alr

Two-Lane Blacktop

Screening on Film
Directed by Monte Hellman.
With James Taylor, Warren Oates, Laurie Bird.
US, 1971, 35mm, color, 102 min.

At one level a vivid documentary of American road fever and the obsessive world of street racing, Two-Lane Blacktop is also a sustained meditation on film acting as one of the most dangerous games, a form of high-stakes gambling where everything, including the film itself, is on the table. The film's fable-like story of a spontaneous cross-country race between two cars thus gives way to an extended and explicit showdown between two distinct modes of performance – with the musician non-actors James Taylor and Dennis Wilson in their stripped-down Chevy pitted against the ultimate actor's actor, Warren Oates, driving the decked-out orange GTO that gives him his name. At once a visually brilliant art film and an intoxicating road movie, Two-Lane Blacktop is often cited as the last film of the Sixties, a lonely farewell to the free spirit innocence and rebellious naivety of the ultimately defeated counterculture. – HG

Part of film series

Read more

All Roads Lead to Nowhere. The Films of Monte Hellman

Other film series with this film

Read more

Séance Screenings

Read more

Furious Cinema '70-'77

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Chronicles of Changing Times. The Cinema of Edward Yang