‘This is Harold. Fully equipped to deal with life. This is Maude. Harold’s girlfriend’. Harold And Maude, Hal Ashby’s jet-black romantic comedy, was strange even by the standards of the seventies. When Ashby and Colin Higgins took the screenplay to Hollywood executives, they were told they were nuts. Nobody, they argued, wanted to see a romance between a 20-year-old man and a 79-year-old-woman.
They also objected to the scenes of Harold faking his death and some other aspects of the story. And wouldn’t you know it when the film came out many critics had issues with the black humour and the age difference between the two title characters. In recent years the film’s reputation has been rehabilitated and it is now regarded as a cult classic and a midnight movie favourite. There’s no denying the film’s heart or its great Cat Stevens soundtrack.
‘On this river, God never finished his creation’ Aguirre is as famous for its off-screen troubles as it is for its breathtaking cinematography and performances on. It was the first of five collaborations between director Werner Herzog and actor Klaus Kinski and it was, to say the least, an inauspicious start for the team. The film may have been about a soldier who goes mad in the Amazonian jungle, but it was Kinski himself who seemed to be losing his mind during the shoot.
Actor and director clashed frequently about how Kinski should play and eponymous Aguirre, usually resulting in a Kinski throwing a massive tantrum and berating Herzog, his crew and the local natives. Kinski got so wound-up by the sound of the cast and crew playing cards in a nearby hut that he fired three gunshots at it. Kinski decided to leave the set, but Herzog, ever the diplomat, told him in no uncertain terms that if he left that he would have to shoot him first. The Kinski/Herzog relationship is documented in detail in Herzog’s documentary My Best Fiend. Aguirre, as a film, is a masterpiece. All of the trouble was worth it in the end.
‘At times it looked like it might cost them their jobs, their reputations, and maybe even their lives.’ The paranoid political thriller was a staple of 1970s cinema. Hey, why not? With Vietnam, political assassinations and Watergate happening around them Americans had a right to be paranoid. All The President’s Men is the true story of two journalists investigating the Watergate scandal and the cover-ups they encounter and missing pieces they try to solve. It was directed by Alan J. Pakula, forming part of his informal ‘paranoia’ trilogy of seventies films along with Klute and The Parallax View (both of which are also worth your time).
Much care was taken to remain as authentic as possible to the real-life story and the production reproduced everything to replicate a real newsroom at great expense. Nothing was allowed in the script unless it had been verified by someone in-the-know. All The President’s Men features one of many great 1970’s Dustin Hoffman performances. Robert Redford isn’t half bad, either.
‘An offer you can’t refuse’ It sounds clichéd to talk about how The Godfather and The Godfather: Part II are two of the greatest films of all time, but there’s no getting around it. They just are and it’s as simple as that. Francis Ford Coppola was on a hell of a roll in the 1970s, directing classics like The Conversation and Apocalypse Now, but the first two Godfather films stand as his greatest achievement. The story of Michael Corleone’s rise to power in the Corleone crime family is an epic tale of betrayal, power and murder that could have only been made this well in the 1970s. Based on Mario Puzzo’s best-selling novel of the same name, the film was a smash hit at the box-office, making $285m well above its $7m budget. But Coppola had to fight to get his vision up on screen, with executives determined to remove Al Pacino (whom they referred to as “that midget”) from the film.
Coppola stuck to his guns and Pacino stayed in the film. The result was one of the best performances in film history (although Pacino would have to wait twenty years to receive an Academy Award). The Godfather has many exceptional performances, not least of which is Marlon Brando’s cotton-mouthed Don Corleone. Part II defies convention as being one of the only sequels in film history that people claim is better than the first. The Godfather Parts I and II are films to be studied and savoured. They are masterclasses in filmmaking and storytelling. Shame about the third one, eh?
‘On every street in every city, there’s a nobody who dreams of being a somebody’ Oh, come on you didn’t really think that there wouldn’t be at least one Martin Scorsese film on a list of great seventies films, did you? Marty made some amazing films in that decade and Mean Streets and Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore just narrowly missed the cut. Taxi Driver, however, simply has to be included, as it is one of the quintessential seventies films. The Palme d’Or winning movie is a terrifying insight into the mind of an alienated man who wants to ‘clean up’ the New York City streets. Not with a dustpan and brush mind you, but by rescuing a 12-year-old prostitute and killing her pimp. Taxi Drive is a rich, complex film that sees Scorsese on top of his game. Robert De Niro gives one of the all-time great performances as Travis Bickle.
De Niro, ever the method actor, got his own cab license and did twelve-hour shifts while researching the role. No film so expertly captures the seedy underbelly of seventies New York, with all of its porn theatres and debauchery. The film was controversial when it was released, coming into conflict with the MPAA over the bloody nature of the film’s climax and the young age of Jodie Foster’s character. Like a fine wine, Taxi Driver only gets better with age. If ever you needed proof that the 1970s were the decade for cinema, this is it. Is the ’70s really the best decade? What other classic 1970’s movies were missed? Get the discussion going down in the comments.
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