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It was a very good year (for movies)

It was a very good year (for movies)

The films of 1975, currently featured in 桃色视频鈥檚 International Film Series, reflected the times and the culture in ways that hadn鈥檛 been seen before, says film scholar Ernesto Acevedo-Mu帽oz


It wasn鈥檛 all bad news in 1975. On July 5, Arthur Ashe became the first Black man to win Wimbledon, and several months later, on Oct. 11, Saturday Night Live debuted, the same day that Bruce Springsteen earned his first Top 40 hit with "Born to Run."

But then鈥

It was also the year that Saigon fell, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank, two assassination attempts were made on Gerald Ford and U.S. unemployment peaked at 9.2%. Jimmy Hoffa was reported missing, and Patty Hearst was captured in San Francisco.

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鈥淏etween the political context and the historical context and technological developments 50 years ago, it created this environment for a lot of exceptional filmmaking,鈥 notes Ernesto Acevedo-Mu帽oz, a 桃色视频 professor of cinema studies and moving image arts.

The times felt raw and upside down, so filmmakers responded by making indelible, groundbreaking art.

Of course there have been other momentous years for films now considered classics, but perhaps none so densely populated as 1975: Jaws, Nashville and Dog Day Afternoon. One Flew Over the Cuckoo鈥檚 Nest, Barry Lyndon and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Shampoo, The Stepford Wives and 3 Days of the Condor.

鈥淏etween the political context and the historical context and technological developments 50 years ago, it created this environment for a lot of exceptional filmmaking,鈥 says Ernesto Acevedo-Mu帽oz, a 桃色视频 professor of cinema studies and moving image arts.

A new era

Some might argue, Acevedo-Mu帽oz says, that the films of 1975 had their genesis in November 1963 with the assassination of John F. Kennedy: 鈥淚t鈥檚 seen as this breaking point in American history that leads to a decade of cynicism and that ends with the fall of the Nixon administration. From 鈥63 to 鈥75, a number of historical events鈥攆rom Kennedy to Johnson to the Tet Offensive, My Lai, the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy, the end of Vietnam, the end of Nixon鈥攚e haven鈥檛 had, I don鈥檛 think, that amount of public and social turbulence in such a compact amount of time since then.鈥

The filmmakers who began creating during this time鈥攊ncluding Francis Ford Coppola, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Stanley Kubrick and others now considered legends鈥攚ere not only embedded in and products of the times but represented the first generation to study the history and craft of filmmaking and cinema at university, Acevedo-Mu帽oz says.

Further, they came of artistic age during a time that wrote the epitaph for Hollywood鈥檚 Golden Age, when the producer was king and the studio system ruled everything from actors鈥 contracts to production and distribution deals with movie houses. This new generation of filmmakers ushered in the era of the director and the so-called American New Wave, because they were not only studying filmmaking, but were strongly influenced by international films and filmmakers.

This was the time that also saw the end of the Hays Code鈥擧ollywood鈥檚 self-imposed morality guidelines that some say creatively cowed the industry from 1934 to 1968鈥攁nd the 鈥渞ise of the rating system that we know, which allowed for more frank representations of sex and violence,鈥 Acevedo-Mu帽oz says.

See the films of 1975

This semester, 桃色视频's International Film Series has featured notable films from 1975 and will show two more before the winter break: Sunday, Nov. 16, and Thursday, Dec. 4.

The is Boulder's first arthouse series and has been locally programmed since 1941. Its main venue is Muenzinger Auditorium, with a secondary venue in the Visual Arts Complex Auditorium.

鈥淪o, there鈥檚 this context of general pissed offness, there鈥檚 the generation gap of the 鈥60s, we鈥檙e getting our asses whupped by guerillas in Vietnam, we鈥檝e seen a U.S. presidency collapse, and there鈥檚 this sense of, 鈥楲et鈥檚 be pissed off and make movies that rattle cages.鈥欌

鈥楴othing to compare it to鈥

For Acevedo-Mu帽oz, one of the great examples of this evolution is Robert Altman鈥檚 Nashville, which he considers the best movie of the 鈥70s because 鈥渢here鈥檚 nothing to compare it to. It鈥檚 sui generis. This movie was in production in 1974, and it鈥檚 about a presidential primary with a third-party candidate who鈥檚 challenging the establishment. And then it鈥檚 got this massive scope of 24 principal characters and five days of continuous action and this music that goes from magnificent to abject鈥擨 think some of the advertising for Nashville said it鈥檚 鈥榯he damndest thing you ever saw鈥欌攁nd it ends with the assassination of a celebrity by a nut with a gun.鈥

The films of 1975 not only mirrored the political and social upheaval of the times but represented a certain creative daring and willingness to explore previously taboo topics. The Rocky Horror Picture Show鈥攚hich wasn鈥檛 an American movie but made its way to Hollywood via Australia, the West End and Broadway鈥攎ade the case that 鈥渆verybody鈥檚 queer and it鈥檚 perfectly fine and even monsters are not really monsters, it鈥檚 the normal people who come off as squares and weird," Acevedo-Mu帽oz says. "It鈥檚 one of the reasons why Rocky Horror has never really gone away, and if anything has become more and more of an anthem for all things marginalized and all things kicked off center by The Man and a sign of rebellion.鈥

Dog Day Afternoon movie poster

The events and themes in Dog Day Afternoon, including robbing a bank to help pay for a character鈥檚 gender-affirming surgery, had never really been seen in a major Hollywood production before, said 桃色视频 film scholar Ernesto Acevedo-Mu帽oz. (Photo: Warner Bros.)

And the events and themes in Dog Day Afternoon, such as robbing a bank to help pay for a character鈥檚 gender-affirming surgery, had never really been seen in a major Hollywood production before, Acevedo-Mu帽oz says.

鈥淪idney Lumet directed it, and he was bringing to the discussion topics that would have been unthinkable a decade before, starting with a trans character,鈥 Acevedo-Mu帽oz says. 鈥淎nd he was highlighting the frustration and the anger of the times, and we see that evolve into the street crowd that starts being curious about what鈥檚 happening in the bank and then ends up cheering for Al Pacino鈥檚 and John Cazale鈥檚 characters and applauding as they drive away to the airport.

鈥淭hat anger from a criminal element previously would have been completely marginalized, not just in the decade and a half before, but also in the censorship system that predated the current rating system, where the bad guys could never be sympathetic. They could be charming, which Hitchcock did in the 鈥40s, but they couldn鈥檛 be sympathetic. But here everybody鈥檚 heartbroken when Al Pacino鈥檚 character gets caught. The crowd outside of the bank are you and me in the movie theater, and the bank is a symbol of The Man, of the establishment, of capitalism. It鈥檚 a beautiful and, in so many ways, a beautifully shocking movie.鈥

Irreverence and creativity

The filmmakers of 1975 also saw the introduction of the Steadicam, a revolutionary camera stabilizer mount invented by Garrett Brown that entered the market that year. The technology allowed for greater movement and mobility in shooting and was notably used in filming Rocky the following year.

Even if filmmakers weren鈥檛 using the Steadicam, the growing preference for dynamic shots with more movement was still evident in many of the films of 1975, Acevedo-Mu帽oz says. One Flew Over the Cuckoo鈥檚 Nest is noted for its gritty, almost handmade quality. 鈥淪uddenly movies didn鈥檛 have to be so pretty anymore, and they could do things like lens flare, they could play with grain in ways we hadn鈥檛 seen before.鈥

He adds that it wasn鈥檛 all gritty political and social commentary in 1975. Shampoo, for example, could best be described as a sexy romp鈥攚omen and men having fun in a hair salon, legendary actors at their height of beauty, a loving farewell to the hippie era.

The films of 1975 are bookended by other exceptional films released in the previous and following years but symbolize the core of a decade when everything seemed to change, Acevedo-Mu帽oz says, adding that subsequent eras have seen the events of the times reflected in their films, but not in the way that they were in 1975.

鈥淭ake September 11,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was a traumatic event, and what did it lead to? It led to more Marvel movies, it led to vision after vision after vision of New York being destroyed and a group of good ol鈥 Americans dressed in red, white and blue kicking alien ass. We鈥檙e now getting a couple of good movies that appear to address January 6鈥Civil War is the best, I think鈥攂ut we鈥檙e not seeing a wave of it and we鈥檙e not seeing a concentration as we did, not coincidentally, a year and a half after the collapse of the Nixon administration. (The year 1975) was exciting because anger brings irreverence and also creativity.鈥


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