Friday, December 29, 2017

The Turning Point

The Turning Point was a well-respected film of 1977 nominated for 11 Oscars, winning zero.  But 1977 was a turning point for film, maybe the biggest since 1927 and The Jazz Singer, for the year saw the release of three of my favorite films ever, including the one that changed everything, Star Wars.

Let's see what my friend Jesse Walker thinks of 1977.

1. Annie Hall
2. Equus
3. Martin
4. The Last Wave
5. 3 Women
6. That Obscure Object of Desire
7. Slap Shot
8. God Told Me To
9. The Sand Castle
10. Citizens Band

I can't argue with Annie Hall in the top slot.  Most can agree it's Woody's masterpiece (though not all would agree with me it's his last great film).

I'm not even sure if Equus holds up as a play, but I'm shocked to see anyone defend it as a movie. (I do remember Richard Burton getting his seventh and last nomination for the Best Actor Oscar.  He'd never won, and they opened the envelope and announced "Richard...Dreyfuss." I've always wondered how he felt.)

Considering the kind of films I see, it's shocking I've never caught Martin.

The Last Wave I like, though probably not enough for the top ten.

3 Women is Altman in a dreamy mood.  Good, but not great.

That Obscure Object Desire would make my list, though I don't think it's necessarily top tier Bunuel.

Slap Shot is a lot of fun and would make my top ten.

Haven't seen 8 or 9.

Citizens Band is pretty good, probably top twenty.

11. Eraserhead

12. Suspiria
13. The Finishing Line
14. Dog's Dialogue
15. House
16. Take the 5:10 to Dreamland
17. Perfumed Nightmare
18. La Soufrière
19. Bead Game
20. The Mallet

I don't think Lynch has ever topped 11.  It would be one of the three films battling for my top spot, so I'm sorry to see it missed the top ten.  Don't think that much of 12, but generally like 15.  I like 16, but it's a short.  To my surprise, I haven't seen any of the others.  As for 18, there's another film by Herzog this year that I expected to see.

Other films that would make my top ten:

The Goodbye Girl

The Kentucky Fried Movie

Smokey And The Bandit (the smart set prefer Handle With Care, but this is the real thing)

Star Wars (I refuse to add the episode title)

Other films I liked:

Desperate Living

The Devil Probably (great ending)

Pumping Iron

Soldier Of Orange

Stroszek (great ending)

Other films of note:

Airport '77, The American Friend, Andy Warhol's Bad, Audrey Rose, The Bad News Bears In Breaking Training, Billy Jack Goes To Washington, Black Sunday, Bobby Deerfield, Breaker! Breaker! (the year of CB radio), A Bridge Too Far, Can I Do It...'Til I Need Glasses?, Capricorn One, The Car, The Chicken Chronicles, The Choirboys, Close Encounters Of The Third Kind, Damnation Alley, The Deep, Demon Seed, Doberman Cop, Exorcist II: The Heretic, Fire Sale, Fist Of Fury II, Foul Play, Fun With Dick And Jane, Grand Theft Auto, Greased Lightning, The Greatest, The Happy Hooker Goes To Washington (where she meets Billy Jack?), Hardcore, Herbie Goes To Monte Carlo, Heroes, High Anxiety, The Hills Have Eyes,
The Hobbit, Hollywood High, I Never Promised You A Rose Garden, In Search Of Noah's Ark, The Island Of Dr. Moreau, Islands In The Stream, Jabberwocky, Julia, The Last Remake Of Beau Geste, The Late Show, A Little Night Music, Looking For Mr. Goodbar, MacArthur, Nasty Habits, New York New York, oh god!, One On One, On Sings The Other Doesn't, Opening Night, Orca, The Other Side Of Midnight (theatres were forced to book Star Wars so they could get this), Padre Padrone, Pete's Dragon, A Piece Of The Action, The Private Files Of J. Edgar Hoover, Race For You Life Charlie Brown, The Rescuers, Rollercoaster (the disaster film is getting tired), Rolling Thunder, Roseland, Saturday Night Fever, Semi-Tough, The Sentinel, September 30 1955, The Serpent's Egg, Short Eyes, Sorcerer, The Spy Who Loved Me, Thieves, The Turning Point, Twilight's Last Gleaming, Valentino, The Van, Walking Tall: Final Chapter, Which Way Is Up?, The White Buffalo, The World's Greatest Lover, You Light Up My Life.

14 Comments:

Blogger Jesse said...

The ending to Stroszek was *almost* enough to get it onto my list. It's one of the greatest endings ever.

I'm with you on refusing to add A New Hope. The movie is called Star Wars, dammit.

7:57 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Jesse said...

In fact, you've inspired me to add a note to my post about Stroszek's ending. That deserves a shoutout.

8:06 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Alan Keith Carver said...

The Chicken Chronicles does NOT hold up. I saw it that year, and thought it was absolutely hilarious when I was 15, but when I was 25 and saw it again on video, I realized it was just dreck. The best movie that year was Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

8:19 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

Taxi Driver was '76.

9:30 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger LAGuy said...

I am one of the few people who saw The Chicken Chronicles when it was released. It's weird what you remember--the main thing I recall from that movie is Phil Silvers serving rancid cole slaw.

I've never really liked Close Encounters, though it has some nice moments. I had high hopes for it, but my main feeling back then was it's no Star Wars. I've seen it a number of times since and it's still no Star Wars.

Sorry about Taxi Driver. You're right. I'm going to remove it and now we'll have this record in the comments of something that doesn't exist.

9:40 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

It was suggested that I post this here, so here goes:

Based solely upon Jesse's/PajamaGuy's lists, I took a few minutes and
made my own list for '77. I may go back and do '87 and '97 as well. PJ
Guy originally had Taxi Driver listed, but that's '76. I will have to assume his
other films are listed correctly.

1. Annie Hall (arguably Allen's best, though I prefer Manhattan)
2. 3 Women (arguably Altman's best)
3. That Obscure Object of Desire
4. Strozek (hey, it'd make a great double feature with It's a Wonderful
Life)
5. Citizens Band a/k/a Handle With Care
6. Close Encounters of the Third Kind (deeply flawed but still pretty
terrific)
7. Julia
8. The Last Wave
9. Saturday Night Fever
10. Equus (works better as a play, but I'll defend the movie, too)

Hon. Mentions in no particular order:

The Turning Point
Star Wars (HATED it when I first saw it, as I was expecting/hoping for
something more similar to THX-1138)
Eraserhead
The Goodbye Girl
High Anxiety
The Late Show
Looking for Mr. Goodbar
New York, New York
I'll throw in A Little Night Music just for the music and Diana Rigg. I
remember Pauline Kael's review, where she said Hal Prince directed as if
he'd never seen a movie before. I'd amend that to: he directed as if he
were making a Super 8 home movie.

10:28 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

And now I see that we apparently left out at least two or three which would make my top 10: Providence, The Man Who Loved Women, and perhaps F for Fake, although I believe Jesse has it under a different year.

10:36 AM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Jesse said...

I've always seen F FOR FAKE listed as a 1973 movie.

10:41 AM, December 29, 2017  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Maybe you know the story that the crew of Stroszek hated the stuff with the dancing chicken so much that they refused to shoot it, so Herzog had to do it himself.

12:18 PM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger LAGuy said...

I have a certain fondness for The Late Show. Perhaps I should have put it in the category of films I liked. (I sort of like many of the films in the final category, but I just don't remember them strongly enough to put them higher.)

I rewatched New York New York last week. That a major studio would give Martin Scorsese a huge budget to make such a film shows how different things were in the 70s.

12:27 PM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

I think it was finished in '73, shown somewhere outside the US in '74, had a European release in '75, a small US release in '76, and a larger US release in '77. I know I didn't see it till then, on my last trip to New York before I moved there.

5:44 PM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

Yes indeed...

5:46 PM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Jesse said...

IMDB says it screened in Spain in '73: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072962/releaseinfo

6:00 PM, December 29, 2017  
Blogger Brian Leonard said...

Seems appropriate that the "actual" year of release is clouded. Pick a card, any card...

7:40 PM, December 30, 2017  

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