Blue Collar By Sean Axmaker
Paul Schrader had established his reputation as a screenwriter (The
Yakuza and Taxi Driver,
among others) before embarking on his directorial debut. Blue Collar
is the story of three working-class guys at the Checker auto plant who run
their local union office. Richard Pryor delivers a funny, passionate,
seething performance in one of his rare dramatic roles as a rabble-rousing
union man. Trapped by family worries and crippling back taxes, he dreams
up the robbery after scoping out the joint and enlists his coworker and
buddies, family man Harvey Keitel and high-living bachelor Yaphet Kotto,
who are in similar financial straits. This is a strictly amateur-hour
heist, and their successful getaway is the last bit of good luck in store
for the trio. The robbery turns up no cash, only incriminating files, and
the inept thieves are soon blackmailing the powerful union, which fights
back with force, seduction, and murder. Schrader's first film has little
of the polish or style he developed by American
Gigolo, but his portrait of lower middle class families in Super70s
Detroit, interracial relations, and male camaraderie is sharp and
insightful. His attention to detail shows in every frame and adds to the
edgy material, which balances the thriller plot with social commentary
about corruption, labor relations, and the lure of power. Schrader's later
films show more subtlety and cinematic confidence, but time hasn't dimmed
the power he unleashes in this angry working class drama.
The DVD features commentary by Paul Schrader, his first such audio
track, guided and prodded by critic Maitland McDonagh, who does her best
to draw the director out of his long silences and launch him into his
fascinating production stories.
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