New Hollywood II 2008 / The Last Detail / USA 1973
A rebellious comedy drama from the director of Harold and Maude, starring Jack Nicholson in one of the lead roles. A pair of cynical navy officers is tasked with escorting a condemned sailor to a remote prison. The innocent youngster, however, arouses the sympathy of the navy lifers, and the journey through several states turns into a party full of initiatory ordeals.
Buddusky and Mulhall, two cynical NCOs in the American navy, are ordered to escort sailor Meadows to prison after he is sentenced to eight years for stealing 40 dollars from the commander’s wife’s charity fund. The escort sets out on its journey and, as the miles mount up, the hardened navy lifers’ growing affection for the unseasoned youth only indicates that his road to the slammer is going to be a winding one, full of initiatory ordeals. Behind this subversive drama with its elements of comedy are three icons of New Hollywood – director Hal Ashby, screenwriter Robert Towne (Chinatown) and Jack Nicholson, who turned down an offer to play Johnny Hooker in The Sting for the role of tough guy Buddusky. The sympathy for outsiders and social outcasts typical of Ashby is enhanced in The Last Detail by the motif of revolt against the establishment, which resonated strongly in the reality of Nixon’s America. Columbia Studio initially refused to distribute Ashby’s film, however, they were compelled to a change of heart after the response to Nicholson’s performance in Cannes. This was followed by three Oscar nominations, among others for Randy Quaid’s outstanding performance in the role of Meadows.
103 min / Color, 35 mm
Director Hal Ashby
/ Screenplay Robert Towne podle románu / based on a novel by Darryl Ponicsan
/ Dir. of Photography Michael Chapman
/ Music Johnny Mandel
/ Editor Robert C. Jones
/ Producer Gerald Ayres
/ Production Columbia Pictures
/ Cast Jack Nicholson, Randy Quaid, Otis Young, Carol Kane
/ Contact Hollywood Classics
Hal Ashby (b. 1929, Ogden – 1988, Malibu) first won recognition as an editor. He won an Oscar for his work on Norman Jewison’s film In the Heat of the Night (1968). Thanks to Jewison, he debuted with the social comedy The Landlord in 1970. He also directed the black comedy Harold and Maude (1971), the psychological drama The Last Detail (1973), the comedy Shampoo (1975), a biography of Woody Guthrie Bound for Glory (1976), the satirical Being There (1979), and also the comedies Lookin’ to Get Out (1982) and The Slugger’s Wife (1985). His direction of Coming Home (1978), about the homecoming of a Vietnam War veteran, brought him his third Oscar nomination.
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