Re: Hell Just Froze Over....
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Originally Posted by RoyM
Richard, I will second that DESPERATE CHARACTERS is a marvelous film. Very much in the style of other low key minimalist dramas of the 1970's such as SCARECROW or FIVE EASY PIECES, so anyone who enjoys the more literate style of 1970's era Hollywood films should really pick this one up. I bought it on VHS just a few years ago because I grew tired of waiting for it to come to DVD, which frankly given it's low profile, I wondered if that would ever happen.
I am definitely very excited about several of these releases from Legend Films. Some real gems in that group, and I hope they all sell well.
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Glad to hear someone shares my appreciation for DESPERATE CHARACTERS. It is a minimalist drama in the best sense, very adult and very unlike traditional Hollywood. It's in the spirit of the 1970s, to be sure, which is perhaps why I like it so much. Shirley McClaine is very good in it. I wish she had more parts like this.Film buffs who like FIVE EASY PIECES, KING OF MARVIN GARDENS, CARNAL KNOWLEDGE, BLUME IN LOVE, etc., will also like DESPERATE CHARACTERS. Many of my favorite dramas of that period are still missing in action; films like LAST SUMMER, PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT, RED SKY AT MORNING etc., all of which were very popular at the time, but are now forgotten.
THE POSSESSION OF JOEL DELANEY doesn't look or feel like a genre horror film, but that's what it is. A similar title, THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD, is still missing in action, although I can't recall if it was Paramount or not. Probably not.
Given the changing times I wonder how consumers and critics will respond to MANDINGO. Showing racism as a means of exposing racism is not an easy tightrope to walk, but audiences in 1975 did not consider MANDINGO to be exploitation. Critics didn't like it, but it was a big hit and played for a long time in some neighborhoods. The sequel, DRUM, was also popular.
The only film I can think of more incendiary than MANDINGO would be THE MAN (1972), starring James Earl Jones as the first African-American Speaker of the House who, through a series of accidents, becomes the first black president. That film was loaded with racist remarks as Jones must rise to the occasion. He's brilliant in it, but audiences may not have much patience with its' language today. I suspect THE MAN will stay missing for a long time.