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Film Underground Presents: "Harold and Maude"

Cade Harstedt

Issue date: 4/11/08 Section: Arts & Living
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Media Credit: Courtesy Photo

I couldn't help thinking of the recent movie "Driving Lessons," while I was watching the 1971 film "Harold and Maude." In "Driving Lessons" a teenager played by Rupert Grint (Ron of the "Harry Potter" films) befriends an eccentric woman who is old enough to be his grandmother. This old woman then teaches the young man important life lessons (the whole "carpe diem" sort of thing). In "Harold and Maude," a rich 19-20-year old named Harold, befriends an eccentric 79-year-old woman named Maude, who then teaches him important life lessons. In both films, the young man and the old woman like each other very much. The difference is "Harold and Maude" takes the idea to its logical extreme-- the young man actually falls in love with the 79-year-old woman. And it's not familial love, but romantic, sexual love. The result is a darkly funny, quirky film that has since become a cult classic. If there ever was a movie that captures the rebellious and eclectic spirit of 70's cinema, this is it.

Harold is a wealthy young American man, old enough to be drafted in the Vietnam War, who seems to be emotionally crippled by high-class ennui and is morbidly obsessed with death. A hearse is his vehicle of choice. He also enjoys repeatedly faking his own death, whether by hanging or drowning or hari kari, and having his vacuous, WASPy mother stumble upon the scene. She's used to it, however - when he's floating motionless on the surface of the pool, she just ignores him and dives right in.

Harold is played by Bud Cort, whose last credit to my memory is "The Bond Company Stooge" in "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou." The young Cort has a disconcerting presence in "Harold and Maude." His complexion is noticeably pale and his voice is incongruously low and mature compared to his looks. Cort has an interesting way of carrying himself with a reserved, knowing irony, but it's really only a fragile facade. In other scenes with Harold's mother, Cort seems to recoil, quite appropriately, in wide-eyed, abject horror.

Harold also likes to attend the funerals of strangers. He soon notices another person that visits nearly every burial and wake that he does. This person is Maude, a 79-year-old woman ("I look young for my age") who goes to funerals for a very different reason than Harold. Her interest stems from a reverence for life, in contrast to Harold's morbid obsession. One of her other favorite activities is "watching things grow" and liberating small, dying trees from the stifling smog of cities. To term Maude a free spirit would not only be a cliché but a tremendous understatement. Her attitude is anarchic, and when Harold first meets her, she's committing a crime -- if I said what crime I'd spoil the gag. In a later sequence, she commits about six offenses at once that I could count. But these offenses are pretty benign and she certainly knows how to have fun. "Do you know how to sing and dance?" she asks Harold at one point. He responds with a few "um's" and "uh's." Through a series of coincidences and misadventures, Harold and Maude begin to spend time together. Meanwhile Harold's mother tries to marry him off through a series of Internet dates. You'll have to see for yourself how Harold handles his developing romantic love for Maude.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2

Roy E Pearson

posted 6/24/08 @ 4:23 PM EST

I saw Harold and Maude in 1972 in a theater in Downtown Austin, Texas. It transformed me. I fell in love with Cat Stevens, Ruth Gordon, and life.

I am amazed that young people who are 18-24 now find the same experience. (Continued…)

repearwo

Roy E Pearson

posted 6/24/08 @ 4:26 PM EST

I saw Harold and Maude in 1972 in a theater in Downtown Austin, Texas. It transformed me. I fell in love with Cat Stevens, Ruth Gordon, and life.

I am amazed that young people who are 18-24 now find the same experience. (Continued…)

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