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Night Moves (1975 film)

Night Moves is a 1975 American neo-noir film[3][4] directed by Arthur Penn, and starring Gene Hackman, Jennifer Warren, Susan Clark, with supporting performances from Melanie Griffith and James Woods. Its plot follows a Los Angeles private investigator who uncovers a series of sinister events while searching for the missing teenage daughter of a former movie actress.

Night Moves
Original theatrical poster
Directed byArthur Penn
Written byAlan Sharp
Produced byRobert M. Sherman
Starring
CinematographyBruce Surtees
Edited byDede Allen
Stephen A. Rotter (co-editor)[1][2]
Music byMichael Small
Production
companies
Hiller Productions, Ltd. – Layton[2]
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
  • June 11, 1975 (1975-06-11) (New York City)
  • July 2, 1975 (1975-07-02) (Los Angeles)
Running time
99 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Hackman was nominated for a BAFTA Award for his portrayal of private investigator Harry Moseby. The film has been called "a seminal modern noir work from the 1970s",[5] which refers to its relationship with the film noir tradition of detective films. The original screenplay is by Scottish writer Alan Sharp.

Although Night Moves was not considered particularly successful at the time of its release, it has attracted viewers and significant critical attention following its videotape and DVD releases.[6] In 2010, Manohla Dargis described it as "the great, despairing Night Moves (1975), with Gene Hackman as a private detective who ends up circling the abyss, a no‑exit comment on the post-1968, post-Watergate times."[7]

Plot

Harry Moseby is a retired professional football player now working as a private investigator in Los Angeles. He discovers that his wife Ellen is having an affair with a man named Marty Heller.

Aging former actress Arlene Iverson hires Harry to find her 16-year-old daughter Delly Grastner. Arlene's only source of income is her daughter's trust fund, but it requires Delly to be living with her. Arlene gives Harry the name of one of Delly's friends in Los Angeles, a mechanic called Quentin. Quentin tells Harry that he last saw Delly at a New Mexico film location, where she started flirting with one of Arlene's old flames, stuntman Marv Ellman. Harry realizes that the injuries to Quentin's face are from fighting the stuntman and sympathizes with his bitterness towards Delly. He travels to the film location and talks to Marv and stunt coordinator Joey Ziegler. Before returning to Los Angeles, Harry is surprised to see Quentin working on Marv's stunt plane.

Harry suspects that Delly may be trying to seduce her mother's ex-lovers and travels to the Florida Keys, where her stepfather Tom Iverson lives. Harry finds Delly staying with Tom and his girlfriend Paula. Harry, Paula, and Delly take a boat trip to go swimming, but Delly becomes distraught when she finds the submerged wreckage of a small plane with the decomposing body of the pilot inside. Paula marks the spot with a buoy, and when they return to shore, she appears to report the find to the Coast Guard. Later that night she visits Harry's cabin and the two make love.

Harry persuades Delly to return to her mother in California. After he drops her off at her California home, he still is uneasy about the case, but focuses on patching up his own marriage. He tells his wife he will give up the agency, something she has wanted him to do for a long time, but then he learns that Delly has been killed in a car accident on the set of a movie.

Harry questions the driver of the car, Joey, who was injured. Joey lets him view footage of the crash, which raises Harry's suspicions about Quentin the mechanic. He goes to the home of Arlene Iverson and finds her drunk by the pool, not particularly grief-stricken over the death of her daughter. Arlene now stands to inherit her daughter's wealth. Harry tracks down Quentin, who denies being the killer, but tells him that Marv Ellman was the dead pilot in the plane and that Ellman was involved in smuggling. Quentin manages to escape before Harry can learn more.

Harry returns to Florida, where he finds the body of Quentin floating in Tom's dolphin pen. Harry accuses Tom of the murder; they fight, and Tom is knocked unconscious. Paula admits she did not report the dead body in the plane because the aircraft contained a valuable sculpture that they were smuggling piecemeal from the Yucatan to the United States. Harry and Paula set off to retrieve the relic. While Paula is diving, a seaplane arrives, and the pilot strafes the boat, machine-gunning Harry in the leg. The seaplane lands on the ocean, but when the pilot sees Paula surface with the sculpture, he taxies the plane over her and kills her. The impact of the pontoons on the surfaced sculpture flips the seaplane, and as the cockpit submerges, Harry is able to see through the glass window beneath his boat that the drowning pilot is Joey Ziegler. Harry unsuccessfully tries to steer the boat, which is now going in circles.

Cast

Production

Night Moves was filmed in the fall of 1973, but for undisclosed reasons, was not released until 1975. The role of Ellen, played by Susan Clark, was originally offered to Faye Dunaway who turned it down to star in Chinatown. Dunaway had just split from one of the film's stars - Harris Yulin - after a two year relationship. Night Moves's original title, Dark Tower, had to be changed so as to not confuse the film with the 1974 blockbuster hit The Towering Inferno. The house belonging to James Woods' character Quentin was owned by Phil Kaufman, road manager for Gram Parsons at the time of Parsons's death. Kaufman's subsequent actions became the basis for the 2003 film Grand Theft Parsons. The cast and crew of Night Moves were shooting at the house on the day the police came to question Kaufman, and as they were taking him away, Arthur Penn turned to Gene Hackman and said, "Man, we're shooting the wrong movie".

My Night at Maud's

An often quoted line from Night Moves occurs when Moseby declines an invitation from his wife to see the movie My Night at Maud's (1970): "I saw a Rohmer film once. It was kinda like watching paint dry."[8] The exchange from Night Moves was quoted in director Éric Rohmer's New York Times obituary in 2010.[9] Arthur Penn was an admirer of Rohmer's films;[10] Bruce Jackson has written an extended discussion of the role of My Night at Maud's in Night Moves; its protagonist and Moseby have related opportunities for infidelity, but respond differently.[8]

Release

Critical response

Roger Ebert gave the film a full four stars and called it "one of the best psychological thrillers in a long time, probably since Don't Look Now. It has an ending that comes not only as a complete surprise — which would be easy enough — but that also pulls everything together in a new way, one we hadn't thought of before, one that's almost unbearably poignant."[11] Ebert ranked Night Moves at No. 2 on his year-end list of the best films of 1975, behind only Nashville.[12] Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that he had "mixed feelings" about the film, elaborating that the characters "seem to deserve better than the quality of the narrative given them. I can't figure out whether the screenplay by Alan Sharp was worked on too much or not enough, or whether Mr. Penn and his actors accepted the screenplay with more respect than it deserves."[13] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three stars out of four and stated that the protagonist is the "kind of mixed-up character" that "seems to be Hackman's specialty", while Alan Sharp's screenplay "provides the character of Paula (Jennifer Warren) with some of the best scripting for any woman this year".[14] Arthur D. Murphy of Variety called the film "a paradox. A suspenseless suspenser, very well cast with players who lend sustained interest to largely theatrical characters ... There's little rhyme or reason for the plot's progression, and the climax is far from stunning. But the curious aspect about the Warner Bros. release is that it plays well."[15] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times described the film as "a stunning, stylish detective mystery in the classic Raymond Chandler-Ross Macdonald mold," as well as "a fast, often funny movie with lots of compassionately observed real, living, breathing people. This handsome Warners presentation is still another triumph for ever-busy, ever-versatile Gene Hackman, director Arthur Penn and writer Alan Sharp."[16] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post was negative, stating, "The fatal weakness is Alan Sharp's screenplay, a pointlessly murky, ambiguous variation on conventional private-eye themes ... we're supposed to be so impressed by the dolorous, world-weary tone that we overlook some pretty awesome loopholes and absurdities in the story itself, which never generates much mystery, suspense or credible human interest."[17]

Night Moves continues to attract critical attention long after its release. Film critic Michael Sragow included the film in his 1990 review collection entitled Produced and Abandoned: The Best Films You've Never Seen.[18] Stephen Prince has written, "Penn directed a group of key pictures in the late 1960s and early 1970s (Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Alice's Restaurant (1969), Little Big Man (1970), Night Moves (1975)) that captured the verve of the counterculture, its subsequent collapse, and the ensuing despair of the post-Watergate era."[19] In his monograph, The Cinema of Loneliness: Penn, Stone, Kubrick, Scorsese, Spielberg, Altman, Robert Kolker writes, "Night Moves was Penn's point of turning, his last carefully structured work, a strong and bitter film, whose bitterness emerges from an anxiety and from a loneliness that exists as a given, rather than a loneliness fought against, a fight that marks most of Penn's best work. Night Moves is a film of impotence and despair, and it marks the end of a cycle of films."[20] Dennis Schwartz characterizes the film as "a seminal modern noir work from the 1970s" and adds, "This is arguably the best film that Arthur Penn has ever done."[5] This remark is telling in the context of Penn's earlier film, Bonnie and Clyde (1967), which is now considered a classic by most critics.[21] Roger Ebert added the film to his "Great Movies" list in 2006.[22]

Griffith's appearance in the movie garnered particular controversy for one racy nude scene that was shot when she was only 17 years old at the time,[23] though she also appeared nude in other films such as Smile which was released the same year.[citation needed]

Night Moves has been classified by some critics as a "neo-noir" film, representing a further development of the film noir detective story.[3] Ronald Schwartz summarizes its role: "Harry Moseby is a man with limitations and weaknesses, a new dimension for detectives in the 1970s. Gone are the Philip Marlowes and tough-guy private investigators who have tremendous insight into crime and can triumph over criminals because they carry within them a code of honor. Harry cannot fathom what honor is, much less be subsumed by it."[4]

The film currently holds a score of 82% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 17 reviews.[24]

Box office

Night Moves was not a commercial success at the time of its 1975 theatrical release.[6][25]

Home media

Night Moves was released in 1992 in the U.S. as a LaserDisc[26] and as a VHS-format videotape.[27] In 2005, it was released as a DVD in the U.S. and Canada (region 1).[28] The DVD was favorably reviewed by Walter Chaw, who writes, "Shot through with grain and a certain, specific colour blanch I associate with the best movies from what I believe to be the best era in film history, Night Moves looks on Warner's DVD as good as it ever has, or, I daresay, should."[29] A region 2 DVD was released in 2007.[30] The film was released on Blu-ray in 2017 by Warner Archive Collection.[31]

See also

References

  1. ^ Rotter was credited as "co-editor"; see "Index to Motion Picture Credits: Night Moves". Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.
  2. ^ a b c "Night Moves". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Sanders & Skoble 2008, p. 3.
  4. ^ a b Schwartz 2005, p. 31.
  5. ^ a b Schwartz, Dennis (December 5, 2000). "Night Moves". Ozus' World: Film Reviews. Retrieved 2010-08-21.
  6. ^ a b Slifkin 2004, p. 545.
  7. ^ Dargis, Manohla (October 8, 2010). "Arthur Penn, a Director Attuned to His Country". The New York Times.
  8. ^ a b Jackson, Bruce (July 11, 2010). "Loose Ends in Night Moves". Senses of Cinema (55).
  9. ^ Kehr, David (January 11, 2010). "Éric Rohmer, a Leading Filmmaker of the French New Wave, Dies at 89". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Penn, Chaiken & Cronin 2008, p. 114.
  11. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 11, 1975). "Night Moves". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  12. ^ Ebert 2006, p. 443.
  13. ^ Canby, Vincent (June 12, 1975). "Screen: 'Night Moves' Stars a Private Eye More Complex Than His Case". The New York Times. 30.
  14. ^ Siskel, Gene (August 5, 1975). "Bleak, unique 'Night Moves'". Chicago Tribune. Section 3, p. 5.
  15. ^ Murphy, Arthur D. (March 26, 1975). "Film Reviews: Night Moves". Variety. 18.
  16. ^ Thomas, Kevin (July 2, 1975). "Private Eye With Style". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1.
  17. ^ Arnold, Gary (June 27, 1975). "Mysterious 'Night Moves'". The Washington Post. B7.
  18. ^ Sragow 1990, p. 22.
  19. ^ Prince 2002, p. 232.
  20. ^ Kolker 2000, p. 21.
  21. ^ Ebert, Roger (August 3, 1998). "Bonnie and Clyde (1967)". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2010-08-20. When I saw it, I had been a film critic for less than six months, and it was the first masterpiece I had seen on the job. I felt an exhilaration beyond describing. I did not suspect how long it would be between such experiences, but at least I learned that they were possible.
  22. ^ Ebert, Roger (March 26, 2006). "Great Movies: Night Moves". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  23. ^ . News.au.com. December 4, 2014. Archived from the original on August 28, 2018.
  24. ^ "Night Moves". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  25. ^ Kemp, Philip. "Arthur Penn". filmreference.com. Penn established his reputation as a director with Bonnie and Clyde, one of the most significant and influential films of its decade. But since 1970 he has made only a handful of films, none of them successful at the box office. Night Moves and The Missouri Breaks, both poorly received on initial release, now rank among his most subtle and intriguing movies, and Four Friends, though uneven, remains constantly stimulating with its oblique, elliptical narrative structure.
  26. ^ Night Moves (LaserDisc). Warner Home Video. October 21, 1992. ISBN 0-7907-1309-8. 100 minutes. See "Night Moves (1975) [11102]". LaserDisc Database.
  27. ^ Night Moves (VHS tape). Warner Home Video. April 1, 1992. 100 minutes. See Night Moves [VHS] (1975). ASIN 630026887X.
  28. ^ Night Moves (DVD). Warner Home Video. July 12, 2005. 100 minutes. See "Night Moves (1975)". amazon.com.
  29. ^ Chaw, Walter (April 14, 2010). . Film Freak Central. Archived from the original on 2010-12-18.
  30. ^ Die heiße Spur (DVD). Warner Home Video. 21 September 2007. 96 minutes; German and English soundtracks. See "Die heiße Spur". amazon.de.
  31. ^ Reuben, Michael (August 15, 2017). "Night Moves Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. The raw 4K scan of Night Moves has been meticulously color-corrected by one of MPI's premier colorists, followed by WAC's customary cleanup to remove dust, blemishes and age-related damage. The result is a 1080p, AVC-encoded Blu-ray that ranks among the best and most accurate releases of a Seventies catalog title currently available.

Sources

  • Ebert, Roger (2006). Awake in the Dark: The Best of Roger Ebert. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-18201-8.
  • Kolker, Robert (2000). The Cinema of Loneliness: Penn, Stone, Kubrick, Scorsese, Spielberg, Altman (3rd ed.). Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-512350-0.
  • Penn, Arthur; Chaiken, Michael; Cronin, Paul (2008). Arthur Penn: Interviews. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-60473-105-7.
  • Prince, Stephen (2002). A New Pot of Gold: Hollywood Under the Electronic Rainbox (1980–1989). University of California. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-520-23266-2.
  • Sanders, Steven; Skoble, Aeon G. (2008). The Philosophy of TV Noir. University of Kentucky Press. ISBN 978-0813172620.
  • Slifkin, Irv (2004). VideoHound's groovy movies: far-out films of the psychedelic era. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 978-1-57859-155-8.
  • Schwartz, Ronald (2005). Neo-noir: The New Film Noir Style from Psycho to Collateral. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8108-5676-9.
  • Sragow, Michael (1990). Produced and Abandoned: The Best Films You've Never Seen. Mercury House. ISBN 978-0-916515-84-3.

Further reading

  • Berman, Emanuel (2001). "Arthur Penn's Night Moves: A Film that Interprets Us". In Gabbard, Glen O. (ed.). Psychoanalysis and Film. Karnac Books. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-85575-275-7. Emanuel Berman's extended interpretation of the film's screenplay.
  • Meyer, David N. (May 3, 2009). . Film Noir of the Week. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. David N. Meyer's review includes a fairly rare effort to parse Night Moves in terms of the contributions of its screenplay, directing, acting, etc.. Meyer particularly credits Gene Hackman's performance, Alan Sharp's writing, and Dede Allen's editing.
  • Gear, Matthew Asprey. Moseby Confidential: Arthur Penn's Night Moves and the Rise of Neo-Noir. Portland, Ore.: Jorvik Press, 2019. Emphasizes Sharp's inspiration and conflicts with Penn. Based on interviews with Sharp's widow, Warren, Clark, and others.

External links

night, moves, 1975, film, this, article, about, 1975, film, directed, arthur, penn, other, uses, night, moves, disambiguation, night, moves, 1975, american, noir, film, directed, arthur, penn, starring, gene, hackman, jennifer, warren, susan, clark, with, supp. This article is about the 1975 film directed by Arthur Penn For other uses see Night Moves disambiguation Night Moves is a 1975 American neo noir film 3 4 directed by Arthur Penn and starring Gene Hackman Jennifer Warren Susan Clark with supporting performances from Melanie Griffith and James Woods Its plot follows a Los Angeles private investigator who uncovers a series of sinister events while searching for the missing teenage daughter of a former movie actress Night MovesOriginal theatrical posterDirected byArthur PennWritten byAlan SharpProduced byRobert M ShermanStarringGene HackmanSusan ClarkCinematographyBruce SurteesEdited byDede AllenStephen A Rotter co editor 1 2 Music byMichael SmallProductioncompaniesHiller Productions Ltd Layton 2 Distributed byWarner Bros Release datesJune 11 1975 1975 06 11 New York City July 2 1975 1975 07 02 Los Angeles Running time99 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishHackman was nominated for a BAFTA Award for his portrayal of private investigator Harry Moseby The film has been called a seminal modern noir work from the 1970s 5 which refers to its relationship with the film noir tradition of detective films The original screenplay is by Scottish writer Alan Sharp Although Night Moves was not considered particularly successful at the time of its release it has attracted viewers and significant critical attention following its videotape and DVD releases 6 In 2010 Manohla Dargis described it as the great despairing Night Moves 1975 with Gene Hackman as a private detective who ends up circling the abyss a no exit comment on the post 1968 post Watergate times 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 My Night at Maud s 4 Release 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Box office 4 3 Home media 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksPlot EditHarry Moseby is a retired professional football player now working as a private investigator in Los Angeles He discovers that his wife Ellen is having an affair with a man named Marty Heller Aging former actress Arlene Iverson hires Harry to find her 16 year old daughter Delly Grastner Arlene s only source of income is her daughter s trust fund but it requires Delly to be living with her Arlene gives Harry the name of one of Delly s friends in Los Angeles a mechanic called Quentin Quentin tells Harry that he last saw Delly at a New Mexico film location where she started flirting with one of Arlene s old flames stuntman Marv Ellman Harry realizes that the injuries to Quentin s face are from fighting the stuntman and sympathizes with his bitterness towards Delly He travels to the film location and talks to Marv and stunt coordinator Joey Ziegler Before returning to Los Angeles Harry is surprised to see Quentin working on Marv s stunt plane Harry suspects that Delly may be trying to seduce her mother s ex lovers and travels to the Florida Keys where her stepfather Tom Iverson lives Harry finds Delly staying with Tom and his girlfriend Paula Harry Paula and Delly take a boat trip to go swimming but Delly becomes distraught when she finds the submerged wreckage of a small plane with the decomposing body of the pilot inside Paula marks the spot with a buoy and when they return to shore she appears to report the find to the Coast Guard Later that night she visits Harry s cabin and the two make love Harry persuades Delly to return to her mother in California After he drops her off at her California home he still is uneasy about the case but focuses on patching up his own marriage He tells his wife he will give up the agency something she has wanted him to do for a long time but then he learns that Delly has been killed in a car accident on the set of a movie Harry questions the driver of the car Joey who was injured Joey lets him view footage of the crash which raises Harry s suspicions about Quentin the mechanic He goes to the home of Arlene Iverson and finds her drunk by the pool not particularly grief stricken over the death of her daughter Arlene now stands to inherit her daughter s wealth Harry tracks down Quentin who denies being the killer but tells him that Marv Ellman was the dead pilot in the plane and that Ellman was involved in smuggling Quentin manages to escape before Harry can learn more Harry returns to Florida where he finds the body of Quentin floating in Tom s dolphin pen Harry accuses Tom of the murder they fight and Tom is knocked unconscious Paula admits she did not report the dead body in the plane because the aircraft contained a valuable sculpture that they were smuggling piecemeal from the Yucatan to the United States Harry and Paula set off to retrieve the relic While Paula is diving a seaplane arrives and the pilot strafes the boat machine gunning Harry in the leg The seaplane lands on the ocean but when the pilot sees Paula surface with the sculpture he taxies the plane over her and kills her The impact of the pontoons on the surfaced sculpture flips the seaplane and as the cockpit submerges Harry is able to see through the glass window beneath his boat that the drowning pilot is Joey Ziegler Harry unsuccessfully tries to steer the boat which is now going in circles Cast EditGene Hackman as Harry Moseby Susan Clark as Ellen Moseby Jennifer Warren as Paula Edward Binns as Joey Ziegler Harris Yulin as Marty Heller Kenneth Mars as Nick Janet Ward as Arlene Iverson James Woods as Quentin Anthony Costello as Marv Ellman John Crawford as Tom Iverson Melanie Griffith as Delly Grastner Ben Archibek as Charles Dennis Dugan as boy C J Hiack as girl Maxwell Gail Jr as Stud Susan Barrister as ticket clerk Larry Mitchell as ticket clerkProduction EditNight Moves was filmed in the fall of 1973 but for undisclosed reasons was not released until 1975 The role of Ellen played by Susan Clark was originally offered to Faye Dunaway who turned it down to star in Chinatown Dunaway had just split from one of the film s stars Harris Yulin after a two year relationship Night Moves s original title Dark Tower had to be changed so as to not confuse the film with the 1974 blockbuster hit The Towering Inferno The house belonging to James Woods character Quentin was owned by Phil Kaufman road manager for Gram Parsons at the time of Parsons s death Kaufman s subsequent actions became the basis for the 2003 film Grand Theft Parsons The cast and crew of Night Moves were shooting at the house on the day the police came to question Kaufman and as they were taking him away Arthur Penn turned to Gene Hackman and said Man we re shooting the wrong movie My Night at Maud s Edit An often quoted line from Night Moves occurs when Moseby declines an invitation from his wife to see the movie My Night at Maud s 1970 I saw a Rohmer film once It was kinda like watching paint dry 8 The exchange from Night Moves was quoted in director Eric Rohmer s New York Times obituary in 2010 9 Arthur Penn was an admirer of Rohmer s films 10 Bruce Jackson has written an extended discussion of the role of My Night at Maud s in Night Moves its protagonist and Moseby have related opportunities for infidelity but respond differently 8 Release EditCritical response Edit Roger Ebert gave the film a full four stars and called it one of the best psychological thrillers in a long time probably since Don t Look Now It has an ending that comes not only as a complete surprise which would be easy enough but that also pulls everything together in a new way one we hadn t thought of before one that s almost unbearably poignant 11 Ebert ranked Night Moves at No 2 on his year end list of the best films of 1975 behind only Nashville 12 Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that he had mixed feelings about the film elaborating that the characters seem to deserve better than the quality of the narrative given them I can t figure out whether the screenplay by Alan Sharp was worked on too much or not enough or whether Mr Penn and his actors accepted the screenplay with more respect than it deserves 13 Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three stars out of four and stated that the protagonist is the kind of mixed up character that seems to be Hackman s specialty while Alan Sharp s screenplay provides the character of Paula Jennifer Warren with some of the best scripting for any woman this year 14 Arthur D Murphy of Variety called the film a paradox A suspenseless suspenser very well cast with players who lend sustained interest to largely theatrical characters There s little rhyme or reason for the plot s progression and the climax is far from stunning But the curious aspect about the Warner Bros release is that it plays well 15 Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times described the film as a stunning stylish detective mystery in the classic Raymond Chandler Ross Macdonald mold as well as a fast often funny movie with lots of compassionately observed real living breathing people This handsome Warners presentation is still another triumph for ever busy ever versatile Gene Hackman director Arthur Penn and writer Alan Sharp 16 Gary Arnold of The Washington Post was negative stating The fatal weakness is Alan Sharp s screenplay a pointlessly murky ambiguous variation on conventional private eye themes we re supposed to be so impressed by the dolorous world weary tone that we overlook some pretty awesome loopholes and absurdities in the story itself which never generates much mystery suspense or credible human interest 17 Night Moves continues to attract critical attention long after its release Film critic Michael Sragow included the film in his 1990 review collection entitled Produced and Abandoned The Best Films You ve Never Seen 18 Stephen Prince has written Penn directed a group of key pictures in the late 1960s and early 1970s Bonnie and Clyde 1967 Alice s Restaurant 1969 Little Big Man 1970 Night Moves 1975 that captured the verve of the counterculture its subsequent collapse and the ensuing despair of the post Watergate era 19 In his monograph The Cinema of Loneliness Penn Stone Kubrick Scorsese Spielberg Altman Robert Kolker writes Night Moves was Penn s point of turning his last carefully structured work a strong and bitter film whose bitterness emerges from an anxiety and from a loneliness that exists as a given rather than a loneliness fought against a fight that marks most of Penn s best work Night Moves is a film of impotence and despair and it marks the end of a cycle of films 20 Dennis Schwartz characterizes the film as a seminal modern noir work from the 1970s and adds This is arguably the best film that Arthur Penn has ever done 5 This remark is telling in the context of Penn s earlier film Bonnie and Clyde 1967 which is now considered a classic by most critics 21 Roger Ebert added the film to his Great Movies list in 2006 22 Griffith s appearance in the movie garnered particular controversy for one racy nude scene that was shot when she was only 17 years old at the time 23 though she also appeared nude in other films such as Smile which was released the same year citation needed Night Moves has been classified by some critics as a neo noir film representing a further development of the film noir detective story 3 Ronald Schwartz summarizes its role Harry Moseby is a man with limitations and weaknesses a new dimension for detectives in the 1970s Gone are the Philip Marlowes and tough guy private investigators who have tremendous insight into crime and can triumph over criminals because they carry within them a code of honor Harry cannot fathom what honor is much less be subsumed by it 4 The film currently holds a score of 82 on Rotten Tomatoes based on 17 reviews 24 Box office Edit Night Moves was not a commercial success at the time of its 1975 theatrical release 6 25 Home media Edit Night Moves was released in 1992 in the U S as a LaserDisc 26 and as a VHS format videotape 27 In 2005 it was released as a DVD in the U S and Canada region 1 28 The DVD was favorably reviewed by Walter Chaw who writes Shot through with grain and a certain specific colour blanch I associate with the best movies from what I believe to be the best era in film history Night Moves looks on Warner s DVD as good as it ever has or I daresay should 29 A region 2 DVD was released in 2007 30 The film was released on Blu ray in 2017 by Warner Archive Collection 31 See also EditList of American films of 1975 Sanibel and Wakulla Springs two Florida locations where filming took placeReferences Edit Rotter was credited as co editor see Index to Motion Picture Credits Night Moves Academy of Motion Picture Arts amp Sciences a b c Night Moves AFI Catalog of Feature Films American Film Institute Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Sanders amp Skoble 2008 p 3 a b Schwartz 2005 p 31 a b Schwartz Dennis December 5 2000 Night Moves Ozus World Film Reviews Retrieved 2010 08 21 a b Slifkin 2004 p 545 Dargis Manohla October 8 2010 Arthur Penn a Director Attuned to His Country The New York Times a b Jackson Bruce July 11 2010 Loose Ends in Night Moves Senses of Cinema 55 Kehr David January 11 2010 Eric Rohmer a Leading Filmmaker of the French New Wave Dies at 89 The New York Times Penn Chaiken amp Cronin 2008 p 114 Ebert Roger June 11 1975 Night Moves RogerEbert com Retrieved May 14 2019 Ebert 2006 p 443 Canby Vincent June 12 1975 Screen Night Moves Stars a Private Eye More Complex Than His Case The New York Times 30 Siskel Gene August 5 1975 Bleak unique Night Moves Chicago Tribune Section 3 p 5 Murphy Arthur D March 26 1975 Film Reviews Night Moves Variety 18 Thomas Kevin July 2 1975 Private Eye With Style Los Angeles Times Part IV p 1 Arnold Gary June 27 1975 Mysterious Night Moves The Washington Post B7 Sragow 1990 p 22 Prince 2002 p 232 Kolker 2000 p 21 Ebert Roger August 3 1998 Bonnie and Clyde 1967 Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 2010 08 20 When I saw it I had been a film critic for less than six months and it was the first masterpiece I had seen on the job I felt an exhilaration beyond describing I did not suspect how long it would be between such experiences but at least I learned that they were possible Ebert Roger March 26 2006 Great Movies Night Moves RogerEbert com Retrieved May 14 2019 Melanie Griffith won t see Fifty Shades of Grey film on Dakota Johnson s instruction News au com December 4 2014 Archived from the original on August 28 2018 Night Moves Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved May 14 2019 Kemp Philip Arthur Penn filmreference com Penn established his reputation as a director with Bonnie and Clyde one of the most significant and influential films of its decade But since 1970 he has made only a handful of films none of them successful at the box office Night Moves and The Missouri Breaks both poorly received on initial release now rank among his most subtle and intriguing movies and Four Friends though uneven remains constantly stimulating with its oblique elliptical narrative structure Night Moves LaserDisc Warner Home Video October 21 1992 ISBN 0 7907 1309 8 100 minutes See Night Moves 1975 11102 LaserDisc Database Night Moves VHS tape Warner Home Video April 1 1992 100 minutes See Night Moves VHS 1975 ASIN 630026887X Night Moves DVD Warner Home Video July 12 2005 100 minutes See Night Moves 1975 amazon com Chaw Walter April 14 2010 Night Moves Film Freak Central Archived from the original on 2010 12 18 Die heisse Spur DVD Warner Home Video 21 September 2007 96 minutes German and English soundtracks See Die heisse Spur amazon de Reuben Michael August 15 2017 Night Moves Blu ray Blu ray com The raw 4K scan of Night Moves has been meticulously color corrected by one of MPI s premier colorists followed by WAC s customary cleanup to remove dust blemishes and age related damage The result is a 1080p AVC encoded Blu ray that ranks among the best and most accurate releases of a Seventies catalog title currently available Sources EditEbert Roger 2006 Awake in the Dark The Best of Roger Ebert University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 18201 8 Kolker Robert 2000 The Cinema of Loneliness Penn Stone Kubrick Scorsese Spielberg Altman 3rd ed Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 512350 0 Penn Arthur Chaiken Michael Cronin Paul 2008 Arthur Penn Interviews Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 105 7 Prince Stephen 2002 A New Pot of Gold Hollywood Under the Electronic Rainbox 1980 1989 University of California p 232 ISBN 978 0 520 23266 2 Sanders Steven Skoble Aeon G 2008 The Philosophy of TV Noir University of Kentucky Press ISBN 978 0813172620 Slifkin Irv 2004 VideoHound s groovy movies far out films of the psychedelic era Visible Ink Press ISBN 978 1 57859 155 8 Schwartz Ronald 2005 Neo noir The New Film Noir Style from Psycho to Collateral Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 5676 9 Sragow Michael 1990 Produced and Abandoned The Best Films You ve Never Seen Mercury House ISBN 978 0 916515 84 3 Further reading Berman Emanuel 2001 Arthur Penn s Night Moves A Film that Interprets Us In Gabbard Glen O ed Psychoanalysis and Film Karnac Books p 83 ISBN 978 1 85575 275 7 Emanuel Berman s extended interpretation of the film s screenplay Meyer David N May 3 2009 Any Kennedy The Merciless Blinding Sunshine of Night Moves Film Noir of the Week Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 David N Meyer s review includes a fairly rare effort to parse Night Moves in terms of the contributions of its screenplay directing acting etc Meyer particularly credits Gene Hackman s performance Alan Sharp s writing and Dede Allen s editing Gear Matthew Asprey Moseby Confidential Arthur Penn s Night Moves and the Rise of Neo Noir Portland Ore Jorvik Press 2019 Emphasizes Sharp s inspiration and conflicts with Penn Based on interviews with Sharp s widow Warren Clark and others External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Night Moves 1975 film Night Moves at IMDb Night Moves at Rotten Tomatoes Night Moves at AllMovie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Night Moves 1975 film amp oldid 1110984867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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