The Day of the Locust (film)
The Day of the Locust | |
---|---|
Directed by | John Schlesinger |
Screenplay by | Waldo Salt |
Based on | The Day of the Locust by Nathanael West |
Produced by | Jerome Hellman |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Conrad L. Hall |
Edited by | Jim Clark |
Music by | John Barry |
Production company | Long Road Productions |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 144 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Day of the Locust is a 1975 American
The film has garnered attention from scholars for its critical commentary on the film industry, as well as its nightmarish depiction of Hollywood, with some critics identifying implicit horror elements in the film's visuals.
Plot
Aspiring artist and recent
Tod attends a party at the
The shy, obsessive Homer continues to vie for Faye's affections, caring for her after her father's death. The two eventually move in together, and Faye continues to hopelessly find employment as a movie extra. While filming a Waterloo-themed period drama, Faye escapes injury during a violent collapse of the set, and reunites with Tod, who witnesses the accident. Faye and Homer subsequently invite Tod to dinner. The three attend a dinner theater featuring a drag show as entertainment. During the dinner, Faye confesses to Tod that her relationship with Homer is sexless, but is loving and offers her security. Later, Faye and Homer host a party attended by Tod, Abe, Earle, Miguel, and Claude Estee, a successful art director. Faye marauds about throughout the party, attempting to impress Claude and the other men. While outside, Homer observes the various men drunkenly fawning over Faye through a window. When Faye notices him, she accuses him of being a peeping tom before throwing a vase through the window. Shortly after, Homer walks in on Faye having sex with Miguel. Tod passively ignores the scene, but Earle discovers it and begins fighting with Miguel.
Later, the premiere of
On a morning shortly thereafter, Faye wanders into Tod's abandoned apartment. She sees everything was removed except for the flower in the wall crack, and her eyes well with tears.
Cast
- William Atherton as Tod Hackett
- Karen Black as Faye Greener
- Donald Sutherland as Homer Simpson
- Burgess Meredith as Harry Greener
- Geraldine Page as Big Sister
- Richard Dysart as Claude Estee
- Bo Hopkins as Earle Shoop
- Pepe Serna as Miguel
- Lelia Goldoni as Mary Dove
- Billy Barty as Abe Kusich
- Jackie Earle Haley as Adore Loomis
- Gloria LeRoy as Mrs. Loomis
- Jane Hoffman as Mrs. Odlesh
- Norman Leavitt as Mr. Odlesh
- Madge Kennedy as Mrs. Johnson
- Natalie Schafer as Audrey Jennings
- Gloria Stroock as Alice Estee
- Nita Talbot as Joan
- Paul Stewart as Helverston
- John Hillerman as Ned Grote
- William Castle as the Director
- Paul Jabara as the Nightclub Entertainer
- Nancy Ellison as Funeral Groupie
Analysis
Film scholar M. Keith Booker views The Day of the Locust as "one of the nastiest film critiques ever produced of the film industry itself,"[1] that depicts Hollywood as a "nightmare realm dominated by images of commodified sex and violence."[2] Booker notes that the film aims to depict Hollywood and greater Los Angeles as a "dumping ground upon which broken dreams can be discarded to make way for the ever newer dreams constantly being turned out by the American Culture Industry."[2]
Lee Gambin of
Production
The apartment building was also a The Fortune set.[4]
Release
Box office
Released in the spring of 1975, The Day of the Locust was considered a box-office flop upon its release.[5]
Critical response
In his review in The New York Times, Vincent Canby called it "less a conventional film than it is a gargantuan panorama, a spectacle that illustrates West's dispassionate prose with a fidelity to detail more often found in a gimcracky Biblical epic than in something that so relentlessly ridicules American civilization... The movie is far from subtle, but it doesn't matter. It seems that much more material was shot than could be easily fitted into the movie, even at 144 minutes... It is reality projected as fantasy. Its grossness — its bigger-than-life quality — is so much a part of its style (and what West was writing about) that one respects the extravagances, the almost lunatic scale on which Mr. Schlesinger has filmed its key sequences."[6]
Jay Cocks of Time said; "The Day of the Locust looks puffy and overdrawn, sounds shrill because it is made with a combination of self-loathing and tenuous moral superiority. This is a movie turned out by the sort of mentality that West was mocking. Salt's adaptation... misses what is most crucial: West's tone of level rage and tilted compassion, his ability to make human even the most grotesque mockery."[7]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times called it a "daring, epic film... a brilliant one at times, and with a wealth of sharp-edged performances," citing that of Donald Sutherland as "one of the movie's wonders," although he expressed some reservations, noting that "somewhere on the way to its final vast metaphors, The Day of the Locust misplaces its concern with its characters. We begin to sense that they're marching around in response to the requirements of the story, instead of leading lives of their own. And so we stop worrying about them, because they're doomed anyway and not always because of their own shortcoming."[8]
In the Chicago Reader, Jonathan Rosenbaum described the film as "a painfully misconceived reduction and simplification... of the great Nathanael West novel about Hollywood... It misses crucial aspects of the book's surrealism and satire, though it has a fair number of compensations if you don't care about what's being ground underfoot - among them, Conrad Hall's cinematography and... one of Donald Sutherland's better performances."[9]
Channel 4 deemed it "fascinating, if flawed" and "by turns gaudy, bitter and occasionally just plain weird," adding "great performances and magnificent design make this a spectacular and highly entertaining film."[10]
Greg Ferrara for TCM, wrote "...every bit as powerful as any movie on the movie industry out there and, in my opinion, conveys the themes and metaphors of the book in exactly the right tone. They didn’t get it wrong at all, they got it perfectly right by telling the story, cinematically, in a very different way than the book. It’s harsh, brutal, cruel and unrelenting. I’ve rarely beheld a more pessimistic movie but it’s [sic] point, about all this fraud and hopelessness around us is both well-presented and well-taken."[11]
The film was shown at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition.[12] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a rating of 63% from 35 reviews. The consensus summarizes: "Although its source material's themes are sometimes beyond The Day of the Locust's grasp, this is a consistently watchable adaptation that gains its own emotional power."[13]
Accolades
Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Award | Best Actor in a Supporting Role
|
Burgess Meredith | Nominated | [14] |
Best Cinematography | Conrad L. Hall | Nominated | ||
British Academy Film Awards | Best Costume Design | Ann Roth | Won | [15] |
Best Supporting Actor
|
Burgess Meredith | Nominated | ||
Best Art Direction
|
Richard Macdonald | Nominated | ||
Golden Globe Award | Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama | Karen Black | Nominated | [16] |
Best Supporting Actor
|
Burgess Meredith | Nominated |
See also
References
- ^ Booker 2007, p. 120.
- ^ a b Booker 2007, p. 121.
- ComingSoon.net. Archived from the originalon August 21, 2019.
- ^ Holub, Kathy (1975-07-22). "Squandering A Fortune". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- ^ Lewis, Dan (October 24, 1976). "Dramamine dramas make a splash". The Record. Hackensack, New Jersey. p. B-26 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Canby, Vincent (May 8, 1975). "'Day of Locust' Turns Dross Into Gold". The New York Times. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019.
- ^ Cocks, Jay (May 7, 1975). "Cinema: The 8th Plague". Time. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (May 23, 1975). "The Day of the Locust". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on August 12, 2014.
- ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan. "The Day of the Locust". Chicago Reader. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013.
- ^ "The Day of the Locust". Channel 4. Archived from the original on December 9, 2004.
- ^ Ferrara, Greg (27 February 2012). "Too Big to Fail and yet…". TCM. Archived from the original on 2012-02-27. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Day of the Locust". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
- ^ "The Day of the Locust". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ^ "Oscars Database Search: The Day of the Locust". Academy Awards. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019.
- ^ "Film in 1976". British Academy Film Awards. British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Archived from the original on April 29, 2014.
- ^ "Day of the Locust, The". Golden Globe Awards. Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019.
Sources
- Booker, M. Keith (2007). From Box Office to Ballot Box: The American Political Film. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-99122-7.
- Tibbetts, John C., and James M. Welsh, eds. The Encyclopedia of Novels Into Film (2nd ed. 2005) pp 91–93.