Five Easy Pieces By Dave McCoy
This subtle, existential character study of an emotionally distant
outcast (Nicholson) forced to confront his past failures remains an
intimate cornerstone of American '70s cinema. Written and directed with
remarkable restraint by Bob Rafelson, the film is the result of a
short-lived partnership between the filmmaker and Nicholson--the first was
the zany formalist exercise, Head, while the equally impressive King
of Marvin Gardens followed Five Easy Pieces. Quiet and full of
long, controlled takes, this film draws its strength from the acutely
detailed, nonjudgmental observations of its complex protagonist, Robert
Dupea--an extremely crass and frustrated oil worker, and failed child
pianist hiding from his past in Texas. Dupea spends his life drinking beer
and sleeping with (and cheating on) his annoying but adoring Tammy
Wynette-wannabe girlfriend, but when he learns that his father is dying in
Washington State, he leaves. After the film transforms into a spirited
road movie, and arrives at the eccentric upper-class Dupea family mansion,
it becomes apparent that leaving is what Dupea does best--from his
problems, fears, and those who love him. Nicholson gives a difficult yet
masterful performance in an unlikable role, one that's full of ambiguity
and requires violent shifts in acting style. Several sequences--such as
his stopping traffic to play piano, or his famous verbal duels with a
cranky waitress over a chicken-salad sandwich--are Nicholson landmarks.
Yet, it's the quieter moments, when Dupea tries miserably to communicate
and reconcile with his dying father, where the actor shows his real
talent--and by extension, shows us the wounded little boy that lurks in
the shell of the man Dupea has become.
Academy Awards
Five Easy Pieces received Academy Awards
nominations for for Best Picture (Bob Rafelson and Richard Wechsler -
Producers), Actor (Jack Nicholson), Supporting Actress (Karen Black), and
Writing (Best Story and Screenplay based on factual material or material
not previously published or produced; Bob Rafelson and Adrien Joyce). |