Laurie Bird, James Taylor, and Dennis Wilson in Monte Hellman’s Two-Lane Blacktop (1971) |
After the Altamont concert disaster in December 1969, when a fan was killed a few feet from the stage where The Rolling Stones were performing, psychedelia lost its middle-class appeal. More unpleasant news followed in 1970 – the Kent State and Jackson State shootings, the Manson Family trials, the deaths by overdose of famous rock stars. And even more quickly than it had sprung up, the media fascination with the counterculture evaporated.
But the counterculture, stripped of its idealism and
its sexiness, lingered on. If you drove down the main street of any small city
in America
in the 1970s, you saw clusters of teenagers standing around, wearing long hair
and bell-bottom jeans, listening to Led Zeppelin, furtively getting stoned. This
was the massive middle of the baby-boom generation, the remnant of the
counterculture – a remnant that was much bigger than the original, but in which
the media had lost interest.
– Louis Menand, “Life in the Stone Age” (The New
Republic, 1991)
A few years ago, the Criterion Collection came out
with a box set devoted to the movies produced by Bert Schneider, Bob Rafelson, and
Steve Blauner’s BBC productions in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, including Easy
Rider, Rafelson’s Five Easy Pieces, The King of Marvin Gardens, the Monkees vehicle Head, and Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture
Show. The set established that the ‘70s renaissance in American movies
resulted in a fair amount of unwatchable slop – both Henry Jaglom’s debut film A
Safe Place and, for anyone not enjoying an acid flashback, most of Easy
Rider qualify – but, taken as a whole, those movies represent a thrilling moment
in popular culture, a time when a group of people who’d been excited by the French New
Wave and other breakthrough European films in the ‘60s tried to bring something
new to American movies, while keeping one foot in the studio system.
There might be another box set waiting to be
assembled from the product of Universal’s “youth division,” which was set up in
direct response to the success of Easy Rider and other counterculture
hits that the studio bosses of the time simply found bewildering. Under the
supervision of youthful studio executive Ned Tannen, a motley assortment of
filmmakers, including two heavy hitters from Easy Rider, were basically given
about a million dollars apiece and instructed to go nuts. The results – including
Dennis Hopper’s The Last Movie, Peter Fonda’s The Hired Hand, Milos
Forman’s Taking Off, Frank Perry’s The Diary of a Mad Housewife, John
Cassavettes’s Minnie and Moskowitz – were, again, a mixed bag, but they
add up to a snapshot of a fascinating time in American history and movie
culture.
Laurie Bird and Warren Oates |
I have no idea what it was like to see Two-Lane Blacktop in a theater when it was brand new, but that’s something I have in common with the rest of humanity. The movie did no business, and there are grounds for suspicion that the studio’s real plan all along was to fund these pictures only to let them die on the vine, with minimal promotion, just to prove that the youth hits were flukes and the people responsible for them had no better idea what the public really wanted than the makers of Paint Your Wagon. Actually, it’s not true that Two-Lane Blacktop entirely bypassed the radar screens of the media barons and shapers of opinion of 1971. Esquire put its leading lady, Laurie Bird, on its cover, and published the entirety of Rudolph Wurlitzer’s screenplay inside. But the magazine’s attempt to anoint Two-Lane Blacktop as the “movie of the year” had so little effect on the box-office and public opinion that it ruefully alluded to the cover in their annual “Dubious Achievement Awards.”
Like Wurlitzer’s first novel, Nog, Blacktop
is conceived as a sort of anti-road road story, with the spare, “existentialist”
feel of The Shooting and Ride in the Whirlwind, the low-budget
Westerns that Hellman had made for Roger Corman. (However much Hellman got into
it, and built a style out of it, their existential sparseness grew out of the
fact that he didn’t have enough money to show much of anything except a few
actors with horses and prop guns in a desert landscape.) The heroes are a
nameless young driver (James Taylor, then in the first full flush of his music
stardom) and his mechanic (Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson) who aimlessly roam
around the country, getting into drag races for pick-up money. They cross paths
with another nomad, a middle-aged man played by Warren Oates, who is identified
only by the name of his car, GTO. Bird plays a hitchhiker who ends up being
passed back and forth between the men, but sexual jealousy is the least of the
motivations for the animosity that develops between Oates and the two younger
men. He envies them their cool and their “freedom,” qualities that ought to
make them ideal fantasy identification figures for the Easy Rider
audience. Oates is too self-involved to see what the camera picks up
immediately: that what looks like cool from a distance looks anomic, miserable,
and pointless up close.
There’s no way of knowing how much Two-Lane
Blacktop’s subversion of the cinema of counterculture cool was intentional
on Wurlitzer’s part. The movie has similarities with the books he was writing
at the time – Nog was followed by Flats and Quake – which are
largely unreadable, partly because they’re emotionally inaccessible in a way
that feels smug and arrogant. Smugness and arrogance aren’t exactly unknown in
the iconography of James Taylor, who Hellman cast (in his only acting role) after
seeing him practicing his intense, romantically pissed-off glare on a billboard
in Los Angeles. None of the three young leads has any presence or acting technique;
Taylor and Wilson are pop stars on paid vacation, and Bird is in the tradition
of unskilled, untalented young women starring in movies because the director
couldn’t think of a more cost-efficient way of asking her out. (Bird, who died
in 1979 at the age of 25, also appeared in Hellman’s 1974 Cockfighter. After
she and Hellman parted ways, she took up with Art Garfunkel, and had a bit part
in Annie Hall, hanging on Paul Simon’s arm. That was her movie career.)
The movie belongs to Warren Oates, who had the chops
and the rapport with the camera that the other performers didn’t have, and who
was also the only one of them who was given a full copy of the script to peruse,
which added considerably to the visible misery of James Taylor, who is reportedly
a bit of a control freak. But Hellman – who also worked with Oates on The
Shooting, Cockfighter, and China 9, Liberty 37 – understood that Oates,
the real actor, had a reason for having the movie’s full game plan in his head,
while the nonprofessionals might be best forced to keep things in the moment.
James Taylor in Two-Lane Blacktop |
Two-Lane Blacktop had the mixed
fortune to be a movie about warring countercultures – GTO is like a guy who read On
the Road when he was younger and waited too long to try acting it out – that
managed to record the exact moment that the ‘60s morphed into the ‘70s, and
solipsism replaced social engagement and the streets were taken over by young
people who retained the styles and social mores of a few years earlier but
abandoned the idealism and utopian hopes that were meant to lend those fashions
revolutionary force. That, and the open question of just which of these
characters is really meant to be the hero – the sad old dude whose self-delusions
have some magic to them, or the sexy, bland guys whose self-chosen loser status
will only seem glamorous for as long as their hairlines hold out – gives the
movie a tension that’s mostly missing from Hellman’s work. After his next
couple of films with Oates, he drifted away, and his 2010 comeback film – Road
to Nowhere, his first feature in more than 20 years – is a 121-minute torture
test. (The commercial failure of Two-Lane Blacktop cost him the chance
to direct Wurlitzer’s script for Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid, which went to
Peckinpah. More than fifteen years later, Wurlitzer wrote and, with Robert
Frank, co-directed his own anti-road movie, Candy Mountain, a thin-but-entertaining string of vignettes enacted by an amusing collection of hip
character actors – Kevin O’Connor, Harris Yulin, Roberts Blossom, Rockets
Redglare – and cult musicians.) Road to Nowhere is a title that could fit
on any of Hellman’s movies, but Two-Lane Blacktop is the one that makes
it look like a ride worth taking.
– Phil Dyess-Nugent is a freelance writer living in Texas. He regularly writes about TV and books for The A. V. Club.
– Phil Dyess-Nugent is a freelance writer living in Texas. He regularly writes about TV and books for The A. V. Club.
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