8.06.2024

1974: Momentarily out of action, temporarily out of gas


Now we're in the thick of it. Long hot days, cool sea haze. Back in the bad old days. Let's set the superficial scene with notable events: Stephen King released his first book, Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth's home run record, Ronnie DeFeo killed his family in Amityville, Nixon resigned, Ali defeated Foreman, the oil crisis ended in all OPEC Nations, and Europe continued to blow itself up. Pick an occasion and celebrate, it just turned 50 years old. 


Not everything lends itself so easily to a theme party and so we don't use every color when we illustrate these reminiscences; fluctuating government in the Republic of Cyprus may hold some importance but is it immediately indicative of 1974? Where's the smell, the taste, the touch? This is the furthest back I've gone with an anniversary essay and with greater distance the mood of a moment becomes most sharply defined by its art. I've said this with every year I've explored: the commercial media of any given time may make us nostalgic for that time... but what if we weren't there the first time? More than history books we have to trust that Pop Culture is an accurate reflection of its age - the more dated, the greater the accomplishment. 


It's hard to emphasize how eclectic the popular music was; Elton John, Kool & the Gang, Barbra Streisand, Jackson 5, Grand Funk, ABBA, Deep Purple, and The Carpenters are entirely dissimilar from one another but they all managed to sound like '74. This was also the first time we heard KISS, Donna Summer, Kansas, and KC & The Sunshine Band, guaranteeing the rest of the decade to be even more diverse. Though I'm not sure we could get as intellectual about TV: All in the Family, M*A*S*H, Kojak, Mary Tyler Moore, and of course The NBC Mystery Movie were predictably and deservedly amongst the most-watched programs. But I will say that, maybe even more than music or movies, television consistently provides the most vivd depiction of any given generation; whether it takes place during the Korean War, Depression Era Virginia, contemporary Queens NY, or on a stage with Sonny Bono and Cher, we get the least compromised sense of fashion, values, and humor from the boob tube. So if it aired in 1974, that's the closest you can get to time travel. 


Who started this conversation anyway? I can't set an entire mood for you by listing a few Top 40 music artists and primetime network TV shows - though if you choose to go out and do the work yourself then your reward awaits you. As usual, these paragraphs are prologue to the point, and it's a major one this time. The popular opinion is that the 1970s still stands tall as the greatest decade for movies, and while the scholars can explain why again and again, the rest of us simple fools need only stand back and observe the varied tapestry that was this specific era of filmmaking. Personally I don't know what the metric is for ranking a stretch of otherwise unrelated movies; my approach is just determining how many of my own favorites fall into which periods time and then I can sorta begin to play along. But I do know that looking at each year between 1970 and 1979 I've found that every 12-month period was an exciting and essential entry into the history of Cinema. And 1974 is no slouch. 


Westerns were still on the radar - many of them were switching out wagon chases for car chases, but the structure was still there. But even more than that, the spirit of every genre had shifted entirely: the age of the Hero was dead; now was the time of the Anti-Hero. Goofy disaster movies where tough guys would ride in and save the day were still appealing to older crowds but mostly played for laughs to those who were ready for flawed characters and harsh realism, and perhaps "escapism" wasn't the sexiest emotion art had to offer. There was shock and awe beyond the spectacle of special effects. Anger and rebellion, frustration and disgust, fascination and terror. Actual sexiness. Mystery and wonder. Ambiguity. Exploring and understanding different cultures. These movies were providing a lot thematically and the bravery of producing them and releasing them into the mainstream was admirable, but the talent and innovation that was evidenced in the craftsmanship is consistently the most notable part; subject matter aside, movies never looked like this before. The creativity was turned up on every level of the process, and that makes this decade and this year remarkable and perhaps preeminent. Could we ever reach these heights again? Will courage and originality someday prevail? If I could only live to see it, to be there with you...

- Paul



1. The Conversation
You ever get the sense that a movie was made specifically for you? It may be wildly popular and held in high regard, but it's clear that they had you (or someone like you) in mind as their target audience. Gene's Harry Caul is most likely my favorite movie character, and it's certainly my favorite Coppola film, but its most attractive attribute is its mood; the simplicity of its structure and pace and scope and score just magnifies the complexity of its characters and compositions and cinematography. To this day I still let out a sigh of amazement when the end credits come on.

2. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
Speaking of flabbergasting credit rolls... I'd seen many a Monster Movie before I got around to this one, and so this was a sobering reminder as to what most of the others are missing: legitimate scares. One of the goriest movies with hardly any blood, one of the most atmospheric movies with hardly any artificial lighting, one of the most articulate cinematic visions with hardly any budget. Who needs money when you got talent? 

3. Chinatown
Period Pictures are marvelous when they're done right; beyond just hair and wardrobe, every audio/visual element needs to reflect the time in a way that doesn't fall into cliché or parody. I can barely follow what this movie is about and I certainly don't understand what the contemporary metaphor was, but I watch it over and over again because it so expertly creates a world in which I enjoy experiencing. 

4. Thunderbolt and Lightfoot
The best Buddy/Car/Crime picture of 1974 - which is a serious claim but I stand by it. The Southwestern landscapes and honky-tonk score are like burgers and fries to me, but like the best of this brand the real driving force is the chemistry - and it makes it that much more engrossing that we get to be there at the very beginning of the relationship and then watch it progress all the way to the bittersweet end. 

5. Young Frankenstein
The comedy works best because it's taken seriously; like Chinatown the aesthetic is so spot-on that we'll gladly accept whatever nonsense comes our way. Unlike Chinatown it gleefully abuses our trust and familiarity with the genre - not by satirizing it, but using it as a foundation for silliness the likes of which we'd never seen. 

6. Freebie and The Bean
In the gritty 70s even slapstick turned into car crashes and bullets. I can't say it's the first Buddy Cop Comedy but it set the tone for how they would be from then on: the violence and the premise was only to be taken as seriously as the dialogue, and in the case of Arkin and Caan, it's brutally ridiculous. 

7. Busting
Blake and Gould, on the other hand, aren't fucking around. They may crack wise throughout but this is solid Peter Hyams Action, complete with questionable tactics and skillful sleuthing. More in the vein of French Connection but having Allen Garfield as the main heavy lets us know we can loosen up a bit.

8. The Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue
In the time between the American and the Italian, there were the Spanish zombies, and in hindsight they were sometimes superior - particularly this triumph directed by Jorge Grau. My strongest sentiment is that, if you've ever wanted a Zombie flick with an engrossing story and interesting living characters, this may be the best. 

9. The Godfather Part II
I never thought it was even remotely as good as the first (though that's a tricky act to follow). I still find the Michael thread sorta tedious and convoluted, while the Vito stuff is the true standout. Though in the end I'm able to admit that the skillful balance between the two are why the whole thing works so well.

10. The Taking of Pelham One Two Three
There's such an immense joy in watching plans unfold, steps followed, procedures laid out - and this movie allows us into everyone's occupation: good, bad, or indifferent. The surroundings are also impressively palpable: the smoke and sweat and grease of this intimate municipal brouhaha linger on your senses for the duration. 

11. The Sugarland Express
Most people don't typically include Spielberg on the list of directors who got their start in Exploitation, and those people probably have problems with this movie (and Duel for that matter); despite the noble intentions of its protagonists, it's lite on the Spielbergian schmaltz and emotional depth and instead comes across as a superficial Actioner. In other words it's pretty great. 

12. Beyond the Door
Sometimes the store brand is better than nothing at all. It'd been nearly a whole six months since we had a demonic possession movie, and this mostly-confused but sometimes-creepy Italian knockoff has enough vibes and vulgarity to fill the void. If anything gives it the edge, its funk-disco score gives "Tubular Bells" a run for its money. 

13. Foxy Brown
The nonpartisan pinnacle of Jack Hill, Pam Grier, and Blaxploitation; while not my personal favorite under any of those columns, it embodies all the best traits of the genre, and the pride and confidence of its creators is infectious. 

14. Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry
There are knockoffs, and then there's cookie-cutter. Sure we've seen it before, but have we seen it with Susan George wearing a denim bralette while riding in a citron yella '69 Dodge Charger? I think not!

15. Blazing Saddles
If the Western was evolving then this is what we thought of the traditional approach (which was largely accurate). Intentional or not, the genre-bending climax always feels tacked on and overblown to me, but all the bits and sketches and small servings of satire leading up to it still hit the mark. 

16. Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
While the decade gave us plenty of characters who were broken souls and mixed bags, it so often digressed into an orgy of action and violence. Here was a character study that was, by definition, simply that and not much else - helmed by a director anxious to prove he could pull off such a feat. 

17. The Teacher
I'm sure I could intellectualize this ultra low budget Sexploitation flick but that would be missing the point; this movie is shamelessly hot and never attempts to disguise it or apologize for it. The always-sinister Anthony James single-handedly elevates this to Erotic Thriller.

18. Lenny
As a Biopic it's pretty routine; at no point am I not aware that I'm watching Dustin Hoffman hurtling through a courageous acting jag. But if you combine that with flawless editing and cinematography then there's really not much to complain about. 

19. Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia
In a world of bad guys, the hero is the one who stays alive till the credits. This is another one that has an excessively tangible atmosphere; it's so hot and painful and putrid that it's abhorrent in a way that only Peckinpah could pull off. 

20. The Towering Inferno
While Charlton Heston was off fighting airplanes and earthquakes, Newman and McQueen battled the burning building, and they did it in style. Even more exciting and manipulative than 1972's Poseidon Adventure, producer Irwin Allen created playgrounds for A-listers to slum it and movie theaters to sling it, and we all got drunk on the peril and the popcorn.

2 comments:

Tony Kim said...

Forgive the off-topic query, but while I know you've said you don't closely keep up with contemporary cinema anymore, have there been any films from 2023 that you've liked?

P and J said...

Holdovers, Poor Things, and the Ninja Turtle movie are some immediate standouts. Oppenheimer had some strong stuff too. Still haven't seen Flower Moon