While Lucas was working on his first film,THX 1138, Coppola asked him to write a coming-of-age film. The genesis ofAmerican Graffiti took place in Modesto in the early 1960s, during Lucas's teenage years. He was unsuccessful in pitching the concept to financiers and distributors but found favor atUniversal Pictures after every other major film studio turned him down. Filming began inSan Rafael, California, but the production crew was denied permission to shoot beyond a second day. As a result, production was moved toPetaluma, California.[2][3] The film is the first movie to be produced by hisLucasfilm production banner.
American Graffiti premiered on August 2, 1973, at theLocarno International Film Festival in Switzerland and was released in the United States on August 11, 1973. Despite low expectations from Universal Pictures, who initially planned to release it as a television movie, the film was given a theatrical release afterFrancis Ford Coppola, fresh off the success ofThe Godfather, agreed to attach his name as an executive producer. Completed on a modest budget of $777,000 (equivalent to about $4.1 million in 2023),American Graffiti became one of the most profitable films of all time, earning over $200 million in box office and home video revenue.
The film received widespread critical acclaim and was nominated for fiveAcademy Awards, includingBest Picture. It is widely credited with launching a wave of 1950s and early 1960s nostalgia in American pop culture, influencing the teen comedy genre and reviving interest in early rock and roll among the baby boomer generation. In 1995, it was selected for preservation in theNational Film Registry by theLibrary of Congress for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
On their last evening ofsummer vacation in 1962, high school graduates Curt Henderson and Steve Bolander meet their friends, confidentdrag-racing king John Milner and unpopular but well-meaning Terry "The Toad" Fields, atMel's Drive-In inModesto, California. Set to travel "Back East" with Steve in the morning to start college, Curt has second thoughts about leaving. Laurie, Steve's girlfriend and Curt's sister, is hurt when Steve suggests they see other people while he is away to "strengthen" their relationship.
En route to the high schoolsock hop, Curt sees a beautiful blonde woman driving a whiteFord Thunderbird who mouths "I love you", leading him to desperately search for her throughout the night. Leaving the dance, he is coerced into joining a group ofgreasers called "the Pharaohs" in stealing coins from arcade machines and hooking a chain to a police car, ripping out its back axle. During a tense ride, the Pharaoh leader tells Curt that the blonde is a prostitute, which he does not believe.
Allowed to take care of Steve's car while he is at college, Terry cruises around the strip and picks up the rebellious Debbie. Telling her he is known as "Terry the Tiger", he spends the night trying to impress her, lying about the car and purchasing alcohol with no ID. The car is stolen while they share a romantic interlude and later, after the alcohol has made Terry violently sick, he attempts to steal it back. The thieves beat on Terry until John shows up and fends off the attackers. Terry eventually admits the truth to Debbie and reveals he rides a Vespa scooter; she suggests it is "almost a motorcycle" and says she had fun, agreeing to meet up with him again.
Seeking cruising company, John inadvertently picks up Carol, a precocious 12-year-old who manipulates him into driving her around all night. He lies to suspicious friends that she is a cousin he is stuck babysitting, and they have a series of petty arguments until another car's young male occupants harass her as she attempts to walk home alone, and John decides to protect her. The racer, Bob Falfa, wants to compete for John's drag-racing crown. During his night of challenging anyone he comes across, Bob picks up an emotional Laurie after a long-brewing argument with Steve.
Leaving the Pharaohs, Curt drives to the radio station to ask the omnipresent disc jockey "Wolfman Jack" to read a message on the air for the blonde. A station employee tells him the Wolfman does not work there and the shows are taped, claiming the Wolfman "is everywhere". He says the Wolfman would advise Curt to "get your ass in gear" and see the world but promises to have the Wolfman air the request. As Curt leaves, he realizes the employee is the Wolfman, who reads the message to the blonde asking her to call Curt at the Mel's Drive-Inpayphone.
After taking Carol home, John is goaded by Bob into drag racing along Paradise Road outside the city with a crowd of spectators. Terry starts the race and John takes the lead but Bob's tire blows out, causing his car to swerve into a ditch and roll over before bursting into flames. Steve rushes to the wreck as Laurie and Bob crawl out before the car explodes. While John helps his rival to safety, Laurie begs Steve not to leave her and he assures her that he will stay with her in Modesto.
An exhausted Curt is awakened by the payphone and finally speaks to the mysterious blonde, who hints at the possibility of meeting the following night, but Curt replies that he is leaving town. In the morning at the airfield, he says goodbye to his parents and friends; after takeoff, he sees the white Thunderbird driving along the road below, and gazes thoughtfully into the sky.
Anepilogue reveals the four male friends' fates: in 1964, John was killed by a drunk driver; in 1965, Terry was reportedmissing in action nearAn Lộc, South Vietnam; Steve is an insurance agent in Modesto, and Curt is a writer living in Canada.
During the production ofTHX 1138 (1971), producerFrancis Ford Coppola challenged co-writer/directorGeorge Lucas to write a script that would appeal to mainstream audiences.[4] Lucas embraced the idea, using his early 1960s teenage experiencescruising in Modesto, California. "Cruising was gone, and I felt compelled to document the whole experience and whatmy generation used as a way of meeting girls," Lucas explained.[4] As he developed the story in his mind, Lucas included his fascination with Wolfman Jack. Lucas had considered doing a documentary about the Wolfman when he attended theUSC School of Cinematic Arts, but he ultimately dropped the idea.[5]
Adding in semiautobiographical connotations, Lucas set the story in his hometown of 1962 Modesto.[4] The characters Curt Henderson, John Milner, and Terry "The Toad" Fields also represent different stages from his younger life. Curt is modeled after Lucas's personality during USC, while John is based on Lucas's teenagedstreet-racing and junior-college years, andhot rod enthusiasts he had known from theKustom Kulture in Modesto. Terry represents Lucas'snerd years as a freshman in high school, specifically his "bad luck" with dating.[6] The filmmaker was also inspired byFederico Fellini'sI Vitelloni (1953).[7]
After the financial failure ofTHX 1138, Lucas wanted the film to act as a release for a world-weary audience:[8]
[THX] was about real things that were going on and the problems we're faced with. I realized after makingTHX that those problems are so real that most of us have to face those things every day, so we're in a constant state of frustration. That just makes us more depressed than we were before. So I made a film where, essentially, we can get rid of some of those frustrations, the feeling that everything seems futile.[8]
AfterWarner Bros. abandoned Lucas's early version ofApocalypse Now (during the post-production ofTHX 1138), the filmmaker decided to continue developingAnother Quiet Night in Modesto, eventually changing its title toAmerican Graffiti.[5] To co-write a 15-pagefilm treatment, Lucas hiredWillard Huyck andGloria Katz, who also added semiautobiographical material to the story.[9] Lucas and his colleagueGary Kurtz beganpitching theAmerican Graffiti treatment to various Hollywood studios and production companies in an attempt to secure the financing needed to expand it into a screenplay,[4] but they were unsuccessful. The potential financiers were concerned thatmusic licensing costs would cause the film to go way over budget. Along withEasy Rider (1969),American Graffiti was one of the first films to eschew a traditionalfilm score and successfully rely instead on synchronizing a series of popular hit songs with individual scenes.[10]
THX 1138 was released in March 1971,[4] and Lucas was offered opportunities to directLady Ice,Tommy, orHair. He turned down those offers, determined to pursue his own projects despite his urgent desire to find another film to direct.[11][12] During this time, Lucas conceived the idea for aspace opera (as yet untitled) which later became the basis for hisStar Wars franchise. At the1971 Cannes Film Festival,THX was chosen for theDirectors' Fortnight competition. There, Lucas metDavid Picker, then president ofUnited Artists, who was intrigued byAmerican Graffiti and Lucas's space opera. Picker decided to give Lucas $10,000 (equivalent to about $59,000 in 2024[13] dollars) to developGraffiti as a screenplay.[11]
Lucas planned to spend another five weeks in Europe and hoped that Huyck and Katz would agree to finish the screenplay by the time he returned, but they were about to start on their own film,Messiah of Evil,[9] so Lucas hiredRichard Walter, a colleague from theUSC School of Cinematic Arts for the job. Walter was flattered, but initially tried to sell Lucas on a different screenplay calledBarry and the Persuasions, a story ofEast Coast teenagers in the late 1950s. Lucas held firm—his was a story aboutWest Coast teenagers in the early 1960s. Walter was paid the $10,000, and he began to expand the Lucas/Huyck/Katz treatment into a screenplay.[11]
Lucas was dismayed when he returned to America in June 1971 and read Walter's script, which was written in the style and tone of anexploitation film, similar to 1967'sHot Rods to Hell. "It was overtly sexual and very fantasy-like, withplaying chicken and things that kids didn't really do," Lucas explained. "I wanted something that was more like the way I grew up."[14] Walter's script also had Steve and Laurie going to Nevada to get married without their parents' permission.[7] Walter rewrote the screenplay, but Lucas nevertheless fired him due to their creative differences.[11]
After paying Walter, Lucas had exhausted his development fund from United Artists. He began writing a script, completing his first draft in just three weeks.[15] Drawing upon his large collection of vintage records, Lucas wrote each scene with a particular song in mind as its musical backdrop.[11] The cost of licensing the 75 songs Lucas wanted was one factor in United Artists' ultimate decision to reject the script; the studio also felt it was too experimental—"a musical montage with no characters". United Artists also passed onStar Wars, which Lucas shelved for the time being.[12]
Lucas spent the rest of 1971 and early 1972 trying to raise financing for theAmerican Graffiti script.[12] During this time,Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,Paramount Pictures,20th Century Fox, andColumbia Pictures all turned down the opportunity to co-finance and distribute the film.[16] Lucas, Huyck and Katz rewrote the second draft together, which, in addition to Modesto, was also set inMill Valley and Los Angeles. Lucas also intended to endAmerican Graffiti showing a title card detailing the fate of the characters, including the death of Milner and the disappearance of Toad in Vietnam. Huyck and Katz found the ending depressing and were incredulous that Lucas planned to include only the male characters. Lucas argued that mentioning the girls meant adding another title card, which he felt would prolong the ending. Because of this,Pauline Kael later accused Lucas ofchauvinism.[16]
Lucas and producer Gary Kurtz took the script toAmerican International Pictures, who expressed interest, but ultimately believedAmerican Graffiti was not violent or sexual enough for the studio's standards.[17] Lucas and Kurtz eventually found favor atUniversal Pictures, who allowed Lucas totalartistic control and the right offinal cut privilege on the condition that he makeAmerican Graffiti on a strict low budget.[12] This forced Lucas to drop the opening scene in which the Blonde Angel, Curt's image of the perfect woman, drives through an empty drive-in cinema in her Ford Thunderbird, her transparency revealing she does not exist.[18]
Universal initially projected a $600,000 budget but added an additional $175,000 once producer Francis Ford Coppola signed on. This would allow the studio to advertiseAmerican Graffiti as "from the man who gave youThe Godfather". The proposition also gave Universalfirst-look deals on Lucas's next two planned projects,Star Wars andRadioland Murders.[17] As he continued to work on the script, Lucas encountered difficulties on the Steve and Laurie storyline. Lucas, Katz, and Huyck worked on the third draft together, specifically on the scenes featuring Steve and Laurie.[19]
Production proceeded with virtually no input or interference from Universal sinceAmerican Graffiti was alow-budget film, and executiveNed Tanen had only modest expectations of its commercial success. However, Universal did object to the film's title, not knowing what "American Graffiti" meant;[19] Lucas was dismayed when some executives assumed he was making an Italian movie about feet.[16] The studio, therefore, submitted a long list of over 60 alternative titles, with their favorite beingAnother Slow Night in Modesto[19] and Coppola'sRock Around the Block.[16] They pushed hard to get Lucas to adopt any of the titles, but he was displeased with all the alternatives and persuaded Tanen to keepAmerican Graffiti.[19]
The film's lengthy casting process was overseen byFred Roos, who worked with producer Francis Ford Coppola onThe Godfather.[9] BecauseAmerican Graffiti's main cast was for younger actors, the casting call and notices went through numerous high-school drama groups and community theaters in theSan Francisco Bay Area.[6] Among the actors wasMark Hamill, the futureLuke Skywalker in Lucas'sStar Wars trilogy.[18]
Over 100 unknown actors auditioned for Curt Henderson before Richard Dreyfuss was cast; George Lucas was impressed with Dreyfuss's thoughtful analysis of the role,[6] and as a result, offered the actor his choice of Curt or Terry "The Toad" Fields.[18] Roos, a former casting director onThe Andy Griffith Show, suggested Ron Howard for Steve Bolander; Howard accepted the role to break out of the mold of his career as a child actor.[6] Howard would later appear in the very similar role ofRichie Cunningham on theHappy Days sitcom.[20]Bob Balaban turned down Terry out of fear of becoming typecast, a decision he later regretted. Charles Martin Smith, who, in his first year as a professional actor, had already appeared in two feature films, including 20th Century Fox'sThe Culpepper Cattle Co. and four TV episodes, was eventually cast in the role.[21]
Although Cindy Williams was cast as Laurie Henderson and enjoyed working with both Lucas and Howard,[22] the actress hoped she would get the part of Debbie Dunham, which ended up going to Candy Clark.[9]Mackenzie Phillips, who portrays Carol, was only 12, and under California law, producer Gary Kurtz had to become her legal guardian for the duration of filming.[18] For Bob Falfa, Roos castHarrison Ford, who was then concentrating on a carpentry career. Ford agreed to take the role on the condition that he would not have to cut his hair, in case he was offered other movie or TV roles set in the "present day" of the 1970s. The character has a flattop in the script, but a compromise was eventually reached whereby Ford wore aStetson to cover his hair. Producer Coppola encouraged Lucas to cast Wolfman Jack as himself in acameo appearance. "George Lucas and I went through thousands of Wolfman Jack phone calls that were taped with the public," Jack reflected. "The telephone calls [heard on the broadcasts] in the motion picture and on the soundtrack were actual calls with real people."[19][23]
AlthoughAmerican Graffiti is set in 1962 Modesto, Lucas believed the city had changed too much in ten years and initially choseSan Rafael as the primary shooting location.[18] Filming began on June 26, 1972. However, Lucas soon became frustrated at the length of time it was taking to fix camera mounts to the cars.[24] A key member of the production had also been arrested for growing marijuana,[16] and in addition to already running behind theshooting schedule, the San Rafael City Council immediately became concerned about the disruption that filming caused for local businesses, so withdrew permission to shoot beyond a second day.[24]
Petaluma, a similarly small town about 20 miles (32 km) north of San Rafael, was more cooperative, andAmerican Graffiti moved there without the loss of a single day of shooting. Lucas convinced the San Rafael City Council to allow two further nights of filming for general cruising shots, which he used to evoke as much of the intended location as possible in the finished film. Shooting in Petaluma began June 28 and proceeded at a quick pace.[24] Lucas mimicked the filmmaking style ofB-movie producerSam Katzman (Rock Around the Clock,Your Cheatin' Heart, and the aforementionedHot Rods to Hell) in attempting to save money using low-budget filming methods.[18]
More problems ensued during filming; Paul Le Mat was sent to the hospital after an allergic reaction to walnuts. Le Mat, Harrison Ford, and Bo Hopkins were claimed to be drunk most nights and every weekend, and had conducted climbing competitions to the top of the localHoliday Inn sign.[27] One actor set fire to Lucas's motel room. Another night, Le Mat threw Richard Dreyfuss into a swimming pool, gashing Dreyfuss's forehead on the day before he was due to have his close-ups filmed. Dreyfuss also complained over the wardrobe that Lucas had chosen for the character. Ford was kicked out of his motel room at the Holiday Inn.[27] In addition, two camera operators were nearly killed when filming the climactic race scene on Frates Road outside Petaluma.[28]Principal photography ended August 4, 1972.[25]
The final scenes in the film, shot at Buchanan Field, feature aDouglas DC-7C airliner of Magic Carpet Airlines, which had previously been leased from owner Club America Incorporated by the rock bandGrand Funk Railroad from March 1971 to June 1971.[26][29][30]
Lucas considered covering duties as the sole cinematographer, but dropped the idea.[18] Instead, he elected to shootAmerican Graffiti using two cinematographers (as he had done inTHX 1138) and no formal director of photography. Two cameras were used simultaneously in scenes involving conversations between actors in different cars, which resulted in significant production time savings.[24] AfterCinemaScope proved to be too expensive,[18] Lucas decidedAmerican Graffiti should have a documentary-like feel, so he shot the film usingTechniscope cameras. He believed that Techniscope, an inexpensive way of shooting on35 mm film and using only half of the film's frame, would give a perfect widescreen format resembling16 mm. Adding to the documentary feel was Lucas's openness for the cast toimprovise scenes. He also usedgoofs for the final cut, notably Charles Martin Smith's arriving on his scooter to meet Steve outside Mel's Drive-In.[31]Jan D'Alquen and Ron Eveslage were hired as the cinematographers, but filming with Techniscope cameras brought lighting problems. As a result, Lucas commissioned help from friendHaskell Wexler, who was credited as the "visual consultant".[24]
Lucas had wanted his then wife,Marcia, to editAmerican Graffiti, but Universal executive Ned Tanen insisted on hiringVerna Fields, who had just finished editingSteven Spielberg'sThe Sugarland Express.[32] Fields worked on the firstrough cut of the film before she left to resume work onWhat's Up, Doc?. After Fields's departure, Lucas struggled with editing the film's story structure. He had originally written the script so that the four (Curt, Steve, John, and Toad) storylines were always presented in the same sequence (an "ABCD" plot structure). The first cut ofAmerican Graffiti was three and a half hours long, and to whittle the film down to a more manageable two hours, many scenes had to be cut, shortened, or combined. As a result, the film's structure became increasingly loose and no longer adhered to Lucas's original "ABCD" presentation.[31] Lucas completed his final cut ofAmerican Graffiti, which ran 112 minutes, in December 1972.[33]Walter Murch assisted Lucas in post-production foraudio mixing andsound design purposes.[31] Murch suggested making Wolfman Jack's radio show the "backbone" of the film. "The Wolfman was an ethereal presence in the lives of young people," said producer Gary Kurtz, "and it was that quality we wanted and obtained in the picture."[34]
The choice of music was crucial to the mood of each scene; it isdiegetic music that the characters themselves can hear and therefore becomes an integral part of the action.[35] George Lucas had to be realistic about the complexities of copyright clearances, though, and suggested a number of alternative tracks. Universal wanted Lucas and producer Gary Kurtz to hire an orchestra forsound-alikes. The studio eventually proposed a flat deal that offered every music publisher the same amount of money. This was acceptable to most of the companies representing Lucas's first choices, but not toRCA—with the consequence thatElvis Presley is conspicuously absent from the soundtrack.[12] Clearing themusic licensing rights had cost approximately $90,000,[34] and as a result, no money was left for a traditionalfilm score. "I used the absence of music, and sound effects, to create the drama," Lucas later explained.[33]
When it came to the ending credits, only the song's title, artist, and the record label was listed. However, the names of the composers and lyricists, as well as the publishing company and the copyright year, were completely left out. This resulted in several of the songwriters filing lawsuits against MCA for leaving their names out of the credits. A settlement was reached in which MCA paid the damages to the songwriters, as well as to the publishing companies.
A soundtrack album for the film,41 Original Hits from the Soundtrack of American Graffiti, was issued byMCA Records. The album contains all the songs used in the film (with the exception of "Gee" by the Crows, which was subsequently included on a second soundtrack album), presented in the order in which they appeared in the film.
Despite unanimous praise at a January 1973test screening attended by Universal executive Ned Tanen, the studio told Lucas they wanted to re-edit his original cut ofAmerican Graffiti.[33] Producer Coppola sided with Lucas against Tanen and Universal, offering to "buy the film" from the studio and reimburse it for the $775,000 (equivalent to $4.4 million in 2024)[13] that it had cost to make it.[25] 20th Century Fox and Paramount Pictures made similar offers to the studio.[5] Universal refused these offers and told Lucas they planned to haveWilliam Hornbeck re-edit the film.[36]
When Coppola'sThe Godfather won theAcademy Award for Best Picture in March 1973, Universal relented and agreed to cut only three scenes (amounting to a few minutes) from Lucas's cut. These include an encounter between Toad and a fast-talking car salesman, an argument between Steve and his former teacher Mr. Kroot at the sock hop, and an effort by Bob Falfa to serenade Laurie with "Some Enchanted Evening". The studio initially thought that the film was only fit for release as a television movie.[25]
Various studio employees who had seen the film began talking it up, and its reputation grew throughword of mouth.[25] The studio dropped the TV movie idea and began arranging for alimited release in selected theaters in Los Angeles and New York.[10] Universal presidentsSidney Sheinberg andLew Wasserman heard about the praise the film had been garnering in LA and New York, and the marketing department amped up its promotion strategy for it,[10] investing an additional $500,000 (equivalent to $2.7 million in 2024)[13] in marketing and promotion.[5] The film was released in the United States on August 11, 1973[1] tosleeper hit reception.[37] The film had cost only $1.27 million (equivalent to $7.2 million in 2024)[13] to produce and market, but yielded worldwide box office gross revenues of more than $55 million (equivalent to $390 million in 2024).[38][39] It had only modest success outside the United States and Canada, but became acult film in France.[36]
Universal reissuedGraffiti on May 26, 1978, withDolby sound[40][41] and earned an additional $63 million (equivalent to $304 million in 2024),[38] which brought the total revenue for the two releases to $118 million (equivalent to $570 million in 2024).[5][38] The reissue included stereophonic sound[39] and a couple of minutes the studio had removed from Lucas's original cut.[42] Allhome video releases also included these scenes.[25] Also, the date of John Milner's death was changed from June 1964 to December 1964 to fit the narrative structure of the upcoming sequel,More American Graffiti. At the end of its theatrical run,American Graffiti had one of the greatest profit-to-cost ratios of a motion picture ever.[5]
Producer Francis Ford Coppola regretted having not financed the film himself. Lucas recalled, "He would have made $30 million (equivalent to $210 million in 2024)[38] on the deal. He never got over it and he still kicks himself."[36] It was the 13th-highest-grossing film of all time in 1977[37] and, adjusted for inflation, is currently the 43rd highest.[43] By the 1990s,American Graffiti had earned more than $200 million (equivalent to $480 million in 2024)[38] in box-office gross and home video sales.[5] In December 1997,Variety reported that the film had earned an additional $55.13 million in rental revenue (equivalent to $108 million in 2024).[38][44]
Universal Studios first released the film on DVD in September 1998,[45] and once more as adouble feature withMore American Graffiti (1979) in January 2004.[46] The 1978 version of the film was used, with an additional digital change to the sky in the opening title sequence.[42] Additionally, the 1998 DVD and VHS releases were bothTHX certified as well.[47] Universal released the film onBlu-ray with a new digitally remastered picture supervised by George Lucas on May 31, 2011.[48][49] In celebration of its 50th anniversary, a4K restoration of the film updated with a brand new5.1 sound mix was re-released domestically on August 27 and 30 before aUltra HD Blu-ray release on November 7, 2023.[50]
American Graffiti received widespread critical acclaim.Roger Ebert gave the film a full four stars and praised it for being "not only a great movie, but a brilliant work of historical fiction; no sociological treatise could duplicate the movie's success in remembering exactly how it was to be alive at that cultural instant".[51]Gene Siskel awarded three-and-a-half stars out of four, writing that although the film suffered from an "overkill" ofnostalgia, particularly with regards to a soundtrack so overstuffed that it amounted to "one of those golden-oldie TV blurbs," it was still "well-made, does achieve moments of genuine emotion, and does provide a sock (hop) full of memories."[52]
Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times wrote, "American Graffiti is such a funny, accurate movie, so controlled and efficient in its narrative, that it stands to be overpraised to the point where seeing it will be an anticlimax."[53] A. D. Murphy fromVariety feltAmerican Graffiti was a vivid "recall of teenage attitudes and morals, told with outstanding empathy and compassion through an exceptionally talented cast of unknown actors".[54]Charles Champlin ofThe New York Times called it a "masterfully executed and profoundly affecting movie".[55]Jay Cocks ofTime magazine wrote thatAmerican Graffiti "reveals a new and welcome depth of feeling. Few films have shown quite so well the eagerness, the sadness, the ambitions and small defeats of a generation of young Americans."[56]Pauline Kael ofThe New Yorker was less enthused, writing that the film "fails to be anything more than a warm, nice, draggy comedy, because there's nothing to back up the style. The images aren't as visually striking as they would be if only there were a mind at work behind them; the movie has no resonance except from the jukebox sound and the eerie, nocturnal jukebox look." She also noted with disdain that the epilogue did not bother to mention the fates of any of the women characters.[57]Dave Kehr, writing in theChicago Reader, called the film a brilliant work of popular art that redefined nostalgia as a marketable commodity, while establishing a new narrative style.[58]
Based on 62 reviews collected byRotten Tomatoes, 95% of the critics enjoyed the film with an average score of 8.6/10. The consensus reads: "One of the most influential of all teen films,American Graffiti is a funny, nostalgic, and bittersweet look at a group of recent high school grads' last days of innocence."[59]Metacritic calculated a score of 97 out of 100, indicating "universal acclaim".[60]
American Graffiti depicts multiple characters going through acoming of age, such as the decisions to attend college or reside in a small town.[9] The 1962 setting represents nearing an end of an era in American society and pop culture. The early 1960s musical backdrop also links between the early years of rock 'n' roll in the mid- to late 1950s (i.e.,Bill Haley & His Comets,Elvis Presley, andBuddy Holly), and mid-1960s, beginning with the January 1964 arrival ofThe Beatles and the followingBritish Invasion, whichDon McLean's "American Pie" and the early 1970s revival of 1950s acts and oldies paralleled during the conception and filming.
The setting is two months before theCuban Missile Crisis, and before the outbreak of theVietnam War and theJohn F. Kennedy assassination[9] and before the peak years of thecounterculture movement.American Graffiti evokes mankind's relationship with machines, notably the elaborate number ofhot rods—having been called a "classic-car flick", representative of the motor car's importance to American culture at the time it was made.[61] Another theme is teenagers' obsession with radio, especially with the inclusion of Wolfman Jack and his mysterious and mythological faceless (to most) voice.
Internet reviewer MaryAnn Johanson acknowledged thatAmerican Graffiti rekindled public and entertainment interest in the 1950s and early 1960s, and influenced other films such asThe Lords of Flatbush (1974) andCooley High (1975) and the TV seriesHappy Days.[74] Alongside other films from theNew Hollywood era,American Graffiti is often cited for helping give birth to thesummer blockbuster.[75] The film's box-office success made George Lucas an instant millionaire. He gave an amount of the film's profits toHaskell Wexler for his visual consulting help during filming, and to Wolfman Jack for "inspiration". Lucas's net worth was now $4 million, and he set aside a $300,000 independent fund for his long-cherished space opera project, which would eventually become the basis forStar Wars (1977).[25]
The financial success ofGraffiti also gave Lucas opportunities to establish more elaborate development forLucasfilm,Skywalker Sound, andIndustrial Light & Magic.[39] Based on the success of the 1978reissue, Universal began production for the sequelMore American Graffiti (1979).[5] Lucas and writers Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz later collaborated onHoward the Duck (1986) andRadioland Murders (1994). They were both released by Universal Pictures, for which Lucas acted as executive producer.Radioland Murders features characters intended to be Curt and Laurie Henderson's parents, Roger and Penny Henderson.[39] In 1995,American Graffiti was deemed culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant by the United StatesLibrary of Congress and selected for preservation in theNational Film Registry.[76] In 1997 the city ofModesto, California (where the film largely takes place), honored Lucas with a statue dedication ofAmerican Graffiti at George Lucas Plaza.[4] Furthermore, the city has anannual classic car festival in honor of its graffiti culture heritage.
Given the popularity of the film's cars withcustomizers andhot rodders in the years since its release, their fate immediately after the film is surprising. All were offered for sale in San Francisco newspaper ads; only the'58 Impala (driven by Ron Howard) attracted a buyer, selling for only a few hundred dollars. The yellow deuce coupe and the Pharaohs' red Mercury went unsold, despite the coupe being priced as low as $1500.[81] The registration plate on Milner's yellow deuce coupe is THX 138 on a yellow, California license plate, slightly altered, reflecting Lucas's earlier science-fiction film (THX 1138).
^Roeper, Richard (August 24, 2023)."50 years ago, 'American Graffiti' showed '70s audiences a simpler time".Chicago Sun-Times. RetrievedJune 18, 2024.Although the story is set in Modesto, the majority of filming actually took place in Petaluma, California.... Filming also took place in San Rafael (the city council withdrew permits after one day)...
^Brooks, Victor (2012).Last Season of Innocence: The Teen Experience in the 1960s By Victor Brooks. Rowman & Littlefield.ISBN9781442209176.Archived from the original on June 9, 2015. RetrievedJanuary 21, 2015.Happy Days began airing only a few months after Graffiti came out, and much of the plotline revolved around Howard's character, Richie Cunningham, who was almost an exact clone of Steve in the film.