Movie review: The Last Picture Show
Reviewed by Gerti
I
stumbled upon this 1971 movie while watching a TV segment on Cloris
Leachman, an actress with a reputation for comedy. She is far from a
comic figure in this black and white classic movie by director Peter
Bogdanovich. Rather, she is the wife of a high school coach with no
time for her who falls into an affair with a sympathetic teenaged
boy, played by the movie’s protagonist, Sonny, played by Tim
Bottoms.
The
film centers around his life in a small Texas town called Anarene
during that time of his life, senior year in high school, where he’s
seemingly surrounded by women. He’s in love with a fellow senior
named Jacy, played with innocent allure by young Cybill Shepherd in
her first acting role. Other now famous actors play important parts
in the movie too, including Jeff Bridges, who plays Sonny’s best
friend (and Jacy’s first boyfriend), Duane. Also sharing screen
time are Ellen Bustyn, as Jacy’s mom, a lady who’s made some bad
life choices, and Randy Quaid, a rich kid who takes Jacy to a nude
swimming party. This film is very hot-blooded, and is not afraid to
show the bodies and desires of young American teenagers.
Sonny
dumps his girlfriend on their one-year anniversary because he’s
just not that into her, and he gets advice from the lady at the local
diner, sultry Guinevieve. She says his old gal wasn’t nearly nice
enough for him, but she also tries to get Sonny to forget Jacy,
saying she’s nothing but trouble. G is certainly spot-on in her
assessment of the teenaged beauty, as Jacy sure brings trouble to
Duane. She wants him to take her virginity, but when he is unable to
perform, she ends up on a pool table with one of her mother’s stud
muffins, an oil man named Abilene. Her career as a heart-breaker is
well on its way. Jacy gets jealous when she learns that Sonny is
satisfying middle-aged Ruth Popper, the coach’s wife, and so she
seduces him after Duane leaves town.
Sonny
cruelly dumps Mrs. Popper for Jacy without a word to let her know its
over. Jacy agrees to marry him after he and Duane have a public
fight, but the cops catch them and the marriage is annulled before
the honeymoon. The end of the movie shows a repentant Sonny going
back to Mrs. Popper’s, despite her anger at his betrayal. His
doe-eyed goodness wins her back, for after all, what other happiness
has she had? The documentary after the movie says her husband is gay,
but I didn’t get that sense from the film.
Larry
McMurtry wrote the original book and worked on the script with the
director, but Bogdanovich wrote the scenes that didn’t work for me.
Still, the black and white format is gorgeous and the story is
equally sharp and stunning in its realism. It was filmed in Archer
City, where McMurtry grew up, so the sets (the streets of town) are
authentically his vision. This movie shouldn’t be seen by kids or
even late teens, as there is a lot of ‘70s style nudity, but the
story will be appreciated by older adults who want to remember young
romance and the often unpleasant lessons of growing up.