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Taking Off (film)

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1971 American film by Miloš Forman

Taking Off
Poster art byBarbara Baranowska
Directed byMiloš Forman
Written byJean-Claude Carrière
Miloš Forman
John Guare
John Klein
Produced byAlfred W. Crown
StarringLynn Carlin
Buck Henry
CinematographyMiroslav Ondříček
Edited byJohn Carter
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • March 28, 1971 (1971-03-28) (New York City)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Taking Off is a 1971 American comedy film, directed byMiloš Forman.[1] It tells a story of an average couple in the suburbs of New York City, who, when their teenage daughter runs away from home, connect with other parents of vanished children and learn something of youth culture.

Plot

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Larry Tyne and his wife Lynn return home one evening to find that their teenage daughter Jeannie is not there. (Viewers know she is attending an audition, clips from which, with future star performers likeCarly Simon andKathy Bates, recur throughout the film). The Tynes ring the Divitos, with whose daughter Jeannie is supposed to be, but the Divitos' daughter claims she doesn't know where Jeannie is. Enlisting their friends Tony and Margot, the two men search the neighbourhood bars while the women stay by the phone and gossip about sex. When the men return home drunk, Jeannie reappears, only to vanish again. Next day, Larry goes into the city to search for her. In the street, he meets Ann Lockston, a parent who's also searching for a missing daughter, and Ann tells Larry about a self-help group for parents in their predicament.

The police from upstate call the Tynes to say their daughter's been arrested 300 miles away for stealing. The two rush to see her, only to find that it is the Divitos' girl in custody, having given the police a false name. On the trip back home, they stop at a hotel, whereIke & Tina Turner are performing. A drunk Lynn is followed to their room by an amorous stranger, unaware that Larry is asleep in the bed. After the stranger disappears, Lynn tries out some of the tips Margot had confided to her earlier.

Later, back in the city, Larry and Lynn attend a formal dinner for the self-help group. Afterwards, marijuana joints are handed round, and a young man named Schiavelli instructs the parents on how to smoke them. Happily high, Larry and Lynn take Ann and her husband Ben back to their home for more drinks and a game of strip poker. As the group gets more inebriated, a naked Larry jumps on top of the table to sing "Libiamo ne' lieti calici". At this point, Jeannie reappears, and the guests hastily leave.

When Jeannie admits to having been with a boy, Larry suggests she brings him home for dinner soon. When he appears, he proves to be an intelligent and wealthy musician. However, he declines to play for them, upon which Larry entertains the four with "Stranger in Paradise".

Cast

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Production

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In 1968 Forman obtained a visa to plan a US film. Forman andIvan Passer arranged a "house on Leroy Street inGreenwich Village"[2] and studied the counterculture there.[3]

The plot ofTaking Off was inspired by a girl found murdered in an apartment not far from that of Forman's residence. A newspaper story reported about "a girl who would leave her affluent family in Connecticut every Monday to spend the week living on the street in New York City, all the while telling her folks that she was in school".[4]

Taking Off is also a partial remake of Forman'sAudition (1964) where Forman staged and filmed a singing competition.[4]

Cast as Jeannie, in her only film role,[5] Linnea Heacock, was "discovered", with friends, inWashington Square Park.[4]

The performers "were encouraged to improvise based on Forman's descriptions of the overall shape of a scene".[4]

Awards

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The film shared theGrand Prix (ex aequo)(second prize)[6] withJohnny Got His Gun at the1971 Cannes Film Festival.[7] The film received six nominations, without a win at the 1972BAFTA awards: Best Direction (for Forman), Best Film, Best Film Editing (for Carter), Best Screenplay (for Forman, Guare, Carrière, and Klein), Best Actress (for Carlin), and Best Supporting Actress (for Engel).[8]

Reception

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Writing inThe New York Times,Vincent Canby declared that "Taking Off is not a major movie experience, but it is — a good deal of the time — a charming one."[1]Variety called it "a very compassionate, very amusing contemporary comedy."[9] However,John Simon wrote- 'I declareTaking Off an antihuman film: mean, arrogant, and thoroughly destructive'.[10]

Home media

[edit]

Until 2008,Taking Off was not available on home video due to music rights complications.[11]

Taking Off was released to Blu-ray Disc, by British company Park Circus, on 7 November 2011 as aRegion-2 widescreen Blu-ray Disc and by Gaumont (with Carlotta Films as home video distributor) on March 23, 2011 as aRegion-0 widescreen Blu-ray Disc.[12]

Novelization

[edit]

Forman, Miloš; Guare, John; Carrière, Jean-Claude; Klein, John (1971).Taking Off. New York: Signet.

Anovelization, with new "scene settings" written by Forman andNancy Hardin (by 1977, vice president ofParamount Pictures[13][14]), and an essay by Forman about his life in America and makingTaking Off.

Soundtrack

[edit]

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^abCanby, Vincent (March 29, 1971)."The Screen: 'Taking Off':Milos Forman Directs a Charming Farce".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  2. ^Conaway, James (July 11, 1971)."Milos Forman's America Is Like Kafka's - Basically Comic".The New York Times. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  3. ^Rizov, Vadim (17 June 2008)."Taking Off: Milos Forman's Runaway Hit".The Village Voice. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  4. ^abcdHorwitz, Jonah."TAKING OFF: Forman's First American Film (and Last Czech Film ?)".Cinematheque. cinema.wisc.edu. Retrieved23 October 2023.This essay on Miloš Forman's Taking Off (1971) was written by Jonah Horwitz, Ph.D Candidate in the Communication Arts Department at UW Madison. A 35mm print of Taking Off, part of our "Universal '71" series, will screen on Sunday, April 5, at 2 p.m., in the Chazen Museum of Art.
  5. ^"Taking Off".catalog.afi.com. AFI. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  6. ^"TAKING OFF".Festival de Cannes. Retrieved22 October 2023.
  7. ^"Festival de Cannes: Taking Off".festival-cannes.com. Retrieved2009-04-13.
  8. ^"Taking Off (1971) Awards".IMDb. Retrieved3 September 2023.
  9. ^"Taking Off".Variety. December 31, 1970. RetrievedJuly 8, 2022.
  10. ^Simon, John (1982).Reverse Angle: A Decade of American Film. Crown Publishers Inc. p. 40.ISBN 9780517544716.
  11. ^Kehr, Dave (February 5, 2008)."From One Cuckoo's Nest to Another".The New York Times. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  12. ^Tooze, Gary."Taking Off Blu-ray".dvdbeaver.com. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  13. ^Levy, Francis (March 25, 1979)."Why Hollywood Still Goes by the Book".The New York Times. Retrieved23 October 2023.
  14. ^The Book LA SUMMER 2000 Selma & FridaArchived 2009-01-13 at theWayback Machine
  15. ^home: Reviews and Criticism of Vietnam War Theatrical and Television Dramas
  16. ^page 7: Reviews and Criticism of Vietnam War Theatrical and Television Dramas

External links

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Films directed byMiloš Forman
Films written
Stage works
TV series written
Books written
1967–2000
2001–present
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