alr

American Gigolo

Screening on Film
Directed by Paul Schrader.
With Richard Gere, Lauren Hutton, Hector Elizondo.
US, 1980, 35mm, color, 117 min.
Print source: Paramount Pictures

Schrader captures the shift in American cinema from the experimentation of the 1970s to the quietism of the 1980s in this play of surfaces and depths centered on a Los Angeles gigolo accused of a murder he may or may not have committed. A rich evocation of late 70s Los Angeles – the Armani clothes, the Giorgio Moroder score, a subdued pastel palette – American Gigolo is also the work of Schrader’s closest to Bresson, a director revered by Schrader and one of the subjects of his fascinating book Transcendental Style in Film. Richard Gere stars – in a career defining role – as the titular hero who, for all his activity and self-fashioning, remains a passive figure through whom we glimpse both the void of existence and, ultimately, the possibility of transcendence.

Part of film series

Read more

The Style of Loneliness – A Paul Schrader Retrospective

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig

Read more

Rosine Mbakam, 2025 McMillan-Stewart Fellow

Read more

The Illusory Tableaux of Georges Méliès

Read more

Activism and Post-Activism. Korean Documentary Cinema, 1981-2022

Read more

Fables of the Reconstruction. Nelson Carlo de Los Santos Arias

Read more

Ben Rivers, Back to the Land

Read more

Harvard Undergraduate Cinematheque

Read more

Make Way for Tomorrow. Carson Lund’s Eephus