Nostalgia is a funny thing. It’s like fashion in general. One never knows exactly what will become an object of the public’s past-looking obsession, but the when is a little more predictable. People often idolize their childhoods, and 15-30 years later will look to their own past for comfort. This happens right about the time adulthood starts slapping them down. It is natural that our own history might offer us solutions to new and uncomfortable situations. A decent set of parents or a good teacher can make a young person feel like the world is less confusing. Dealing with marriage, career and children can make anyone yearn for the simplicity of childhood. Thus it is not surprising that popular art attempts to capitalize on this phenomenon. It rarely works. More often than not, nostalgic songs or movies feel hokey and predictable. Indeed, they tend to sully our memories, or confuse with cheap anachronistic jokes, the very real yearning we have for a time when our lives made sense. George Lucas’ second movie, 1973’s American Graffiti rises above nostalgia, and uses the building blocks of his own youth to create a universal tribute to coming of age in small-town America at the birth of the 1960’s.
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American Graffiti succeeds
so wildly for three different reasons. First and foremost: ROCK AND ROLL! When
Lucas started making this picture, the first thing he did was get his older
sister’s collection of 45 records and a portable record player, and he used the
music of his own memories to help him map out the action of his movie. In
today’s world it is hard to imagine a time when this was such a revelation, but
it is true, that Lucas was really the first director to use wall-to-wall songs
to punctuate, and sometimes even explicate the story he is telling. The
soundtrack to this movie actually is a character, and the way the sound of the
songs are manipulated, modulated and magnified makes them behave more like dialogue
than incidental noise. Songs get louder and softer as people enter rooms or
cars drive by with open windows. The audio realism of this movie adds to an
already documentary-like feel. Cinematographer Haskell Wexler does an amazing
job of making everything feel spontaneous, as though scenes are being caught on
the fly and lit by streetlights and dashboards. The film truly has a
breathless, you-are-there feeling of immediacy.
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The final aspect of American Graffiti which
sets it apart from other nostalgia films is Lucas’ masterful editing job. It is
now hard to remember a time when dramas were not told by introducing several
plots and winding them together over the course of a story. It is the way
virtually all modern cable TV dramas and films unfold. It was unheard of in
1973 and a controversial move by Lucas. I remember seeing this film for the
first time in the theatre and being exhilarated by the seemingly disorienting
quick cuts in action. It was like watching four movies at once. The emotional
impact was breathless excitement that felt like real life.
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-
Paul
Epstein
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