Rating: R
Genre:
Drama
Release Date: 12/14/1999
SubTitles: English/Espanol/Por/KO/TH
Dubbed: English
Sound: 5.1/1
Run Time: 95 Minutes
Flags: Nudity, Adult Situations, Adult Language
Distributor/Studio: Columbia TriStar
A disaffected man seeks a sense of identity in one of the key films of Hollywood's 1970s New Wave. Once a promising pianist from a family of classical musicians,
Bobby Eroica Dupea (
Jack Nicholson, in his first major starring role) leads a blue-collar life as an oil rigger, living with needy waitress girlfriend
Rayette (
Karen Black) and bowling with their friends
Elton (
Billy "Green" Bush) and
Stoney (
Fannie Flagg). Feeling suffocated by responsibilities,
Bobby seeks out his sister,
Tita (
Lois Smith), and, discovering that his father is gravely ill, he reluctantly heads back to the patrician family compound in Puget Sound with a pregnant
Rayette in tow. After a road trip featuring a harangue from hitchhiker
Palm (
Helena Kallianiotes) about filth, and
Bobby's ill-fated attempt to make a menu substitution in a diner, he tucks
Rayette away in a motel before heading to the house. There
Bobby seduces his uptight brother
Carl's cultured fiancée,
Catherine (
Susan Anspach), but
Rayette shows up unexpectedly. As
Rayette's crassness collides with the snobbery of the Dupea circle,
Bobby loses patience with both sides. After trying to reconcile with his mute father,
Bobby departs, unwilling to give in to either destiny. Director
Bob Rafelson and screenwriter
Adrien Joyce (aka
Carole Eastman) used the creative control afforded by the low budget to craft a European-influenced character study, catching a cultural mood of anomie and resentment as it was embodied in
Bobby. Neither older generation nor hippie,
Bobby fits in nowhere, and his desire for independence conflicts with his emotional emptiness.
Nicholson's nuanced performance of simmering frustration resonated with 1970 audiences caught between
Nixon's "silent majority" and the troubled counterculture; a substantial hit,
Five Easy Pieces was nominated for several Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Actor, and established
Nicholson as a star. Offering no "easy" answers to
Bobby's existential crisis,
Five Easy Pieces is one of the pre-eminent films in the early-'70s cycle of alienated American art movies, as even the fantasy of rebellion is reduced to merely running away.
~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide