The Great American Fourth of
July and Other Disasters (1982) DVD-R
Most filmgoers will associate humorist Jean Shepherd
exclusively with his autobiographical big-screen nostalgia piece A Christmas
Story (1983), which has drawn millions of loyal viewers over the years with
its charm. Its devotees may be surprised to discover that several
PBS-produced Shepherd teleplays preceded it, nearly identical in tone and
brand of humor. Made for PBS in 1982, the hour-long The Great American
Fourth of July and Other Disasters sends up middle-American Independence Day
festivities with manic glee -- thus doing for the Fourth exactly what A
Christmas Story does for the Yuletide season. The Great American Fourth
carries us to small-town Americana, where several subplots unfold
concurrently. In one, Ralph, here a teenager, played by Matt Dillon,prepares
to go on a date with his buddy's resplendent cousin, and makes a fool of
himself by spilling licorice candy all over the aisles; in a second, Mom
(Barbara Bolton) makes good to an absurd degree on a "chain letter" by
suddenly inheriting more washrags (that's right, washrags) than she ever
knew existed; in a third, a local baton twirler tosses his bar a little too
high and blacks out the entire town. In yet another substory, the town
drunk, Ludlow Kissel (Babe Sargent) sets off a rather destructive firework
with a mind of its own, which manically chases a pack of children down the
street and refuses to be outwitted. And, in the gut-busting showstopper that
concludes the film, the Old Man (James Broderick, of Family) hosts a public
fireworks display by shooting off Roman candles from his pants. This marked
Broderick's final screen appearance; he died several months after it was
produced. To date, neither The Great American Fourth of July nor any of Jean
Shepherd's other early PBS specials have received home-video distribution. A
witty prologue was added for Disney Channel screenings in the mid-'80s,
wherein the late Shepherd himself is seen driving to a fireworks store in
the Carolinas.
Matt Dillon plays a young Jean Shepherd
(author and narrator of A Christmas Story). Through Matt, Shep tells several
humorous stories about his teen years in an Indiana steel town. In the
movie, during the 'blind date' scene, Shep and his blind date Pamela,
Schwartz and his date Clara Mae, are watching the movie "Love is a
Many-Splendored Thing". Clara Mae says to Schwartz "This is so romantic.
It's just like us." In the movie William Holden and Jennifer Jones fall in
love and Holden goes off to war and never returns. In real life Schwartz
goes off to war and never returns.
This DVD quality is
acceptable but not the best
1982/COLOR/60 MIN./G
Delivered in DVD Case and Art Work
FULL
REFUND IF NOT SATISFIED
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