American Graffiti (1973)
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
American Graffiti (1973)
Information
Released Year: 1973
Runtime: 110 minutes
Directors: George Lucas
Casts: Ron Howard, Harrison Ford, Manuel Padilla Jr., Paul Le Mat, Richard Dreyfuss, Charles Martin Smith, Scott Beach, Cindy Williams, Candy Clark, Mackenzie Phillips, Wolfman Jack, Bo Hopkins, Beau Gentry, Kathleen Quinlan, Suzanne Somers, John Brent, Kay Lenz, Debralee Scott, Terence McGovern, Lynne Marie Stewart, Jana Bellan, Jim Bohan, Susan Richardson, Jody Carlson, Joe Miksak, Al Nalbandian
IMDB: American Graffiti (1973)
Storyline
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
Trailer
Reviews
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Chicago Sun-Times -
On the surface, Lucas has made a film that seems almost artless; his teenagers cruise Main Street and stop at Mel’s Drive-In and listen to Wolfman Jack on the radio and neck and lay rubber and almost convince themselves their moment will last forever. But the film’s buried structure shows an innocence in the process of being lost, and as its symbol Lucas provides the elusive blonde in the white Thunderbird -- the vision of beauty always glimpsed at the next intersection, the end of the next street.
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The Hollywood Reporter -
The ingeniously structured screenplay by Katz, Huyck and Lucas offers up a load of wonderful characters who whirl about in ducktail haircuts and shirtwaist dresses, lost in the obscenity of American culture. Thanks to some of the most spirited, daffy dialogue since Lubitsch, their sweetness is deliriously funny. No matter how high the dramatic stakes become, the movie never loses its sense of humor, and although it has a lot to say, it's gloriously free of pretensions.
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The New York Times -
American Graffiti exists not so much in its individual stories as in its orchestration of many stories, its sense of time and place. Although it is full of the material of fashionable nostalgia, it never exploits nostalgia. In its feeling for movement and music and the vitality of the night—and even in its vision in white—it is oddly closer to some early Fellini than to the recent American past of, say, The Last Picture Show or Summer of '42.
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Variety -
Of all the youth-themed nostalgia films in the past couple of years, George Lucas’ American Graffiti is among the very best to date. Set in 1962 but reflecting the culmination of the 1950s, the film is a most vivid recall of teenage attitudes and mores, told with outstanding empathy and compassion through an exceptionally talented cast of relatively new players.
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The Dissolve -
It isn’t simply a nostalgic movie, it’s a nostalgic movie about nostalgia. Lucas could have set the film in 1959, when Steve, Curt, and John were still in high school and still cruising night after endless night. Instead, Graffiti begins right as the fun is about to end, and gives its characters just enough self-awareness to recognize that this is last call at the party. George Lucas isn’t the only one mourning for this magical lost era; the characters onscreen mourn right along with him.
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Related Movies
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
A couple of high school graduates spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.