Based
on a James Leo Herlihy novel, British director John Schlesinger's first
American film dramatized the small hopes, dashed dreams, and unlikely
friendship of two late '60s lost souls. Dreaming of an easy life as
a fantasy cowboy stud, cheerful Texas rube Joe Buck (Jon Voight) heads
to New York City to be a gigolo, but he quickly discovers that hustling
isn't what he thought it would be after he winds up paying his first
trick (Sylvia Miles). He gets swindled by gimpy tubercular grifter Rico
"Ratso" Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman)
but, when Joe falls in the direst of straits, Ratso takes Joe into his
condemned apartment so that they can help each other survive. Things
start to look up when Joe finally lands his first legit female customer
(Brenda Vaccaro) at a Warhol-esque party; Ratso's health, however, fails.
Joe turns to a final homosexual trick to get the money for one selfless
goal: taking Ratso out of New York to his dream life in Miami. One of
the first major studio films given the newly minted X rating for its
then-frank portrayal of New York decadence, Midnight
Cowboy was critically praised for Schlesinger's insight into
American lives, with the intercut mosaic of Joe's memories and Ratso's
dreams lending their characters and actions greater psychological complexity.
While they may have been drawn by the seamy content (tame by current
standards), the young late '60s audience responded to Joe's and Ratso's
confusion amidst turbulent times and to the connection they make with
each other despite their alienation from the surrounding culture. Midnight
Cowboy became one of the major financial and artistic hits of
1969, winning Oscars for Best Picture (the first for an X-rated film),
Best Director, and former blacklistee Waldo Salt's screenplay. Though
the one-two punch of Midnight Cowboy
and The Graduate (1967)
proved Hoffman's range and Voight's Joe Buck made him a star, both lost
Best Actor to classical cowboy John Wayne for True
Grit. Even though it was a hit, the Academy ignored Harry Nilsson's
theme song "Everybody's Talking." With its initial humor, quiet despair
and final open-ended loss, Midnight
Cowboy's study of companionship in a changing society is at
once keenly contemporary and poignantly timeless.
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