Monday, 27 April 2009
Blue Collar (1978)
Paul Schrader's directorial debut, Blue Collar is a fairly typical spin on his own unique brand of morality tale and catholic tangent, that follows the dire straits of a group of Detroit auto-workers and their plot to embezzle money from the union that has failed them. The film is effectively an ensemble piece, and that how its billed, yet their is very much a "star-turn" in the shape of the performance of Richard Prior.
The film is beautifully shot too, with the gritty locales (all filmed on location in Detroit) somehow managing to look as handsome as the wordplay is surreally poetic. It reminded of the early scenes set on the oil fields of Bob Rafelson's Five Easy Pieces, impressing upon the viewer the notion that even the most imposing of situations can look impressive given the right aesthetic decisions.
I was very impressed with Blue Collar, despite having very little expectation.
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Blue Collar is a hell of a movie, as you say. What I find so interesting is that the entire production was hell for Schrader and it pushed him to the brink of a) quitting the business and b) having a mental breakdown. Apparently Pryor brought out a gun and threatened to shoot Schrader, Kotto beat Keitel with a chair, and fistfights erupted almost daily. Just a ton of crazy incidences which, I think, add a lot to the film.
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