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American Graffiti

  • 1973
  • PG
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
103K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,384
96
Ron Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark, Paul Le Mat, Mackenzie Phillips, and Cindy Williams in American Graffiti (1973)
A couple of high school grads spend one final night cruising the strip with their buddies before they go off to college.
Play trailer2:47
5 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeTeen ComedyTeen DramaComedyDrama

A group of teenagers in California's central valley spend one final night after their 1962 high school graduation cruising the strip with their buddies before they pursue their varying goals... Read allA group of teenagers in California's central valley spend one final night after their 1962 high school graduation cruising the strip with their buddies before they pursue their varying goals.A group of teenagers in California's central valley spend one final night after their 1962 high school graduation cruising the strip with their buddies before they pursue their varying goals.

  • Director
    • George Lucas
  • Writers
    • George Lucas
    • Gloria Katz
    • Willard Huyck
  • Stars
    • Richard Dreyfuss
    • Ron Howard
    • Paul Le Mat
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    103K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,384
    96
    • Director
      • George Lucas
    • Writers
      • George Lucas
      • Gloria Katz
      • Willard Huyck
    • Stars
      • Richard Dreyfuss
      • Ron Howard
      • Paul Le Mat
    • 390User reviews
    • 135Critic reviews
    • 97Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 5 Oscars
      • 9 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos5

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:47
    Official Trailer
    American Graffiti
    Clip 2:24
    American Graffiti
    American Graffiti
    Clip 2:24
    American Graffiti
    What Roles Has Harrison Ford Turned Down?
    Video 4:33
    What Roles Has Harrison Ford Turned Down?
    American Graffiti | Anniversary Mashup
    Video 1:48
    American Graffiti | Anniversary Mashup
    Ron Howard Talks 'American Graffiti' and Meeting George Lucas and Harrison Ford
    Video 1:10
    Ron Howard Talks 'American Graffiti' and Meeting George Lucas and Harrison Ford

    Photos173

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    + 167
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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Richard Dreyfuss
    Richard Dreyfuss
    • Curt
    Ron Howard
    Ron Howard
    • Steve
    • (as Ronny Howard)
    Paul Le Mat
    Paul Le Mat
    • John
    Charles Martin Smith
    Charles Martin Smith
    • Terry
    • (as Charlie Martin Smith)
    Cindy Williams
    Cindy Williams
    • Laurie
    Candy Clark
    Candy Clark
    • Debbie
    Mackenzie Phillips
    Mackenzie Phillips
    • Carol
    Wolfman Jack
    Wolfman Jack
    • Disc Jockey
    Bo Hopkins
    Bo Hopkins
    • Joe
    Manuel Padilla Jr.
    Manuel Padilla Jr.
    • Carlos
    Beau Gentry
    • Ants
    Harrison Ford
    Harrison Ford
    • Bob Falfa
    Jim Bohan
    • Holstein
    Jana Bellan
    Jana Bellan
    • Budda
    Deby Celiz
    • Wendy
    Lynne Marie Stewart
    Lynne Marie Stewart
    • Bobbie
    Terence McGovern
    Terence McGovern
    • Mr. Wolfe
    • (as Terry McGovern)
    Kathleen Quinlan
    Kathleen Quinlan
    • Peg
    • (as Kathy Quinlan)
    • Director
      • George Lucas
    • Writers
      • George Lucas
      • Gloria Katz
      • Willard Huyck
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews390

    7.4102.8K
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    Featured reviews

    inspectors71

    Breathtaking!

    This is the ground-breaking work by George Lucas, loosely based on his friends and his experiences as a teenager living in the San Joaquin Valley at the beginning of the 1960s, a time of gentle naiveté and innocence. There are no words to describe the edgy sweetness and humor that permeates this ensemble story of friends and enemies, jocks, brains, and punks maneuvering through the stultifying heat of the last weekend of summer vacation, 1962.

    American Graffiti is a comedy, a drama, a tragedy, a musical, and a reminder of what small-town America once was, a mere forty years ago. From its breezy humor to its excruciating last moments (I remember theater-goers stunned in their seats, sobbing after the credits were done), Lucas's first major hit hits home. American Graffiti is pure magic.
    pooch-8

    The single-greatest teen-age cruising film ever made

    American Graffiti, voted in 1998 to the American Film Institute's list of 100 superlative films, is as good today as it was upon its release in 1973. Countless films (such as Linklater's excellent Dazed and Confused) have borrowed heavily from Lucas' blueprint of multiple characters and storylines punctuated by wall to wall rock music. If possible, you should try to see the 1998 documentary that accompanies the DVD release, as it provides a wealth of information directly from Lucas, Coppola, LeMat, Ford, Clark, Dreyfuss, Howard, and many others about the creation of the film from concept to box-office phenomenon.
    serla43

    My own past.... and it was so great !!!

    In 1962, I was 19 years old. So, don,t ask me if I can relate to the movie American Graffiti. Music, emotions, friends, drive-ins, THAT WAS MY LIFE.. . and many scenes remind me of that good time, before making adult decisions.

    Darn, Curt leaves friends and family to persue studies in the East. I left friends and family to start my carreer as a jounalist in a small town weekly newspaper in 1963. And YES, I sured danced to music and songs provided by a real little musical groups. The Platters were standard fare for slow dances. Those sock ups dances in gymnasiums were soooooo full of different kinds of emotions. My Wolfman Jack was Joey Reynolds, then a fast talking DJ, at WKBW, in Buffalo, that came in strong at night in Montreal. And yes, I went back years later to my old high school to walk in the halls, like Curt, and remember ... remember friends that I still had and those that had moved into their own world of responsabilities and out of mine. All the songs in me movie can stick to something I lived listening to them, as they came out, got airplay and made me dance or fall in love, if not both. My Mel'S Drive In was a A & W drive in and, yes, in our gang there was a 1957 Chevrolet, with a boosted motor under the hood. Milner would have loved to drive it. I could go on and on.... Don't ask me if it's a great movie. For me, it's a window on my youth and, darn, did I have a great time. So, for me, the movie is GREAT !. I always watch it with a broad smile on my face. No nostalgia goose bumps for me. Life is great also today but when I watch American Graffiti, I have the immense pleasure of reliving my teenage years and enjoy the magic of them, with all my heart and soul. Thanks Lucas !!!!
    jantoniou

    The great, seminal '60s nostalgia flick

    I was born at the beginning of the next decade--1970--yet "American Graffiti" was a chord that rippled throughout my life.

    My father, who, like George Lucas, grew up in California's Central Valley, said this movie perfectly captured what it was like to grow up there--street cruising, hot rodding, picking up chicks, pulling pranks. Though this movie necessarily sidesteps the boredom inherent in growing up in the pesticide-choked San Joaquin Valley, the place itself is not as important the time it explores. It was a time just before the 1960s descended into the beginning of the end of American culture--the prototypical middle America that existed in almost all its small towns and now has substantively disappeared thanks to the urbanization and suburbanization of much of this country.

    The ensemble cast, including so many that went on to become hugely successful in Hollywood--Ron Howard, Cindy Williams (well, with Laverne & Shirley at least), Richard Dreyfuss, and of course Harrison Ford (not to mention Lucas himself)--is handled with great skill from such a young director and reinforces the mystery why Lucas has so horribly mishandled Star Wars Eps. I and II. Lucas simply has been at the Ranch too long and his brilliant career has arrived parked in the garage at a large, entirely perfunctory business and media empire.

    Anyway, regardless of Lucas' drift far away from the cutting edge, "American Graffiti" still stands as a kind of monument to his precocity. It is the kind of movie that hits every note with effortless precision, which I think is less the effort of great editing as it is a combination of youthful exuberance and actors and a director at essentially the beginning of their ascent as some of the best in the business.

    This movie also withstands the test of time simply because it works magically both for those who have no particular emotional connection to the '60s and for those who were there on nearly equal levels. There is tremendous humor and naturalistic character play and dialog that few can help but be drawn into. Anyone with any sense of history will acknowledge that all the characters are standing at the edge of the deflowering and self-destruction of America in the '60s. It is a time of tremendous innocence, change, and harrowing decisions. The Bay of Pigs, Cuban Missile Crisis, and Vietnam haven't happened yet.

    With Iraq and terrorism chewing at our consciousness every day, it's pretty easy for modern youth to identify and yearn for the nostalgia of such innocence.
    JackA123

    The Best Teen Film Ever Made.

    "I just love it when guys peel out." -Debbie Dunham

    American Graffiti is the best film about teenagers. It actually has a point, unlike the other teenage films where all that they do is get drunk and party. American Graffiti is about different types of teenagers doing different things on the last night that they all have together in 1962 after graduating. They all actually learn about themselves and what they want to do with their lives. One of the older

    teenagers, Curt, is planning on leaving the next day. Steve is trying to work out his relationship with Curt's sister, while John and Terry have their own dates for the night. American Graffiti is a wonderful film on many levels. It is both funny and serious. A great direction by George Lucas and a fine cast with Ron

    Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Cindy Williams, Paul LeMat, Charles Martin Smith,

    Candy Clark (Oscar-nominated), MacKenzie Phillips, Harrison Ford. One of the

    best films of the 70's and the only teen film in my memory that has had the

    pleasure of being nominated for Oscar- Best Picture. 10/10 stars.

    The Life and Times of Harrison Ford

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Due to the low budget, George Lucas was unable to pay all of the crew members. He offered to give many of them a screen credit in lieu of payment, and they accepted. Traditionally, only department heads received screen credit. Giving screen credit to all crew members is now standard, which is why closing credits last so much longer now.
    • Goofs
      The movie is set in 1962, but a cinema marquee advertises Dementia 13 (1963) (released in 1963). This was done on purpose by George Lucas, because Dementia 13 was Producer Francis Ford Coppola's first movie.
    • Quotes

      Curt Henderson: You're the most beautiful, exciting thing I've ever seen in my life and I don't know anything about you.

    • Crazy credits
      Worded epilogues prior to the credits shows what happen to the characters following the movie. While this has since become commonplace in films, it was considered innovative at the time.
    • Alternate versions
      Originally released at 110 minutes; re-edited and re-released in a slightly longer version (112 minutes) in 1978 when many of its then-unknown stars became famous.
    • Connections
      Featured in Airport 1975 (1974)
    • Soundtracks
      At The Hop
      Written by John Madara, Artie Singer and Dave White (uncredited)

      Performed by Flash Cadillac (as Flash Cadillac and The Continental Kids)

      Produced by Kim Fowley

      Courtesy of Roulette Records:

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    FAQ21

    • How long is American Graffiti?Powered by Alexa
    • If the action takes place on the last night of Summer Break, how come the school is holding a Freshman Dance? Surely the first dance in the school calendar would be Homecoming a few weeks after the start of semester?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 11, 1973 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • American Graffiti: Locura de verano
    • Filming locations
      • Mel's Drive-in - 140 South Van Ness Ave., San Francisco, California, USA(demolished)
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Lucasfilm
      • The Coppola Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $750,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $115,000,000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $115,006,690
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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