31° TORINO FILM FESTIVAL
NEW HOLLYWOOD

FAT CITY

FAT CITY
by John Huston
Country: USA
Year: 1972
Duration: 100'


The dream of an impossible Eldorado (the “Fat City” of the title) for two boxers who fight in the lowest category in a marginal city (Stockton). A sad periphery of the empire for souls who have reached the end of the line, whether they be over-the-hill failed boxers or eager newcomers. Stacy Keach and Jeff Bridges share friendship, drinking binges and disappointments in a melancholy, lucid masterpiece about those years. Directed by an old hand who had it all figured out.

Biography

film director

John Huston

John Huston

(Nevada, MO, USA, 1906 - Middletown, RI, USA, 1987)

 

The son of the actor Walter Huston and the journalist Reah Gore, after his parents divorced he lived with his mother in various cities in the United States until they eventually settled down in Los Angeles. This is where he became interested in the figurative arts, in the French language and in boxing, a sport in which he excelled. In 1924, during a trip to New York to see his father who was appearing on Broadway, he debuted as a theatrical actor, a profession he soon abandoned in order to join the Mexican cavalry. He moved to Mexico City and dedicated himself to writing. He returned to the United States in 1929, after receiving the news that a short story of his had been published in the magazine “American Mercury.” He was called to Hollywood by Samuel Goldwyn and worked as a screenwriter at Metro, Universal Pictures and Gaumont-British in London. In 1938 he was hired by Warner, for whom he wrote the script of Jezebel, directed by William Wyler, and High Sierra, the film which made Humphrey Bogart an international star. The success of this film led to Huston’s debut as a director that same year with The Maltese Falcon. The next year, he directed In This Our Life and Across the Pacific, after which the Army asked him to shoot three war propaganda documentaries. After returning to the States, his film The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) won three Oscars, including Best Supporting Actor for his father Walter. He next directed Key Largo and in 1950, the noir The Asphalt Jungle. These were the years of McCarthyism, which he and his friend Bogart strongly opposed, and he worked on subjects that dealt less with current affairs, like The African Queen, Moulin Rouge and Moby Dick. In 1960, he directed The Misfits, which was written by Arthur Miller and was the last film Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable acted in. 1966 was the year he directed the blockbuster The Bible in Italy, in which he portrayed Noah, and the following year he made Reflections in a Golden Eye, based on the novel of the same title by Carson McCullers. At the same time as he was directing, he was also acting in films like The Cardinal (1963) by Otto Preminger (which won him a Golden Globe), the unfinished The Other Side of the Wind (1972) by Orson Welles, Chinatown (1974) by Roman Polanski and The Wind and the Lion (1975) by John Milius. After making a few films in Europe, he returned to the United States in 1972 to make Fat City. His film The Man Who Would Be King (1975), starring Sean Connery and Michael Caine, led to a period of inactivity, which ended when he directed Wise Blood (1979). He next directed a series of films, including Under the Volcano (1984), which received a special tribute in Cannes, and Prizzi’s Honor, which was presented in Venice in 1985 and for which his daughter Anjelica received an Oscar as Best Supporting Actress. In 1987 he shot his final film, The Dead, based on the famous short story by James Joyce.

Cast

& Credits

REGIA
John Huston
SOGGETTO
dall’omonimo romanzo di/from the novel of the same title by Leonard Gardner 
SCENEGGIATURA
Leonard Gardner
FOTOGRAFIA
Conrad L. Hall
MONTAGGIO
Walter Thompson
SCENOGRAFIA
Richard Sylbert
COSTUMI
Dorothy Jeakins
INTERPRETI E PERSONAGGI
Stacy Keach (Billy Tully), Jeff Bridges (Ernie Munger), Susan Tyrrell (Oma), Candy Clark (Faye)
PRODUTTORI
John Huston, Ray Stark
PRODUZIONE
Columbia Pictures, Rastar Pictures
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