Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.
  • Home
  • BOOKS
    • THE ONCE AND FUTURE ORSON WELLES
    • IF ANY OF THESE STORIES GOES OVER 1000 WORDS...
    • ORSON WELLES OF MARS
    • THE DEVIL LIVES IN BEVERLY HILLS
    • A LOSS FOR NORMALCY
    • RIGHT - A NOVEL OF POLITICS
  • PODCASTS
    • Beyond the Cabin in the Woods
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN
    • THE FOURTH WALL
    • As The Myth Turns
    • FRIENDIBALS! - TWO FRIENDS TALKING ABOUT HANNIBAL LECTER
    • DISORGANIZED! A Criminal Minds Podcast
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • BLOGS AND MORE
    • Bloggy B Bloggington III, DDS
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN BLOG
    • REALLY GOOD MAN!
  • Home
    • THE ONCE AND FUTURE ORSON WELLES
    • IF ANY OF THESE STORIES GOES OVER 1000 WORDS...
    • ORSON WELLES OF MARS
    • THE DEVIL LIVES IN BEVERLY HILLS
    • A LOSS FOR NORMALCY
    • RIGHT - A NOVEL OF POLITICS
    • Beyond the Cabin in the Woods
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN
    • THE FOURTH WALL
    • As The Myth Turns
    • FRIENDIBALS! - TWO FRIENDS TALKING ABOUT HANNIBAL LECTER
    • DISORGANIZED! A Criminal Minds Podcast
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
    • Bloggy B Bloggington III, DDS
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN BLOG
    • REALLY GOOD MAN!

A Blog About Watching Movies (AKA a Blog in Search of a Better Title)

Harold_and_Maude_(1971_film)_poster.jpg

Harold and Maude (1971)

Mac Boyle January 30, 2020

Director: Hal Ashby

Cast: Ruth Gordon, Bud Cort, Vivian Pickles, Charles Tyner

Have I Seen It Before?: No.

Did I like it?: Yes…

But I do wonder if it is one of those instances where a film’s music single-handedly makes the rest of the film watchable. There are several absurdist—almost cartoonish—moments of mayhem on display, and they bring a smile to one’s face, even when they turn the morbidity up to eleven. I laughed much harder than I had any right to when Maude (Gordon) tells a Motorcycle Cop (Tom Skerritt, apparently using a different credit and trying to hide out), “Don’t get officious. You’re not yourself when you’re officious. That is the curse of a government job.”

Harold and Maude trucks (or more appropriately, stole cars) in the same era of late-adolescent ennui that permeated The Graduate (1967). So much so, that the two films have surprisingly similar taglines on their posters, but this film far more effectively rejects the suburban yuppiness that The Graduate is either resigned to or fails to ultimately surpass. Benjamin Braddock appears doomed at the end of the older film, whereas Harold (Cort) has experienced loss far more tragic but is more positively affected by what had happened during the film.

This is all to say that the film is perfectly charming. But would I have been anywhere near as swept away if—as Ashby had originally intended—Elton John’s music had filled the film’s soundtrack instead of Cat Stevens? That’s not even a knock against John’s discography, but I do watch this movie and am instantly in the mind of that one spring many years ago where I couldn’t stop listening to “Tea of the Tillerman.” It was prime “being Harold” time for me. Had the film tied its fate to songs like “Levon” or “Your Song” I don’t think the film—or those songs—would have been as well-remembered as they are.

Tags harold and maude (1971), hal ashby, bud cort, ruth gordon, vivian pickles, charles tyner
Comment

Powered by Squarespace

Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.