Similar to Paul Thomas Anderson, Jacked In’s Jack has a massive appreciation for the vintage aesthetic. So, it’s only right that he viewed Anderson’s latest feature, Licorice Pizza, on 35mm for another classic experience at Newcastle upon Tyne’s Tyneside Cinema.
The thing about Anderson’s movies is they all differ greatly from one another and yet, they’re all connected by the director’s style and nuances. And as soon as our leading (braless) lady, twenty-five-year-old Alana Kane (Alana Haim) slowly waltzes down a line of high schoolers on picture day before proceeding to get hit on by our leading lad Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman) – who is ten years her junior – you can tell straight away… This is a PTA flick.
Taking place in 1973’s San Fernando Valley, the story sees Gary, a child star actor, declare his infatuation for Alana and plucks her from her high school photography job. Gary has a loveable charm and Alana has the sass, together, they navigate their way through life as well as their feelings for one another. The legendary late Phillip Seymour Hoffman’s son [Cooper] shows the apple hasn’t fallen far from the tree and Haim steps away from the mic onto the big screen seamlessly with an Oscar-worthy performance.
Anderson is no stranger to being able to nail the 70s’ and this picture is no exception. With an unflattering wardrobe for the cast, contrasting bright and vibrant colours against these gritty surroundings, topped off with a soundtrack that compliments the era perfectly.
Typical for the director, the feature has plenty of colourful individuals (both real and fictional), each beautifully chaotic in their own way. The characters that surround Gary and Alana, don’t have a conclusion to their story’s that would necessarily give one closure, but it isn’t their journey we’re following. We’re bumping into these people, during brief encounters that sum them up wonderfully and that’s all we need.
In short, Licorice Pizza gives you exactly what the title promises, something alternative. A fun, original take on a coming of age/love story about two people who are both very unique and at different stages in their lives, but equal in their struggle.
It’s quirky, loveable, pulls no punches and not forgetting, absolutely hilarious in the unapologetic way that Anderson does best.
Jacked In Reviews ‘Sid’ (2023)
A tale that was just waiting to be told, Shahzaib Yaqoob’s short brings us a dark re-imagining, showing the […]
Jacked In Reviews ‘In Search of Darkness: 1990-1994’ (2024)
Writer/director, David A. Weiner and Creator Robin Block, the marvellous minds behind – arguably – one […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘Rear Window’ (1954)
An Alfred Hitchock classic, Rear Window follows the life of L.B. Jeffries (James Stewart), a recently […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘Bone Tomahawk’ (2015)
Bone Tomahawk takes place in the small western town of Bright Hope and locals are shuck up after an outlaw wanders […]
Jacked In Reviews ‘Aldbrough’ (2023)
Gail Smith’s Aldbrough gives us a grainy, 8mm window into the past with archive footage of a town long gone.
Jacked In Reviews ‘Longlegs’ (2024)
We open on an Oregon farm in the dead of winter through the POV of what looks like a ‘70s home video. A young child […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘24 Hour Party People’ (2002)
A semi-fictional tale of how Manchester’s alternative music scene was born as it follows the life of Factory […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘The Butterfly Effect’ (2004)
Evan Treborn (Ashton Kutcher) has reached his adult years being a constant sufferer of blackouts which have caused […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘Dredd’ (2012)
Dredd does exactly what an adaptation should and makes the source material its own, whilst staying true to the […]
Jacked In Reviews ‘It’s John’ (2023)
It’s John follows amateur filmmaker Smithy Jones (Victor Hampson), and his rag-tag team of actors who are in the […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘Evil Dead’ (2013)
Evil Dead follows a bunch of youths staying in a cabin whilst attempting to help their drug-addicted friend, Mia […]
Jacked In Recommends ‘One Hour Photo’ (2002)
One Hour Photo follows the story of SavMart photo technician, Sy, The Photo Guy (Robin Willaims). However, although […]