Sept. 5, 1980—With a simultaneous prominent spot at the Toronto Film Festival to go along with a wider release in the U.S., The Return of the Secaucus 7 marked a kind of coming-of-age for the American independent film industry.
The directorial debut of John Sayles, who had paid his dues as a screenwriter and script doctor for horror honcho Roger Corman, was a low-budget affair with plenty of dialogue. He had expected it would be shown on an outlet like PBS rather than movie theaters, and its original subpar performance on its original New York release did not help matters.
But more successful runs in Boston, Washington D.C.
and Los Angeles led to a more successful return to the Big Apple, along
with Top Ten citations for the year 1980 in Time, Roger Ebert's Sneak
Previews, The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times.
Sayles would be the first to tell interviewers he was
not the first filmmaker to go outside the Hollywood system—John Cassavetes, for
instance, he noted, encouraged “this feeling that there’s no rule that says you
can’t make a good movie without studio money and somehow get it on a screen
somewhere.”
But The Return of the Secaucus 7 came
out when the VCR created an at-home audience for prior art-house mainstays
like, say, the French new wave. Theaters suddenly needed to replace them. The
modest but real profits that Sayles generated (on a budget of only $40,000)
demonstrated that success in this form was indeed possible.
That same year, with Robert Redford helping to
establish the nonprofit Sundance Institute, an infrastructure was being put in
place that would provide resources that would enable directors to tell their
stories as they wished—and provide an alternative to the screenplay-for-hire
financing mode that Sayles followed when he was starting out in the industry.
For his directorial debut, Sayles shot his script
about seven college friends who come back together a decade after their arrest
on the way to a massive protest. The title is a wink at the infamous “Chicago
7” trial that encapsulated the student unrest of the Sixties. In contrast,
Sayles’ group has been arrested before the big protest in DC—in Secaucus, New
Jersey, for heaven’s sake!—and they’re unlikely to be remembered in the annals
of their time.
With males and females thrown together, the goings-on
end up having sex with one another—except for one member who stands apart from
it all.
Now that I’ve told you the plot, you must be thinking,
“Where have I heard that before?” And yes, Sayles’ film does remind many people
of The Big Chill, which was released three years later.
Lawrence Kasdan, the writer-director of The Big Chill,
has stated that he never saw The Return of the Secaucus 7. Whatever the
case may be, it is true that Sayles (directly or indirectly, through The Big
Chill) kick-started an entire genre best thought of as "friends
reunion" movies and productions, including The Decline of the American
Empire (1986); Peter's Friends (1992); Everything Relative
(1996); Indian Summer (1993); Grand Canyon (1991); The Myth of
Fingerprints (1997); The Men's Club (1986); and Beautiful Girls
(1996).
To adhere to the self-imposed spartan budget, Sayles
followed several practices:
*Maximize a single locale. In the book Off-Hollywood,
Sayles recalled: “I decided to make the film at a ski lodge, which was cheap to
rent out-of-season. We were able to use it as our set, as well as lodging for
the crew and actors.”
*Use individuals in multiple roles. Sayles
himself was not only writer, director, and editor, but played motel clerk
Howie. Offscreen partner Maggie Renzi acted in effect as business partner, too:
Not only playing Katie Sipriano, but serving as unit manager, assistant editor
as well as location manager.
*Use cheap music whose rights don’t need to be
acquired. Out of necessity, these were folk songs created by his
Boston-based friends. That must have rankled, because for his third film, Baby, It’s You, Hollywood financing enabled him to secure the rights to
enormously popular songs he deemed essential to the time, in the same way that The
Big Chill had. But this opened the door so much to interference by
Paramount Studios that he resolved to avoid this in the future.
*Avoid well-known actors. The major cast
members of The Big Chill had each, in some way, been involved in
high-profile projects, and would go on to become even more successful. In
contrast, Secaucus 7 featured five actors who had only appeared in one
production prior to this film. Only two actors became famous afterward: Gordon
Clapp (NYPD Blue) and David Strathairn (in just about everything). Several
of Sayles’ actors never appeared in another film.
In several later films—notably Matewan, City
of Hope, and Lone Star—Sayles was able to create complex,
challenging stories way out of the Hollywood mainstream. But these projects
could not have been made without the favorable reception given Return of the
Secaucus 7.
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