To Live and Die in Hicksville., 8 August 2011
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Sex in a small town. And more sex. And more sex...
In 1951 Anarene, Texas, there's not much to do except be an
angst-ridden teen and feel up chicks in the dark of the old movie
theater. But small town life is crawling to a close, and the teens in
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW, like the town of Anarene itself, are thrown into
the world with their naïveté on stun and their hormones on kill.
The bad economy (isn't it always?) has forced the movie theater to
close. Soon there will be a last picture show. And the dull meaningless
void beckons. The teens are antsy, drunk, irresponsible; the adults,
worn out, cynical, devoid of dreams.
From a novel by Larry McMurtry, Peter Bogdanovich co-writes and directs
this frank, forward tale of a small community fragmenting as the old
guard is replaced with teen beat. With the death of the town's tacit
head, Sam the Lion (Ben Johnson), the townsfolk and teens who regarded
him a stabilizing force are suddenly rudderless.
Duane (volatile Jeff Bridges) and Sonny (soulful Timothy Bottoms) are
best friends, high school graduates gawping at the threshold of life
without a clue. Jacy (Cybill Shepherd) is the teen tease every boy
lusts after - she's Duane's girl, but has no qualms in cozying up to a
rich college boy to further her prospects.
Shepherd plays Jacy with a callousness that prompted the invention of
the c-word; using sex academically, as a weapon. She accepts an
invitation by Randy Quaid (so young he looks like little brother
Dennis) to a pool party only to get closer to the rich boy; on this
same night, Duane gives her a watch bought with six months savings,
which she callously takes off - along with her clothes - and dives
naked into the pool for the rich boy. Rich boy tells her "Come see me
when you're not a virgin," so she deflowers herself dutifully with
Duane (who adopts the studly strut - until he realizes she was only
prepping herself for the richie).
Meanwhile, MILF Ruth (Cloris Leachman) cozies up to teen Sonny while
her husband Coach Popper is at school coaching Sonny's basketball team.
Back when Cloris Leachman was only in her 40s, she was surprisingly
svelte and sexy, yet it wasn't from her cardboard emotionlessness or
pointy bra - it was her sexual forthrightness, openly seducing Sonny
with a frankness that we don't see in modern American cinema.
When Jacy eventually elopes with Sonny she doesn't allow him to touch
her in the car on the way to their honeymoon; as with all her relations
it is purely academic, simply so she wouldn't be an old maid in a small
town. When they are caught and she is forced away from him, it is not
the usual tearful rending of two lovers; she gives him an ambivalent
look, gets into another car and doesn't look back as it drives off.
Then - Clu Gulager, renowned C-actor and bane of MYSTERY SCIENCE
THEATER 3000, boyfriend to Jacy's mother (Ellen Burstyn, also looking
young and MILF-y), seduces Jacy on a pool table, who acquiesces with
nary a movement.
No such thing as foreplay in this town, which is a refreshing change
from all those mid-Americana teen movies where kids spend endless hours
necking necking necking. Yet there is also dearth of emotion.
Bogdanovich is intent on showing us how clinical, uncomfortable and
embarrassing sex is, almost an unnatural act with its participants
autonomously going through motions without knowing why.
And on the opposite side of the life-creating act, there is death.
Tragedy must necessarily dog a town on the threshold of change. Or does
this much shtupping. And Bogdanovich pours out the tragedy in equal
amounts.
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW is the reality that happens after the cameras
stop rolling on any given episode of HAPPY DAYS.
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