American Graffiti By Jeff Shannon
Here's how critic Roger Ebert described the unique and lasting value of
George Lucas's 1973 box-office hit, American Graffiti: "[It's]
not only a great movie but a brilliant work of historical fiction; no
sociological treatise could duplicate the movie's success in remembering
exactly how it was to be alive at that cultural instant." The time to
which Ebert and the film refers is the summer of 1962, and American
Graffiti captures the look, feel, and sound of that era by chronicling
one memorable night in the lives of several young Californians on the cusp
of adulthood. (In essence, Lucas was making a semiautobiographical tribute
to his own days as a hot-rod cruiser, and the film's phenomenal success
paved the way for Star Wars.) The action is propelled by the music
of Wolfman Jack's rock & roll radio show--a soundtrack of pop hits
that would become as popular as the film itself. As Lucas develops several
character subplots, American Graffiti becomes a flawless time
capsule of meticulously re-created memory, as authentic as a documentary
and vividly realized through innovative use of cinematography and sound.
The once-in-a-lifetime ensemble cast members inhabit their roles so fully
that they don't seem like actors at all, comprising a who's who of
performers--some of whom went on to stellar careers--including Ron Howard,
Richard Dreyfuss, Harrison Ford, Cindy Williams, Mackenzie Phillips,
Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark, and Paul Le Mat. A true American
classic, the film ranks No. 77 on the American Film Institute's list of
all-time greatest American movies.
Academy Awards
American Graffiti received Academy
Awards nominations for Best Picture (Francis Ford Coppola - Producer,
Gary Kurtz - Co-Producer), Supporting Actress (Candy Clark), Directing
(George Lucas), Writing (Best Story and Screenplay based on factual
material or material not previously published or produced; George Lucas,
Gloria Katz, Willard Huyck), and Film Editing (Verna Fields, Marcia
Lucas).. |