Showing posts with label Duel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Duel. Show all posts

Monday, 11 April 2011

A-Z #68: Duel

You can pick up hundreds of DVDs for a round-pound each - it doesn't matter. It's never about quantity, it's about quality. A-Z is my way of going through my collection, from A-Z, and understanding why I own the films ... or you can tell me why I should sell 'em

#68 - Duel 

Why did I buy it?

This is where things get interesting. This isn't mine. This is Sarah's. (See, I told you that - outside of Bridget Jones and Dreamgirls the girl has increidble taste!). Sarah has some vivid memories of watching this and I has to always endure the shame of Sarah reacting appalled by the fact that I haven't seen Duel. It was only a matter of time before she purchased the film - and I was more than happy to sit down for a viewing.

Why do I still own it?

During my Spielberg-a-thon a while back this was inevitably the start. I got as far as 1941, and I made the first decision to sell 1941 as it was so ... unfunny. Especially considering it is a comedy. At any rate, Duel is classic Spielberg. You think of the simplicity of Jaws it traces back to Duel. It is an example of how a filmmaker, alone, is the guy who builds up the tension and the fear. In no other circumstance are you afraid of a truck ... except here. Even more interesting is the author of the story - Richard Matheson of I Am Legend. Again, I Am Legend is a simple set-up that, from the position of one man, the story expands to become more fearful and discomforting. A gripping story that forces you to root for the lead and imagine what you would do in such a situation.
Large Association of Movie Blogs

Monday, 9 August 2010

The Complete Collection: Steven Spielberg (Part 1)


"A lot of the films I've made probably could have worked just as well 50 years ago, and that's just because I have a lot of old-fashion values." - Steven Spielberg

As heard recently on the podcast, I have attempted to fill in all the blanks of my Steven-Spielberg-knowledge and I am now, pretty much, there. Its been a long haul and, initially, I attempted to watch all the films chronologically and failed. I got as far as E.T. and, having seen E.T. so many times, I simply stalled and did not move on.

Spielberg, in the first instance, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio to a Jewish family. Its crazy to think that even, at a very young age, Spielberg was making 8mm films and even charged visitors to the family home whilst his sister made popcorn. A business-man as much as a filmmaker even then! At age 13, he won an award for a forty-minute short film and then at age 16, he made his first feature (Can you believe it? 16 years old!), 140-minute film called Firelight (1964). His parents divorced at a young-age - something that influences his work - and, following this, he moved to California with his Dad.

It seems ridiculous, but Spielberg was unsuccessful with getting onto a course at USC, but finally managed to get on a course at California State University. This is where it all began - as Spielberg created a 24-minute short Amblin' (1968) which was seen by a studio-producer who, employing Spielberg at the tender age of 22/23 and Spielberg dropped out of Uni in '69, to begin a contract for a television company and, thus, following some TV work he directed his first feature, for TV, based on a Robert Matheson (writer of I Am Legend amongst other novels...) book...

Duel (1971)

It is interesting to watch this as an 'early-Spielberg', especially considering his future films. Such a simple story (as Scott in 10 seconds, said on Frankly, My Dear podcast recently)- a truck trying to kill a guy (Dennis Weaver) in a car. Nothing else really to it - no family revealed of the guy in the car, the driver of the truck is never revealed. The majority of the film is set on dusty, long roads and, in the few instances where there are other characters, we rarely trust them. A film that was primarily about pace and tension, Spielberg clearly learnt a lot. Even the truck had small details that gave it a certain character - specific number plates all over the grill to signify the 'kills' it has accumulated in the past.

Sarah absolutely adores this film, and when I watched it - for the first time only recently - I realised how something so simple requires the full control of the director. He slowly builds up a tension that simply couldn't be done by someone more amateur - its a truck, nothing more, but it scares you so much. Even at this starting point, Spielberg's skill is clear - character and detail never forgotton, tension, pace and entertaiment. A perfect example of a film with little depth (could you argue it is the industrial world attacking the working man? robots taking the jobs of the working man? Hmm), simply an enjoyable ride from beginning to end.

The truck is currently in North Carolina and, for the Incredible Hulk fans, some footage from the film was used in the TV series, in an episode called Never Give a Trucker an Even Break. Nothing illegal there - as Universal owned full-rights to the footage.

The Sugarland Express (1974)

Having shown great promise with TV-film (released theatrically in Europe) and Spielberg moves onto his first feature-length theatrical film, The Sugarland Express. I covered this in one of my first posts on this blog, so I have copied the information from that post about the Spielberg trends established:

"The film shows a classic Spielberg-shot (no, not the zoom-in in 'Jaws' that Hitchcock used on 'Vertigo'), but the 'Lawrence of Arabia' shot of police cars on the horizon distorting under the heat and slowly coming into focus. These cinematic treats are littered throughout the movie showing how, even at this point, Spielberg was a director to look out for. Spielberg won Best Screenplay at Cannes for this film, but ultimately - commercially - it flopped. Lets be honest - post 'Bonnie and Clyde' and 'Easy Rider', this was a bit, well, boring. There are a few parallels too - the celebrity status of the couple also evoke the Bonnie and Clyde story, which the tragic finale, though not a shootout, is i a similar vein (It is a shootout of sorts... just nowhere nears as impressive). Another production factor is John Williams score - I personally love film scores and this one I regularly listen to on a John Williams soundtrack. It has a real softness and yet catchy theme - justified no Indiana Jones - but it fits the story, showing John Williams skills as a composer even as early as this." (If you want to read the full post, click HERE)

There are flaws, a certain lack of characterisation in Goldie Hawn's character, but I am pretty sure Spielberg was aware of this because it was only one year later that Spielberg directed a different film, in the style of Duel - keeping John Williams to compose the score, Richard D. Zanuck and David Brown stayed alongside Spielberg as he adapted a novel by Peter Benchley... something called Jaws...

Large Association of Movie Blogs

Sunday, 6 December 2009

The Simon and Jo Show Podcast: 06/12/09

This week, with the focus firmly on Richard Kelly's third effort The Box on release we discuss Richard Kelly career to date and then onto directorial debuts - every director has one and once they have done it, it represents the coming of a new artist ... but which one, if you were to choose, is the best ...

All will be revealed in Podcast 11 of 'The Simon and Jo Show' - links on the left!