Overview
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Release Date:
11 August 1973 (USA)
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Tagline:
...is back! [1978 Re-release]
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Plot:
A couple of high school grads spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
full summary |
full synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for 5 Oscars.
Another 7 wins
&
5 nominations
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User Comments:
Let's be the way we are not going to be anymore for just one more night!!
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Crew verified as complete
Additional Details
Runtime:
110 min | 112 min (re-release) (1978)
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Filming was beset by a series of misfortunes and disasters. The day before filming was due to start a key member of the crew was arrested for growing marijuana. On the first night of shooting it took so long to get the cameras mounted onto the cars that filming didn't get started until 2 a.m., putting the crew half a night behind schedule before they'd even started. Most of the outdoor footage was to be shot in San Rafael. After the first night of shooting the city revoked the crew's filming permit due to complaints from a bar owner that their blocking off of the main street was costing him business. Filming proceeded in San Rafael for three more nights, then moved to Petaluma, 20 miles away. On the second night of shooting a fire in a nearby restaurant brought fire trucks into the area, their sirens and the resulting traffic jam preventing any filming. During the filming of Milner's deuce coupe, assistant cameraman
Barney Colangelo slipped off the trailer of the camera truck and was run over, suffering minor injuries.
Paul Le Mat also ended up being rushed to hospital after suffering an allergic reaction to the walnuts in the Waldorf salad he had at dinner. Another night LeMat threw
Richard Dreyfuss into a swimming pool, gashing his forehead on the day before he was due to have his close-ups filmed. Dreyfuss also had wardrobe complaints - he refused to wear the loud Bermuda shorts and shirt Lucas had chosen for his character. During the filming of the drag race between Milner (LeMat) and Falfa (
Harrison Ford), the car's axle broke and was replaced. On the second try, the replacement axle broke. On the next try the car failed to veer off the road as planned, narrowly missing two cameramen lying on the road.
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Goofs:
Anachronisms: When Milner has a run-in with Officer Holstein, the
Wolfman Jack montage on the radio contains a clip from the song "Grazing In The Grass" by the Friends of Distinction, released in 1969.
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Quotes:
[
first lines]
Terry Fields:
Hey, what do you say, Curt? Last night in town - you guys gonna have a little bash before you leave?
Steve Bolander:
The Moose have been looking for you all day.
[
hands check to Curt]
Steve Bolander:
They got worried - thought you were trying to avoid them or something.
Terry Fields:
What is it? What do ya got?
Curt Henderson:
Oh, great.
Terry Fields:
That's $2000 man! $2000!
Steve Bolander:
Mr. Jennings gave it to me to give to you. He says he's sorry it's so late, but it's the first scholarship the Moose Lodge has given out. And he, uh, says they're all very proud of you back at the lodge.
Curt Henderson:
Cute. Why don't you hold it for me for awhile?
[
...]
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Soundtrack:
You're Sixteen
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FAQ
What does Curt yell as they drive past the police car?
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American Graffiti was a compilation of pop culture pique, a harbinger of political changes, and the birth of an era that explodes the "Leave it to Beaver America" simply by saying farewell to it!!!...Set in a small town in Southern California, with a bunch of people who's existence in 1962 means the 13th and final year of the fifties, it correlates a cosmic awareness with an innocent societal disagreement.... People are happy, but not happy enough to want to stay the same.... The constant bond throughout the film is Wolfman Jack, the "supercool" disc jockey who creates a thousand different images of himself just by virtue of what he says on the radio...He is illuminating as well as socially influential to a bunch of naive teenagers....The music in this movie is extremely entertaining, as it signifies the end of an Eisenhower style Utopia.. The couples that are paired off in this movie homogenize the attitudes and aspirations of these precocious 1962 teenagers, who are on the verge of growing up!! All of the characters in this film have an imperviousness to the objections related to a perceived totalitarianism brought on in the sixties, not just because the radical aspect of the decade has yet to be, but also, because locking horns with the authority figures is not second nature to them ...(Even Big John Milner)... The bevy of Radicalism which besieges our nation over the remainder of this decade, (the 1960's) created a metamorphosis in social behavior that would change all Americans, even the people living in the town of Graffit, California!!! This movie superbly exemplifies the phrase "The calm before the storm" It gives the entire movie audience a crystal ball concept analysis report that sparks a bittersweet realization and empathy for everyone who plays a significant role in this George Lucas masterpiece!! Director George Lucas has never been better...The cast is sensational!!and the film's unassuming demeanor surprisingly captures the honor of being one of America's greatest films on record!!! Five stars!! No question!!