Not many viewers will ever have seen this as having connections with
frontier fiction or the western, but they are there. The young Jack Nicholson
plays the black sheep of a cultured family of musicians. Trained as a classical
pianist, he has long ago left home and lives as a drifter, taking jobs and then
moving on, as he explains, to “get away from what gets bad if I stay.”
He is currently working as a roustabout in oilfields not far from
Bakersfield, California. He has a live-in girlfriend (Karen Black) with musical
aspirations of her own—to be a country and western singer. (There are Tammy
Wynette songs on the music track.) His best buddy (Billy Green Bush) is married, but the two men happily drink nights away, or they hook up with a couple of
unattached females (Sally Struthers, Martina MacGuire) that Nicholson meets at
a bowling alley.
Plot. When Bush is
arrested for robbery, Nicholson heads up the coast to Washington, taking along
Black and picking up two other women (Helena Kallianiotes, Toni Basil) whose
car has overturned at the side of the road. Leaving Black at a motel, he drives
to the family home on an island in Puget Sound. There he persuades a house guest
(Susan Anspach) into bed but does not like her assessment of him, that he is
emotionally empty and unable to love.
On a walk with his aging father, wheelchair-bound and unable to speak
after suffering two strokes, Nicholson admits his failings as a son in a
tearful monologue to the silent older man. Back on the road with Black, he abandons
her at a truck stop, where he catches a ride with a trucker, heading for
Alaska.
Diner scene |
Frontier
ethos. It’s not hard to see Nicholson’s character as one in a long line of
drifting western heroes, most of them loners who are estranged from family and far
from home, always moving to some new frontier, abandoning attachments,
especially to women. It’s a rough life, with no commitments, a two-fisted, hard
drinking, tough exterior masking any vulnerabilities.
The story is told with the modern-day West as a backdrop—the arid lands
of the oilfields and the woods and waters of the Pacific Northwest. As in
frontier fiction we have seen here earlier, this world is an opposite to the
sophistication of the East, represented by concert musicians, polite dinner
conversation, and some high-minded intellectual snobbery that a not so polite
Nicholson calls “bullshit.”
He also represents a westerner’s aversion to Eastern high-stress urban
lifestyles and the prevalence there of rules and regulations. The film
dramatizes this in two iconic scenes. In one, when Nicholson and Bush are
stopped in stalled traffic on a freeway, Nicholson leaves his car and climbs
onto a mover's truck to play an out-of-tune piano. Another is the well-remembered diner
scene, where Nicholson is prevented from getting a side order of toast. We also
get it in the relentless harangues of his backseat passenger, Kallianiotes, who
sees the populated world and the people in it as “filth.”
Nicholson and Black |
Meanwhile, what the movie portrays is the exhaustion of the myth of
Western expansion. The frontier continues to recede and offers only an illusion
of escape from civilization’s discontents. Nicholson’s character in the end may
have shrugged off a situation he can no longer abide (his girlfriend is
pregnant, and he clearly does not want to be married), but riding off
into a fog, as he does, he has no hope of improving his lot in life.
We get a similar deflation at the end of Shane, as the gunman moves on, unable to stay where he might have
put down roots and made a home. But for Nicholson’s character, there is an
emptiness in his soul that will follow him wherever he wanders.
Wrapping up. It’s worth
remembering that the film is a product of its time. Made during the Vietnam
War, it reflects a crisis of a divided nation’s spirit. Its ambivalence can be
found in the downbeat tone of other Hollywood movies of the time, e.g. Easy Rider (1970) and McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971), or the off-beat
humor of M.A.S.H. (1970).
Still, it holds up well for its age, despite its occasional 70s-style
languors, where a modern-day editor would cut more to the quick. Anyway, it’s a
pleasure for a change to watch a film that lingers on moments for its effects. A lovely
example comes as Nicholson plays a short piece by Chopin, as the camera slowly pans
in closeup from his hands on the keys to the listening Anspach, then across a
wall covered with family photographs and back to Nicholson again.
If anything about the film has improved with time, it’s Karen Black’s
performance. She gives dignity to her diner waitress character that could
easily have slipped over into caricature. A fish out of water with the social
circle who gather at the family home, she exhibits an honesty and integrity
that deserve better than what the film gives her in the final scene. Also
memorable are Nicholson’s scenes with Lois Smith, who plays his sister. Here's a scene from the film:
Five Easy
Pieces is currently available for instant viewing at Netflix and on DVD at amazon
and Barnes&Noble. For more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies and TV, click on
over to Todd Mason’s blog, Sweet Freedom.
Image credits:
Diner scene, sparlow.sourceforge.net
Nicholson and Black, nukethefridge.com
Coming up: Robert J. Conley, Quitting Time (1989)
It's been so long since I've seen it, I only recall the toast scene (because it's always shone) and a feeling of not liking that character he played, probably for the way he treated women. In fact, I don't think I've ever cared for any character Nicholson has played, though I sit mesmerized through each of his movies.
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean. There's an unpredictable wild streak in him and a devilish grin that keep you watching, even when you don't admire the characters he's playing.
DeleteThe toast scene is played so often it is what you remember. You make a great case for its tie to frontier stories, Ron. Will have to watch it again.
ReplyDeleteOften lose patience with movies I've seen before. But 5EP popped up the other night on TCM, and we both watched it to the end.
DeleteKaren Black’s performances were always tops. I first noticed her in a TV film called Mr. Horn (1979) alongside David Carradine. Superb actress and this film is still fun to watch because of Jack. Caught it a few months back and was tied to the screen until it was over.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen her in years but think of her now as another of Hollywood's great wasted talents.
DeleteNever saw this one. I do like Karen Black, though.
ReplyDeleteIt's a classic, Charles. You owe it to yourself to give it a watch.
DeleteOne of my favorite Nicholson films. Saw it last year. It does date well enough, with a few exceptions (one I always remember is the camera work on "swriling Sally Struthers" --if you recall the scene.)
ReplyDeleteThat scene has been imitated beyond counting.
ReplyDeleteTerrific movie with great performances overall. As has already been said, Karen Black really shines here. Btw, as a kid I read the parody in Mad magazine decades before I saw the actual movie. Imagine that - there was once a time when a movie like this was considered high-profiled enough to be the subject of a parody in Mad. Artwork by the great Mort Drucker, of course.
ReplyDelete