It is not only possible to be nostalgic for a time one never
experienced, it is commonplace. I’ve mentioned my own nostalgia for certain
aspects of 1940s
pop culture, though of course not for the decade’s brutal
conflict. The culturally pivotal 1960s have great power to stir nostalgia not
only from those who remember the decade but from members of the majority who
don’t. For example, writer/director Drew Goddard, born in 1975, evokes 1969
with uncanny precision in his 2018 movie Bad
Times at the El Royale. Quentin Tarantino, born 1963, also chose 1969 for
his Once upon a Time in Hollywood,
currently in theaters. I caught it last Friday. I turned 17 in 1969, by the
way, which no doubt gives me a different perspective on the era than younger
folk – Drew Goddard included.
As the title suggests, Quentin Tarantino has directed a
fairy tale of sorts in Once upon a Time
in Hollywood, albeit of the bloody Grimm variety rather than a sanitized Disneyesque
version. He has lovingly and humorously portrayed 1960s Hollywood and its
denizens in a way that someone who didn’t see them first-hand might regard as
parody. It really isn’t. Brief portrayals of Steve McQueen, Bruce Lee, Joey
Heatherton (unnamed, but that is who it has to be), and others intersperse the
movie. However, when the ‘60s were good they were very
very good, but when they were bad they were horrid. (Longfellow’s poem is
better known slightly misquoted for some reason, so I’ll stick with the pattern
of the misquote.) The horrid aspect remains very much a part of the American
psyche and mythology, and it is central to the movie. It is a
Tarantino movie after all.
Leonardo DiCaprio plays Rick Dalton, a former TV Western
lead who now mostly plays one-off parts as the heavy in TV shows such as Mannix and Bonanza. Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) is his stunt double and best
friend, who, as Booth narrates, is “more than a brother and a little less than
a wife.” Dalton is so concerned about being past his prime that after playing a
scene (as the heavy) in a movie Western, he is sincerely and deeply moved by validation
from an 8-year-old girl (an “actor” not an “actress,” she tells us) who praises
his acting. He mulls an offer to star in spaghetti Westerns. Dalton’s house is located
on Cielo Drive neighboring one rented by Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate. (A 50th
anniversary is coming up next week on August 8.) There is a truly menacing
scene as Booth gives a teenage girl a ride back to the Spahn Ranch where Charlie
Manson and his followers have taken up residence. A well-cast Margot Robbie plays
Sharon Tate, who is on her way up the hill that Dalton has crested. She is
still excited enough to see her own name on a marquee that she spontaneously
walks into a movie theater to watch herself in a showing of The Wrecking Crew; she enjoys laughs
from the audience at her comic turns on screen.
It might be hard to imagine calling anything with these
elements a comedy, but to a large degree it is. The soundtrack is a well-selected
mix of ‘60s numbers. There is a remarkable cast in minor roles including Al
Pacino, Bruce Dern, and Dakota Fanning. The movie is as un-PC as the decade
itself.
This is the 9th Tarantino movie. Hardly anyone is
likely to score it in the top three. Yet, it is fun and definitely
re-watchable. This is no Pulp Fiction,
but thumbs solidly up.
Good review, Richard. I'll probably wait for the DVD, however. :)
ReplyDeleteIt's not a typical Tarantino movie: not much blood and guts until the last act. That's either an advantage or disadvantage depending on taste.
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