The Last Picture Show (1/8) Movie CLIP – School Spirit (1971) HD

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The Last Picture Show movie clips:
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
Jacy (Cybill Shepherd) is caught by her mother Lois (Ellen Burstyn) fooling around with Duane (Jeff Bridges) and Sonny (Timothy Bottoms) after school.

FILM DESCRIPTION:
Produced by Hollywood iconoclast BBS Productions, film critic-turned-director Peter Bogdanovich’s 1971 film pays homage to Hollywood’s classical age as it chronicles generational rites of passage in Anarene, a fictional one-horse Texas town. In 1951, high school seniors Sonny (Timothy Bottoms) and Duane (Jeff Bridges) play football, go to the movies at the Royal Theater, hang out at the pool hall owned by local elder statesman Sam the Lion (Ben Johnson), and lust after rich tease Jacy Farrow (Cybill Shepherd in her film debut). As the year passes, Sonny learns about the pitfalls and compromises of adulthood through an affair with his coach’s wife Ruth (Cloris Leachman) and a thwarted elopement with Jacy after she dumps Duane. Following two tragic deaths, and with Duane gone to Korea and Jacy packed off to college in Dallas, Sonny is left behind in Anarene, wise enough to absorb the life lessons of Sam the Lion and Jacy’s mother Lois (Ellen Burstyn). He is determined to honor Sam’s legacy as the town’s conscience, despite a telling sign of incipient communal disintegration: the closing of the Royal Theater after a final showing of Howard Hawks’s Red River. Paying tribute to classical Hollywood directors like Hawks and John Ford, Bogdanovich used old-time cinematographer Robert Surtees and shot The Last Picture Show in crisp black-and-white, with a restrained style devoid of the kind of “new wave” techniques (jump cuts, zooms, and jittery hand-held camerawork) used by such contemporaries as Arthur Penn, Robert Altman, Mike Nichols, and Martin Scorsese. As in such Ford films as The Grapes of Wrath (1940), Bogdanovich relies on careful visual composition in deep focus to help communicate the regret over the passing of an era. Hailed as one of the best films by a young director since Citizen Kane (1941), The Last Picture Show premiered at the New York Film Festival and went on to become a hit. It was also nominated for eight Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay for Larry McMurtry’s and Bogdanovich’s adaptation of McMurtry’s novel. John Ford stalwart Johnson won Supporting Actor and Leachman won Supporting Actress, beating out their cohorts Bridges and Burstyn. For an audience steeped in movie history and caught up in the chaotic 1971 present, The Last Picture Show presented a nostalgic look backward that was not so much an escape from the present as a coming to terms with what the present had lost. Its 1990 sequel Texasville, in which Bridges and Shepherd played later incarnations of their original characters, was not as successful.

CREDITS:
TM & © Sony (1971)
Cast: Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Clu Gulager, Ellen Burstyn, Cybill Shepherd
Director: Peter Bogdanovich
Producers: Bob Rafelson, Harold Schneider, Bert Schneider, Stephen J. Friedman
Screenwriters: Peter Bogdanovich, Larry McMurtry

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13 Comments
  1. Andrew Brendan says

    Wow! Until I read the comments below I didn't even know that Ellen Burstyn was playing the role of the mother. The voice and looks are different from anything of seen of Ms. Burstyn—proof that she's an outstanding actress.

  2. Jesse Sands says

    Domineering Mother!🤨⛓️🔒

  3. Jesse Sands says

    3 great stars of the future!😊🏘️🏠🏚️

  4. Bobby says

    the real america.

  5. Jackson's 45's says

    It’s the dude! He abides!

  6. lolo van says

    What is the name of that song they're singing, the school fight song???

  7. Melanie Willard says

    What would Jacy do?
    The heart and soul of Thalia.

  8. Peppermint Snowdrift says

    At 01:47, cue up Fifth Harmony's "Work From Home". 😉

  9. hebneh says

    At 0:37, on the far left, a modern car from about 1970 is visible in a carport, contemporary to the time when this film was made instead of the year it was supposed to be taking place (1951). And how could Jacy's father, sitting in the driver's seat of the Cadillac, NOT see her mother giving the other man the finger? She's sitting right next to him. Is this not a giveaway that something's going on between the two of them?

  10. Victor N. Pagan says

    Fuck movie clips. I want the whole movie. This is a bastardation of a great film You are committing a sin by showing little shreds of a great film. Would you do that with that show that is so popular today  about flying dragons…I can't remember the title…but people dye a lot…What's next? The Citizen Kane Highlights?!!! You fucking volgarian!!!

  11. tall32guy says

    Ellen looks so different!! awesome! 🙂

  12. Joe Dollinter says

    Love the scene at 1:54, the communication Ellen Burstyn exchanges with her Husband's foreman behind their sunglasses is just priceless, I watch the whole movie just to catch that scene again.

  13. Trev Biggs says

    WTF Cybil was one of the good old redneck boys?????????? She was so stuck up in Taxi Driver.

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