Five
Easy Pieces (1970, Rob Rafelson)
Jack
Nicholson, so far as the most recent decade of his work is concerned,
has earned a dubious reputation to say the least. The sarcasm, the
bullish wisecracks, that widest of wide grins, all are hallmarks of
the Jack Nicholson of the late 1990s and first decade of the new
millennium, so much so that he is mostly recognized for playing
himself as opposed to actual three-dimensional characters, joining
the same undesirable club as the once great Al Pacino. As was
discovered last week in a review for Easy Rider, Nicholson's
film career began many, many years ago in the late 1960s. One of his
first starring roles and, arguably, one of his more complex roles,
was in the film under review today, Five Easy Pieces, directed
by BBS co-founder Rob Rafelson, who also made Head two
years prior.
Robert
'Bobby' Dupea (Nicholson) lives in a relatively small house with his
diner waitress partner Rayette Dipesto (Karen Black). He is employed
at a nearby oil drilling company, where physically taxing chores are
asked of its employees day in and day out. The film establishes early
on that Bobby is what some would describe as a drifter, an individual
possessing a variety of knowledge but having never put any of it to
tremendous use, hopping from one job to another. In his thirties, he
remains unmarried and has no children, his current relationship with
Ray, a kind and loving if somewhat simple minded woman, not as solid
as it maybe once was. Bobby definitely likes her, but refuses, in his
own brash way, to give in to true love, just just he once refused to
remain with his eclectic family back home and just as he refused to
make a life for himself with his stunning piano playing skills.
Evenings are spent with friends Elton (Billy Green) and his wife
either at their place or at the bowling alley, where Ray makes a fool
of herself more than anything else, much to Bobby's annoyance. When
he learns of Ray's pregnancy, Bobby feels to the need to get away for
a while, quitting his job and meeting up with his pianist sister
(Lois Smith) who warns him about the poor health of his estranged
father. Despite himself, he and Ray drive their way up to the family
home to revisit some old people Bobby would rather not seen again, as
well as some interesting new people, like his brother's beautiful,
sophisticated, music loving fiancée, Catherine (Ausan Aanspach).
Five
Easy Pieces is, more than anything else, a character study, with
of course Jack Nicholson's Bobby being the centre of attention.
Whatever poignant moments the film has in store for the viewer,
whatever surprises or emotional tugs it may elicit, they are squarely
the products the film's quiet, slowly paced drama where the people,
their lives and how their interactions define one another matter
most. Director Rafelson, who made quite the impression with the
visually and aurally psychedelic Head, takes on an entirely
different role, letting go of any desires to dazzle audience with
clever cuts or flash, preferring rather to invest the film's success
in the script and acting. The piece's central figure, Bobby, is a
representation of alienation in many ways. Even in his mid thirties
is ill defined as can be, all things taken into account. He has
certain skills, certain charms, certain likes and dislikes, but puts
them to genuine good use only infrequently, preferring time spent
with his friend Elton drinking beer, bowling, watching television and
joking at work. Any impetus that sets him in motion is often
something he does not like or does not want to deal
with. In that respect, Bobby is an uneasy character to follow around
for 90 minutes since his attitude towards many things the majority
holds dear is borderline hostile, especially when confronted by them
directly, exemplified by his outburst when Elton talks with him about
Ray's pregnancy. He is as far removed from the traditional American
film hero as can be. In a strange way, he is the film's villain.
One
recurring device the film handles with a great deal of success is the
very idea of Bobby's behaviour frequently being driven by what
happens to him without ever giving off the impression that the
character is nothing more than a blank slate onto which the script
piles on a series of convoluted events. Nay, his reactions to
people and events do, in fact, help define him. The tomfoolery he
engages in with Elton, his ambivalent feelings towards the hopelessly
romantic Rayette, the counter-culture hitchhikers the couple picks up
briefly on their way up to see Bobby's father, the vastly different
personalities he is forced to reckon with once reunited with his
immediate family, his complicated attraction to Catherine, the
snobbish intellectuals the latter invites one evening for dinner
which, after one of the guests scoffs at Ray's immaturity, actually
prompts him to come to the defence of his partner even though he
really wants to bang Catherine (a contradictory emotional predicament
if there ever was one). All of these disparate elements help depict
just how psychologically wild Bobby is. He has heart, but will not
love. He has education, but likes to play dumb, He is a heartbeat
away from leaving Ray, but will come to her defence is she is target
of verbal abuse. There really is no simple way of describing him,
thus earning Five Easy Pieces a sense of emotional ambiguity
both in how the protagonist is portrayed and in how the audience
might respond to him.
What
can be said about Jack Nicholson's performance? Put simply, it is
amazing. Those mostly familiar with the actor's more recent work
should do away with any preconceived notions about the frequent
obnoxious pomposity which plagues his style of acting. Here is as
nuanced a performance as Nicholson has ever delivered in his entire
four decade long career. It is only a shame it came so early and
reproduced only so often in the years afterwards. His portrayal of
Bobby is what can, ultimately, get the audience on board behind the
character even though his behaviour and demeanour are less than
savoury. Nicholson manages to extract all the duality he can out of
this ambiguous man. Yes, some of the vintage charm that would soon
earn him considerable fame is on display, but it is much more subdued
here.
It
is a comforting thing to re-discover the often forgotten fact that
Jack Nicholson can, when in the mood, be the appropriate emotional
anchor in a film. Everything in Five Easy Pieces is rightfully
earned, making it, at this point in the marathon, the clear leader as
the best film BBS produced.
1 comment:
Great piece. I'm a big fan of this film and love the older Nicholson films. The only great performances he has done in the last ten years are About Schmidt and The Pledge. But even those roles don't touch the layered work he does here as Bobby Dupea.
Looking forward to reading your other stuff.
Post a Comment