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Rating: 4.2 / 5.0 (147 votes)

Released: 2013-01-08


Two-Lane Blacktop (Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray] by Criterion Collection

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Movie Screenshots

Movie Details

Director
Monte Hellman
Studio
Criterion Collection
Runtime
103
Rated
R (Restricted)
Binding
Blu-ray

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Description

Drag racing east from L.A. in a souped-up ’55 Chevy are the wayward Driver and Mechanic (singer/songwriter James Taylor and the Beach Boys’ Dennis Wilson, in their only acting roles), accompanied by a tagalong Girl (Cockfighter’s Laurie Bird). Along the way, they meet Warren Oates’s Pontiac GTO–driving wanderer and challenge him to a cross-country race—the prize: their cars’ pink slips. But no summary can do justice to the existential punch of Two-Lane Blacktop. With its gorgeous widescreen compositions and sophisticated look at American male obsession, this stripped-down narrative from maverick director Monte Hellman (The Shooting) is one of the artistic high points of 1970s cinema, and possibly the greatest road movie ever made.

Actors

  • James Taylor
  • Dennis Wilson
  • Laurie Bird

Format

  • Anamorphic
  • NTSC
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen

Editorial Review

James Taylor is The Driver, a car-obsessed racer with stringy hair and a concentration that precludes conversation. He travels the backroads of rural America with his buddy, The Mechanic (Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys), an equally obsessed lost soul at home only in the car or under the hood. They have no names, only designations, and no life outside of their gypsy existence, riding the unending highway in their souped-up '55 Chevy from race to race. After picking up a hitchhiking Girl (Laurie Bird), whose presence breaks the tunnel-vision focus of the two men, they challenge a middle-aged hotshot, the garrulous G.T.O. (Warren Oates) to a cross-country race. Monte Hellman's Two-Lane Blacktop is the most alienated evocation of modern America ever made, an almost abstract study in dislocation and obsession set against a vague landscape of roadside diners and rest stops. Taylor and Wilson deliver appropriately blank performances, only expressing emotion when The Girl sparks jealousy between them. Oates is a glib dynamo constructing a new persona in every scene, as if trying on characters to play as he ping-pongs between the coasts. “How fast does it go?” asks The Driver, admiring G.T.O.'s car. “Fast enough,” he answers. The Driver snaps, “You can never go fast enough.” These are characters on the road to nowhere who can't work up enough speed to escape themselves. –Sean Axmaker

More Details

Binding
Blu-ray
Aspect Ratio
1.77:1
Disks
1

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