taht's not a bad thing at all!

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  6. Having read Ebert's review now, I see your point better - but I don't believe my interpretation goes against Eberts. Indeed, Ebert focusses his attention on the influence of Orson Welles and how the town, in and of itself, "has no reason to exist". I don't focus on that - and instead focus upon the financial-prospects which, in fairness, Ebert acknowledges: "Jacy's parents are what pass for rich in the town".

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