Valley Redux

Paul Thomas Anderson has consistently been one of the more interesting filmmakers in the past 25+ years, both writing and directing his films. After a strong feature debut with the gambling-themed Hard Eight, he had a major hit with Boogie Nights, looking at the porn industry, based in the San Fernando Valley where Anderson grew up, through the 70s into the 80s. Next, he did Magnolia, also set in LA, that followed multiple stories intersecting in unexpected ways. It gave Tom Cruise one of the best roles of his career. After a strong character study with Punch Drunk Love, with the performance by Adam Sandler that he likely wants to be remembered for, Anderson expanded his vision. He adapted Upton Sinclair 1920’s novel “Oil!” which told of the early years of the American oil industry, and made There Will Be Blood, getting Daniel Day-Lewis his second Oscar. His next film was The Master, a fictionalized look at the early days of Scientology, and he then returned to LA for an adaption of Thomas Pynchon’s mystery Inherent Vice before reunited with Day-Lewis for Phantom Thread, set in 1950’s London.

Along with his feature films, Anderson has done dozens of music videos, starting with Michael Penn (brother of Sean), then working with Fiona Apple, Aimee Mann, and Radiohead. In 2017, he directed his first video for the sister group Haim, who also hail from the San Fernando Valley. He’s now done ten of their videos. Anderson had a special contact with Haim, in that their mother was one of Anderson’s teachers when he was in school.

Now he’s returned to the Valley of the 1970s with Licorice Pizza. If you’re wondering about the name, it’s slang for long play vinyl records (LPs for short) and was the name of a record store in the Valley where a scene from Fast Times at Ridgemont High was filmed, a movie that influenced Anderson.

Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman) is the epitome of the American entrepreneur even before he can drive a car. While waiting to have his school portrait taken, he begins hitting on one of the assistants, Alana Kane (Alana Haim), inviting her out for dinner. Alana knows she’s the proverbial older woman – she’s 25 to Gary’s 15 – but she finds herself intrigue by him and does join him for dinner at the classic valley restaurant Tail O’ The Cock, where Gary’s on a first-name basis with the maître ‘d. When Alana asks how he can afford the evening, Gary explains he was a child actor but now runs a publicity firm which actually employs his mother.

From there, the story twists and turns with Gary and Alana essentially bound together even as they deny they have a relationship. When Gary’s mother Anita (Mary Elizabeth Ellis) is unable to chaperon Gary to a reunion in New York City of the cast for one of his movies, Alana steps in, and ends up becoming interested in one of Gary’s older co-stars, though their nascent relationship doesn’t survive a disastrous supper with Alana’s family. Gary discovers waterbeds and opens his own store, with Alana doing sales while wearing a bikini. Alana, at Gary’s urging, tries to break into the movie business. It leads to a bizarre evening at the Tail O’ The Cock with a Hollywood legend (played by Sean Penn), and even weirder motorcycle stunt. Gary’s waterbed business is ruined by the Arab Oil Embargo, but he does do one final installation for Hollywood producer Jon Peters (Bradley Cooper). And that’s not even all of their misadventures.

The crazy thing is that many of the stories are based on real life. The original inspiration for Anderson was walking past a school and seeing a student try to chat up an older woman. Most of the incidents are based on stories told Anderson by producer and actor Gary Goetzmann, who was a child actor and had a waterbed business while still a teen, along with other things portrayed in the movie. Goetzman is mostly known today for co-founding with Tom Hanks the production company Playtone. He’s produced or executive produced some of the best TV and movies in the last 30 years, including “Band of Brothers,” “The Pacific,” Silence of the Lambs, Philadelphia, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, and many, many more. The movie Alana reads for was an early Clint Eastwood film called Breezy, that starred William Holden and Kay Lenz; Anderson uses the actual script for the scene.

Of particular fun is that Anderson filled the cast with friends and relatives, and a large number of parents or progeny of famous people in the film business. There’s a couple of Spielberg’s daughters in the film, Tim Conway’s son, and the man who sells Gary on the idea of waterbeds is played by Leonardo DiCaprio’s father. One interesting casting is Cooper as Peters. Anderson had talked to Peters about having him be a character in the film, since Goetzmann had actually installed a waterbed for the producer. Bradley Cooper had wanted to work with Anderson for years, but having him play Peters highlights a connection between the two men. Cooper’s hit version of A Star Is Born counted as a remake of previous films, including the Barbara Streisand/Kris Kristopherson version from the 1970s. Peters had produced that film and owned the rights, so he was given a producer credit on Cooper’s film, though Cooper has said Peters had no actual involvement in the new version.

The most important casting, though, was Cooper Hoffman and Alana Haim. Cooper is the son of Philip Seymour Hoffman, who was close friends with Anderson and appeared in several of his movies. Cooper had no interest in acting until Anderson asked him to do the role of Gary, but he captures the character with all the panache his father demonstrated in his acting career. He’s charming and precocious, as well as frustrating and infuriating – in other words, real. Just as important is Alana Haim, the youngest of the Haim sisters, in her acting debut. She’s totally at ease and natural in front of the camera, and you believe her as the character. One moment that particularly stands out is when she has to pilot an out-of-gas delivery truck backwards down from Peters’ house in the Hollywood Hills. She makes it down safely, but then you see her sitting on the curb, shaking from the rush of adrenalin. Not a word is spoken, but it’s a powerful moment. (It also helps that Anderson cast her sisters and their mother and father as Alana’s family in the film. Strangely enough, Alana had met Cooper when he was 13, when the sisters went over to Anderson’s house while Philip Seymour Hoffman was there as well, and they ended up essentially babysitting Cooper.)

While it was nominated for three Oscars (Best Picture, Director, and Original Screenplay), Licorice Pizza was shut out at the recent event. You can’t fault the Academy voters for picking CODA, Jane Campion, and Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast, each of which was deserving. But I hope with streaming and home video more people will discover the delights of this slice of clear-eyed 1970s nostalgia that ends up having a huge heart for its characters. It will stick with you, like an earworm from a particularly tasty piece of licorice pizza.

The 10 Best Mystery Movies of the 1970s

While the classic detective was pretty much absent from movie screens during the 1960’s, he made a major comeback in the 1970s.  “He” was the operative word; V.I. Warshawski and Kinsey Millhone had yet to break into the “boy’s only” world of detective novels, and movies have lagged behind on that score.  Here are my choices for the best mystery movies of the 1970s, in no particular order:

Chinatown (1974)

The hard-boiled 1930s private detective roared back into the movies in Roman Polanski’s stylish take on film noir.  Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson) pokes his nose into a murder and almost gets it cut off, even as he falls for the victim’s widow (Faye Dunaway).  With a script by Robert Towne and haunting theme music by Jerry Goldsmith, the film was nominated for 11 Oscars, though only Towne won.

The Last Of Sheila (1973)

A year after losing his wife Sheila to a hit and run driver, Clinton Green (James Coburn) invites a group of friends (Richard Benjamin, Dyan Cannon, Ian McShane, James Mason, Joan Hacket and Raquel Welch) onto his yacht for a scavenger hunt-style mystery game that soon turns deadly.  The script was written by the unlikely pair of Anthony Perkins and Stephen Sondheim and was directed by Herbert Ross (The Goodbye Girl, Footloose, Steel Magnolias).

The Conversation (1974)

In between doing the first two Godfather pictures, Francis Ford Coppola wrote and directed this classic.  Gene Hackman plays Harry Caul, a surveillance expert who can bug any conversation and record it.  In the course of an assignment, he begins to suspect the couple he’s watching has been targeted for murder.  It’s an exercise in paranoia, but as the phrase says, “Just because you’re paranoid, it doesn’t mean everyone isn’t out to get you.”

Dirty Harry (1971)

San Francisco Homicide Inspector Harry Callahan became a pop culture icon the first time he asked a punk if he felt lucky.  Don Siegel’s tight procedural movie, loosely based on the still-unsolved Zodiac killer case, has Harry not only trying to stop a killer but having to battle with the Mayor, the Police Chief, and the D.A. who want to rein him in.  All the exterior filming was done on location, with the exception of the bank robbery sequence.

Murder on the Orient Express (1974)

Agatha Christie got the all-star treatment in Sidney Lumet’s version of this Hercule Poirot mystery.  A man is discovered murdered on the snowbound train of the title and Poirot is called upon to investigate.  Albert Finney was the best Poirot on film (though David Suchet owns the role on television), and the movie won Ingrid Bergman the last of her three Oscars.  It also launched a series of Christie adaptations in the 70’s and 80’s, but Murder on the Orient Express was the first and the best.

Frenzy (1972)

For the first time in decades, Alfred Hitchcock returned to England to film this movie, and he recovered some of his 1930’s mojo.  London is terrorized by a serial killer who strangles women with neckties.  Suspicion falls on Richard Blaney (Jon Finch) when his estranged wife becomes one of the victims.  As the noose closes around Blaney, Chief Inspector Oxford (Alec McGowan) begins to doubt they’re chasing the right man.  While it’s not in the same class as his movies in the 1950s (North By Northwest, Dial M for Murder, Vertigo), this film was the last flicker of brilliance from a director whose name has come to define mystery and suspense on film.

The Late Show (1977)

Robert Benton (Kramer vs. Kramer, Places in the Heart) wrote and directed this private eye movie that teamed Art Carney and Lilly Tomlin.  Carney plays a semi-retired P.I. who, with the help of a quirky client (Tomlin), investigates the murder of his partner.  Benton manages to blend in comedy while keeping the tension and mystery high.  Tomlin was nominated for an Oscar for her role, and the film won an Edgar award as the best film mystery of the year.

The French Connection (1972)

William Friedkin’s gritty police procedural, based on an actual NYPD case, won 5 Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Director.  It also featured one of the best car chases on film, rivaling Bullitt.  Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider play cops who stumble onto a major heroin smuggler.  The cops who were actually involved in the case, Eddie Egan and Sonny Grasso, appeared in the movie and then made the move from New York to Hollywood.  Egan stayed on the acting side, playing cops in films and on TV series, while Grasso became a producer of TV movies and series, usually with a crime theme.

Night Moves (1975)

This is the third Gene Hackman movie on this list.  He reunites with his director from Bonnie and Clyde, Arthur Penn, to play Harry Moseby, a former football player turned private detective who’s hired by an aging Hollywood actress to find her runaway granddaughter (Melanie Griffith in her first movie role).  Unusual for a movie, Harry is oblivious to a deeper mystery swirling around him until near the end of the film, and doesn’t realize the person who’s behind it all until a final, shattering reveal in almost the last shot.

Farewell My Lovely (1975)

It’s rare when the remake of a classic can match the original.  Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe novel was filmed as Murder My Sweet in 1944, with Dick Powell as the iconic detective.  (This was two years before Humphrey Bogart played the role in The Big Sleep.)  The 1975 version had Robert Mitchum as Marlowe, following a missing person case into a web of lies, blackmail and murder.  The movie actually stays truer to the source by including the seamier parts of Chandler’s story that couldn’t make it past the Production Code in 1944.  Strangely enough, there is a third, earlier version of the story; the plot was used in the 1942 B picture The Falcon Takes Over starring George Sanders.