Wednesday, 4 May 2022

Economic Decline in the Cinema of the 1970s

 This is part seven from a forthcoming book called Collected Essays: Volume Two.

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Economic Decline in the Cinema of the 1970s

The western world enjoyed a period of unusually high growth and low unemployment during the Second World War. It has been called ‘the golden age of capitalism.’ However, by the 1970s the economy started to stagnate, unemployment went up and so did inflation. The preceding era, known as ‘Keynesianism,’ had led to ‘stagflation.’ Economists who had been previously been marginalised seized the moment and proposed a different agenda. Meanwhile, cinema was experiencing something of a golden period. ‘New Hollywood’ had produced a spate of subversive and anti-authoritarian films which reached large audiences. Indeed, during the 1970s Hollywood produced auteurs like Martin Scorsese, Brian de Palma, Michael Cimino, Terrence Malick, Woody Allen, Sam Peckinpah, Hal Ashby and Francis Ford Coppola. A sense of economic dysfunction often appears in these films. This essay will look at four films from the 1970s and examine economic decline. In Being There (1979), a gardener with learning difficulties is perceived as being an insightful political philosopher. His talk about the seasons is perceived as being a comment on economic cycles. Life of Brian (1979) satirises the trade unions which had paralysed the British economy. Taxi Driver (1976) vividly recreates the decadence of New York. Finally, Blue Collar (1978) recreates corrupt American trade unions.

This essay will start by outlining the parlous state of the economy in the 1970s. The economy prior to the 1970s has been called ‘the golden age of capitalism,’ as unemployment was at an all time low, growth was very high and living standards had never been better, but this came at the cost of mild inflation. Indeed, between 1945 and 1973 the incomes of Americans grew exponentially (p. 420). In the 1950s and 60s, economic growth averaged 4.5%. However, in the 1970s unemployment grew, growth stalled and inflation reached double digits. This was largely due to the oil embargo, which already exacerbated rising inflation. During this period, growth averaged 2.8% and it was believed that Americans lived in an age of scarcity. Inflation, which had averaged 3% in the 50s and 60s, now raged between 10 and 15%. Productivity also stalled (p. 421) and inflation reached 13% in 1979 (p. 630). Indeed, in 1972 Richard Nixon had instituted wage and price controls (p. 454), a year before the Oil Crisis accentuated the existing problem. The gurus of the New Right, such as Milton Friedman, proposed a type of ‘shock therapy’ and leaders Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher promised to ‘roll back the frontiers of the state.’ Ronald Reagan had been a liberal – in the American sense – in the 1940s. Back then, he blamed inflation on corporations pursuing higher profits rather than higher wages. As a conservative in the 1970s, he blamed inflation on big government. He channelled Milton Friedman when he said the following: ‘Inflation occurs when the growth of the nation’s money supply outstrips the growth in the nation’s productivity’ (Perlstein 2020, p. 408). He went on to say the following: ‘The federal reserve controls the money supply and is therefore the primary source of inflation… In truth, inflation is simply another tax imposed by Washington in the name of easy money’ (p. 408). This theory, ‘the quantity theory of money,’ had lost credibility after WWII, but it made a renaissance in the 1970s. However, the incumbent Jimmy Carter did not appear to disagree: ‘If we are to overcome a threat to accelerating inflation, the government will simply not be able to do much as it can’ (p. 408). Inflation had increased under Carter up to 8.9%, but he opposed any further reductions in income tax. He wanted to limit wages and he created a ‘Council of Wage and Price Stability,’ which established voluntary price guidelines for businesses to follow (p. 387). The monetarists, however, were resolutely opposed to these kinds of controls. 

            The monetarists wanted to reverse the Keynesian settlement and it was this their political program that Thatcher and Reagan implemented. This essay will now establish what they wanted to do. Instead of setting prices, organisations like the FTC proposed anti-trust laws ban trade organisations from keeping eye glasses out of ads, making merchants and consumers freer to allow the marketplace to do its work. Eyeglasses were more expensive in states with these controls (p. 464). Indeed, liberalising, deregulating and privatising were a core part of the agenda. Additionally, cutting taxes was a core part of the New Right. Arthur Laffer argued that a 0% tax rate would yield no revenue, but a 100% tax rate would also yield no revenue. If all gains are confiscated, there is no incentive to work or invest. Taxes have to be low enough to maximise economic activity and high enough to maximise revenue. The USA was in its worst recession since the 1930s because taxes were far too high to do either. The national economy was being choked by high taxes (p. 283). These ideas were starting to become more influential during this period of stagflation and it was a shift away from Keynesianism, which argued in favour of redistribution and in spending money into the economy to boost demand and keep unemployment low. In the late 60s, Milton Friedman prophesied that Keynesianism would come to an end, as he argued that it would lead to both stagnation, inflation and high unemployment. Friedman argued in 1967 that if inflation kept going up, which was caused by full employment, then this would conversely lead to unemployment. Friedman wanted to hold back on the supply of money and let the free market do its work. Monetarism provided an ideological justification for conservatives to ‘roll back the frontiers of the state.’ If companies prospered, it was because they deserved to prosper. The winners in a competitive market were not prospering due to high regulation and this distorted the competitiveness of the market (p. 281). Milton Friedman and Paul Volker proposed a ‘shock therapy,’ as they wanted to contract the money supply. Jimmy Carter did not want to do this, as he thought that it would lead to a recession (p. 633). In the UK and the USA, this brought inflation down, but it destroyed manufacturing, created large unemployment and a lot of money went to investors rather than workers (p. 634).   

    This essay will examine how Keynesianism came to an end. Up to the 1970s, Keynesianism was the main economic orthodoxy. Indeed, Richard Nixon said ‘I am now a Keynesian’ (Stein 2019). The ‘golden age of capitalism’ had been in the 1950s and 1960s, since by historical standards unemployment had been exceptionally low, growth in real incomes exceptionally fast and economies were exceptionally stable. This was all achieved at the cost of modest inflation. This was all attributed to Keynesian policies (Skidelsky 2010, p. 125). In the late 1960s, however, inflation and unemployment went up and growth started to slow down, which was before the oil shock of 1973. Having been extolled for its success, Keynesianism was now blamed for failure. Inflation became worse in the late 1960s, which created higher unemployment and this defeated the purpose of achieving full employment. Monetarism gained respectability during this period (p. 133). The worldwide explosion in costs due to shortages, accompanied by the rise in raw material and energy prices, culminated in the fourfold increase in oil prices in 1973, which reduced full employment (p. 133). An ‘incomes policy’ was introduced – a restraint on pay increases – which did not work. More money was pumped into the public sector to deal with these problems, which only made matters worse. After the second oil price rise in 1979, governments tightened fiscal and monetary policy (p. 179). Keynesians at this period were obsessed with incomes policy, which allowed a lot of leeway for monetarists to defend contractual freedom (p. 137). In other words, Keynesians wanted to intervene in all aspects of the economy by setting prices and wages, which made it easy for monetarists to defend the core principle of the free market, of voluntary transactions between consenting adults. Prior to the 1970s, low unemployment was the acceptable price for mild inflation (p. 137), but this was no longer the case. Keynesians wanted to centralise more power in the government, and this was worse in the 1970s, but this ignored the amount of power a government can have in a free society. As such, lovers of liberty and efficiency left the Keynesian camp in droves (p. 170).

              This essay will now analyse Being There (1979) by Hal Ashby and take into consideration the state of the American economy at the time of its release. This film was the swan song of Peter Sellers, as it was his last performance before his death. Peter Sellers plays a character called ‘Chance,’ a gardener with learning difficulties. He is evicted from his house after the owner dies. Following this, he runs into an extremely wealthy businessman who lets him stay at his house. Chance simplemindedly says that he is a gardener and would like to work for them, but he is instead perceived as a intellectual. In one scene, Chance tells the businessman that ‘my house was shut down.’ Rand says: ‘You mean your business was shut down?’ Chance says: ‘Shut down and closed by the attorneys.’ Rand says: ‘That’s exactly what I mean’ and launches off into a diatribe. In another scene in the film, he says: ‘Businessmen have been harassed by inflation, increased taxation, all sorts of indecencies.’ He certainly evinces the Reaganite ethos; that is, that government is causing all of the country’s problems. The government has taken Chauncey’s business away from him. Taxes are too high and there is too much government intrusion. Excessive government involvement shuts down the businesses of earnest entrepreneurs like Chauncey.

            One of the most striking scenes in the film is when Chance talks to the president of the United States. The president visits Rand and asks for advice on how to tackle the country’s economic problems. The scene starts with a mid-shot of Rand with Chance. The décor is elaborate, as there are expensive paintings on the wall and a stove. There is a butler hovering in the background. There are elaborate gold-rimmed candles. The mise-en-scene clearly establishes that he is one of the wealthiest businessmen in the country. Rand says: ‘An old habit comes with power. Keep them waiting.’ He gets up from his wheelchair and the camera pans across as the president walks across the hall accompanied by his assistants. This is followed by a long shot of a spacious room with a large painting and there are about fifteen men in black suits. Rand says: ‘I thought about public office, but I found that I could contribute more as a private citizen. Of course, wealth provided me with considerable influence.’ He says this just before the president asks him for advice. This is followed by a mid-shot of Rand walking with Chance and they are accompanied by three other people who wear suits and bow ties. This is clearly an important room in the house, as it is a spacious library with many books in the background. The president is on the second floor of the library and he is framed by a low-angle mid-shot. The president descends the stairs whilst the camera work alternates between mid-shots of Rand, Chance and the president. Rand says: ‘I’ve missed you, my friend.’ The president clearly has a close relationship with Rand. There is a mid-shot of Chance looking gormless and he emulates Rand by embracing the president as he did. Indeed, Chance repeats the behaviour of others, especially when it is something that he has seen on television. There is a mid-shot of Rand sitting down on a red chair as he says: ‘I want you to meet my very dear friend, Mr. Chauncey Gardiner.’ This is followed by a mid-shot of the president flummoxed by Chance’s strange behaviour. Chance banally says: ‘On television, Mr. president, you look much smaller.’ He keeps embracing the president who is still perplexed. This is followed by mid-shots framed from several angles. The president says: ‘Ben, did you read my speech.’ Rand says: ‘You shouldn’t resort to temporary measures. I sympathise with you and I understand how difficult it is to be straightforward, but I tell you now, Bobby…’ The editing alternates to a scene elsewhere in the house and we no longer hear what Rand’s recommendations on the economic crisis. It seems like Rand is railing against the Keynesian orthodoxies. He already mentions earlier on in the film how the economy is being choked by high taxes and excessive intervention. He tells him not to be straightforward and at the time to be straightforward was to be Keynesian. The president says: ‘Mr. Gardiner, do you agree with Ben or do you think that we can stimulate growth through temporary incentives.’ Indeed, using the government to stimulate growth is Keynesian. All three characters are framed in the same mid-shot as a clock ticks in the background. There is later a mid-shot from Ben’s perspectives. Chance says: ‘As long as the roots are not severed, all is well. And all will be well in the garden.’ The president asks: ‘In the garden?’ There is 90 degree mid-shot of Chance as he says: ‘In the garden, growth has its seasons. First comes spring and summer, but then we have fall and winter.’ This is followed by a mid-shot of an out-of-focus Chance and a perplexed president. The president says: ‘And then spring and summer again.’ Chance says: ‘Yes.’ The president: ‘And then fall and winter.’ This is followed by a mid-shot of Rand with a grin on his face as he says: ‘I think that what our very insightful young friend is saying is that we should welcome the inevitable seasons of nature, but we’re upset about the seasons of our economy.’ Chance says: ‘Yes, there will be growth in the spring.’ The president says: ‘Well, Mr. Gardiner, I must admit that is one if the most refreshing and optimistic statements that I’ve heard in a long time.’ The camera work throughout the scene alternates between the three characters. The camera work also showcases the spacious library, which emphasises the seriousness and scholarly nature of the situation. Meanwhile, Chance’s banal and innocent statements are interpreted as gnomic insights. The economy at the time of the release of the film, as this essay has established, was in turmoil. There was double digit inflation, high unemployment and stagnation. This had followed the Keynesian ‘golden period of capitalism’ of high growth and low unemployment. Chance’s childlike remarks are interpreted as insights into economic cycles. There are booms and busts as well as periods of growth and recessions. Everyone at the time was highly pessimistic – indeed, Jimmy Carter lost in 1980 to Ronald Reagan partly because he was so pessimistic. Chance says that ‘there will be growth in the spring’ and the president compliments him on this ‘refreshing’ statement.



            This essay will now look at the state of the British economy in the 1970s, which was in a worse condition that the USA and the rest of Europe. Indeed, Britain became the first developed country to take a loan from the IMF. This was done so as to stabilise the value of the British pound. The UK Labour Party attained power by promising to solve the miner’s dispute, who had gone on strike. They went back into work on the agreement that their wages would be raised, but once this was done this only accelerated double digit inflation. Inflation went up to 27% in 1975. Once Callaghan took over in 1976, he took a large loan from the IMF. After the dissolution of Bretton Woods, the IMF became ‘a global firefighter’ which imposed stringent spending cuts. These spending cuts were opposed by much of the Labour cabinet, but they brought inflation down to single digits by 1978. However, they partly did this by severe wage restraint on all public sector workers. As such, they all went on strike and this led to the ‘winter of discontent.’ Rubbish went uncollected, hospitals did not let patients in and the dead were left unburied (Coyle 2017). Indeed, trade unions played a larger part in the economy and culture. 13 million workers were part of a trade union in the 1970s and 1980s. ‘Collective bargaining’ aimed to negotiate better wages and working conditions between employers and employees without state interference. However, the worthy achievements of full employment and the welfare state diminished the reliance of the Labour Party on the trade unions. In the 1950s and the early 60s, the trade unions were more conservative and crushed militants. Indeed, industrial relations were better than in other parts of Europe. However, trade unions moved to the left and the Stalinist Arthur Scargill became influential. They were more concerned with trade unions than the national interest and it did not bother them to bring a Labour government down. Militancy increased in the late 1960s and since the devaluation of the pound in 1967 led to higher inflation, this led to a ‘statutory prices and incomes policy.’ The UK increased exports, but it now had to pay more for its imports and this led to higher inflation. As such, the government had to freeze prices and wages, which led to resistance from the unions. Cabinet minister Barbara Castle devised ‘In Place of Strife,’ which aimed to curtail the power of trade unions, but this was quashed by James Callaghan, who was then home secretary (Cambert 2021).

            Leftist and trade union sectarianism is featured in Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979). The film is set in Roman antiquity and satirises religion and politics. Left-wing sectarianism is cleverly satirised with two rival political groups called ‘Jewdian People’s Front’ and the ‘People’s Front of Jewdia.’ Brian wants to join their group, but they tell him to ‘piss off!’ Brian says: ‘I hate Romans as much as anybody!’ They say: ‘Are you sure?’ He says: ‘Dead sure.’ John Cleese says: ‘Listen, if you want to join the P. F. J, you have to really hate the Romans.’ Brian says: ‘How much.’ He says: ‘A lot.’ Cleese says: ‘You’re in. The only people we hate more than the Romans are the Jewdian People’s Front.’ This is all about ideological purity and sectarian squabbling. The differences in their ideology are minute, but this does not prevent them from creating sects and fighting each other. Their raison d’ etre is to be against the Romans and fighting against injustice, but the other left-wing group is worse and they spend more energy fighting other leftists than deposing the Romans. The film was released in 1979, the year of ‘the winter of discontent.’ The Labour government had been brought down by the trade unions, which were led by leftists like Arthur Scargills. Dogmatists like Tony Benn subsequently blamed the government for being insufficiently ‘socialist,’ which again echoes the ideological purity of the ‘Jewdian People’s Front.’ Figures like Benn, and organisations like Militant, spent more time fighting Labour Party politicians than the Conservatives. Indeed, the J. P. F say that they hate the P. F. O. J. more than the Romans. The behaviour of trade unionists is clearly satirised here by the Pythons and the film is as much a political satire as a religious one. The trade unions brought the British economy to its knees due to this type of sectarianism.

            This essay will now analyse another scene in Life of Brian. The scene starts with a low-angle close-up of Michael Palin in a small room, which is darkly lit. We later see a mid-shot of the Jewdian People’s Front in the room and they all wear black robes. There is faint sunlight in the background. There is a large group of people packed into the mid-shot. There is a sense that this a clandestine meeting. Someone says: ‘What exactly are the demands?’ Cleese says: ‘We have two days to dismantle the entire apparatus of the Roman imperialist state. If she doesn’t agree immediately, we execute her.’ We later see a mid-shot, from the opposite angle, of people shrouded in black robes, jeering. We later see a 180 degree mid-shot of three leaders of J. P. F. and they say ‘What have they ever given us in return?’ We see a mid-shot from the opposite angle of the crowd. They say: ‘The aqueduct?’ Cleese says: ‘Oh yes, they did give us that.’ They say: ‘And sanitation.’ Eric Idle says: ‘Oh yes, sanitation. Remember what the city used to be like.’ Cleese says: ‘I grant you, the aqueduct and the sanitation are two things the Romans have done for us.’ The crowd proceed to list the roads, irrigation, medicine, education, wine, public baths and safe streets. Cleese then says: ‘Apart from all those things, what have the Romans done for us!’ The camera work alternates between mid-shots of the three leaders and the crowd and a mid-shot of everyone in the room. The room is cramped and the camera work creates the sense that it is forbidden and secret. There is also an attempt to recreate antiquity with the clothing and the dilapidated building. This scene once more recreates the sectarianism of the trade unions and the left in the late 1970s. They find fault with everything in society and the quality of life has never been better, but they still cannot help but find fault with it. The economy at the time of the film’s release had been paralysed by these kinds of sectarians.



            This essay will now look at the parlous condition of New York in the 1970s. Indeed, ‘stagflation’ affected New York more than other cities. It had to lay off city workers and cut municipal services such as sanitation and school programs. The high unemployment rate increased throughout the decade. Middle class families, more than 820,000 of them, fled to the suburbs. Many people turned to violence due to cuts in social services. Crime rates increased, theft became more common and power unexpectedly failed on the July 13th 1977, which led to looting all over the city (American Experience). Indeed, people arriving in the airport in 1975 were greeted with pamphlets warning them with the following message: ‘Until things change, stay away from New York City if you possibly can.’ There was a fiscal crisis in the mid-1970s and the disintegration of the largest city on earth seemed perfectly possible. Gerald Ford wanted to replace it as the leading financial centre. However, many of the warnings in the pamphlet were exaggerated but, still, murders doubled from previous decades. They went up from 681 in 1965 to 1,690 in 1975. Car thefts and assaults more than doubled, rapes and burglaries more than tripled and robberies went up ten-fold. Subway trains were filthy and covered in graffiti. Trains were late and they were always crowded. Roads were in a bad condition. Public restrooms were non-existent and they were dangerous and dirty. Men could be seen pissing in the gutter. Office buildings were allowed to rot away and many of them showed scratchy prints of pornographic films. Indeed, there were many porn theatres in respectable neighbourhoods. This comes through in the film Taxi Driver, as the protagonist frequents porn theatres. Vandalism was rampant. Major pieces of infrastructure were allowed to rust until they were in danger of collapsing. By early 1975, New York owed five billion to six billion in short term debt. The city also had over a million welfare recipients, as the city had lost a million manufacturing jobs since 1945 and 500,000 since 1969. Indeed, president Gerald Ford visited the city and said that its mismanagement was ‘unique’ among municipalities in the United States. He blamed it on ‘high wages and pensions… its tuition free university system, its city-run hospital system and welfare administration.’ He would ‘veto any bill that has its purpose a bailout of New York City to prevent a default.’ This provoked a headline, which was called ‘Ford to city – drop dead.’ Shortly after, the city had to lay off 51,768 city workers. Public hospitals had to deal with thousands of heroin junkies and subway workers had to get deteriorating trains back on the rails. Americans generally supported aid for New York as long as the city balanced its budget and tax payers outside New York did not pay for it. Ford urged congress to pass a bill making $2.3 billion a year available for three years to New York in direct loans. It quickly passed and it was signed by the president. There were a lot of spending cuts, but additionally workers had to deal with a cost-of-living crisis that was afflicting the rest of the world (Baker 2015). New York, in many, ways symbolised the decadence and economic decline of the free world.

            The decadence of New York is palpably apparent in Taxi Driver (1976) by Martin Scorsese. Early on in the film, the character Travis Bickle, famously played by Robert De Niro, says: ‘Thank God for the rain that has helped to wash away all the garbage and trash.’ Elsewhere, he says: ‘All the animals come out at night. Whores, pussies, skunk junkies, queens, fairies, dopers… Sick, venal… Some day a rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets.’ This is accompanied by shots prostitutes and drug addicts. The film also depicts porn theatres and child prostitution. Indeed, the film accentuates the worst stereotypes that circulated about the city. In one scene, he encounters a presidential candidate. The scene starts with a mid-shot of Travis Bickles, famously played by Robert De Niro, driving the taxi. The presidential candidate, called Pallandine, sits at the back of his cab. His associate says: ‘This is making me nervous. Maybe we should have taken a limo.’ Pallandine says: ‘I don’t mind taking a cab.’ Bickle is framed by a mid-shot from the right side of his car, which is followed by a mid-shot of Bickle driving and Pallandine at the back of the cab. He turns around, surreptitiously grins and says: ‘I am one of your biggest supporters. I tell everyone who comes into this taxi to vote for you.’ This is followed by a mid-shot of Pallandine and his associate. Pallandine says: ‘Why thank you.’ This is followed by a close-up of Travis Bickle’s name and photograph at the back of the taxi. Pallandine, noticing this, says: ‘Thank you, Travis.’ We see a mid-shot of Travis, once more from the right side of the taxi. He says: ‘You are going to win, sir. Everyone who comes in is going to vote for you. I was going to put one of your stickers in my taxi, but the company said it was against the policy.’ Pallandine says: ‘I have learned more about America from riding a taxi than from all the limos in the country.’ Pallandine asks Bickle: ‘What is the one thing about this country that bugs you the most?’ Bickle says: ‘Well, I don’t follow political issues that closely, sir.’ Pallandine says: ‘There must be something.’ Bickle:

‘Well, whatever it is, you need to clean up this city. This city is like an open sewer. It’s full of filth and sometimes I can hardly take it. Whoever becomes the president should just really clean it up. Sometimes I go out and I get headaches it is so bad. […] The president should just clean up this mess… Should just flush it down the fucking toilet.’

Pallandine replies thusly: ‘Well, I uh… I think I know what you mean, Travis, but it’s not going to be easy. We’re going to have to make some really radical changes.’ The camera work throughout the scene alternates between the same angles; it alternates between three mid-shots around different sides of the taxi. Bickle’s diatribe is inarticulate and nonsensical, but it reflects the sense of frustration at what New York has become. The film was released in 1976 and it is set in New York. His diatribe reflects the crime, the grime and the grottiness of New York. The film was released a year after Gerald Ford visited the city and acknowledged how decrepit it was. Pallandine, similarly, recognises that something ‘radical’ is needed to change it.



            This essay will now look at corrupt trade unions in the United States. Some unions cooperated with organised crime. Corrupt union officials enriched themselves at the expense of other unionists and exploited business people (Jacobs 2006). The transport union, led by Hoffa, plagued it with corruption. Indeed, Hoffa was killed by his own mob. Hoffa’s death coincided with the decline of America’s union membership (Cornwell 2010). Many other organised crime groups infiltrated trade unions, which gained influence, and even control, of trade unions. This created a climate of fear and intimidation among employers and trade union members and led to threats and acts of violence (Department of Justice).

            Paul Schrader was the screenwriter for Taxi Driver and he made his directorial debut two years later with Blue Collar (1978). The film deals with three operatives in a car manufacturing factory. They are struggling with a cost-of-living crisis and their trade union is crooked. Early on in the film, they attend a committee. The scene starts with a mid-shot of a spacious room filled with people. The union rep says: ‘I’ve got to wait for something big, not a bunch of little things.’ There is a picture of J. F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King in the background. There is also a flag of the United States and a labour confrontation from 1937. The character played by Richard Pryor feels aggrieved because the rep does not listen to his complaint. He says: ‘I also want to run for union rep and take your fucking job. […] I give the man some real representation.’ They all clap and jeer as he says this. The camera work alternates between mid-shots of Pryor and the union rep, from opposite angles. The rep looks indifferent, as he smugly smokes a cigar. Pryor says: ‘And when I get your job, I am going to get a private jet… And play golf with Nixon and president Ford and them motherfuckers.’ However, the union rep continues to parry all of his concerns.



            Later on in the film, Pryor finally does get the rep job, but he is swiftly disappointed. He is powerless to change anything and, to his horror, finds that the union is even more criminal than he ever imagined. He ingratiates himself with the union and tries to change it from within, but he finds that he cannot do this. Indeed, they kill his close friend Smokey. Pryor is told this in a striking scene. The union leader acknowledges that he killed Smokey on a bridge overlooking a motorway. We see a mid-shot of Pryor as he says: ‘You motherfuckers lied to me. You said Smokey and Kerry would be ok.’ We see a mid-shot of the leader, who looks blasé. The camera work alternates between mid-shots of Pryor and the union leader as the traffic whirrs in the background. The leader attributes this to an accident: ‘We’ve been having meetings all morning. We’ve found Smokey’s death as the result of negligence and improper staff precautions.’ Pryor says: ‘Fuck that, man! You had him murdered!’ The leader says: ‘Be careful who you call murderer. […] And how do you think things get changed around here? Not pie-in-the-sky martyrs. […] You thought being a union rep was going to be easy. Now you know it’s tough and it’s rough.’ The character played by Pryor becomes a union rep to change it, but once he gets the job is powerless to effect any change. Schrader is critiquing the corrupt nature of American trade unions in the 1970s. He is also representing the precarious position many blue-collar workers were in the 1970s, as it is the cost-of-living that drives them towards the crooked trade unions in the first place.

            The Keynesian settlement was already running into problems by the late 1960s, but the Oil Crisis exacerbated it. Keynesianism had been the prevailing economic orthodoxy, but many figures sought to distance themselves from it. The 1970s were a period of ‘stagflation’ – that is, high unemployment, high inflation and low growth. Economists like Milton Friedman and Paul Volker proposed a type of ‘shock therapy’. They wanted to contract the money supply so as to bring inflation down, which would create a recession. Keynesianism had previously redistributed wealth and intervened in the economy to keep unemployment low, but these economists wanted a freer market. At this point, many Keynesians overestimated the role of the sate in a free society, as they tried to tackle inflation by setting prices and wages. This sense of economic chaos is apparent in Being There, as the simpleminded protagonist talks about the seasons and this is interpreted as an insightful comment on economic cycles. He talks about ‘growth in spring’ and this is interpreted as a comment on the economy. Indeed, there was a wide sense of pessimism at the time. Life of Brian recreates the sense of sectarianism of the British left and trade unions. The trade unions at the time had paralysed the British economy due to their strikes. Leftists like Tony Benn, meanwhile, lamented the lack of ideological purity in the government. This comes through in the film as the Jewdian People’s Front hate the People’s Front of Jewdia more than the Romans. Meanwhile, New York was in a state of stagnation in the 1970s and fared worse than any other American city. It had a large deficit and had very high crime rates. At the time, president Gerald Ford visited the city and lamented its condition. This comes through in Taxi Driver, as it depicts child prostitution and the protagonist Travis Bickle talks about the ‘filth’ in the streets. American trade unions at the time were notorious for their links to organised crime, which comes through in Blue Collar by Paul Schrader. The lead character joins the trade union to change it, but they kill his best friend. These are the ways in which these films recreate economic decline in the 1970s.

 

 

 

 

Works Cited

            Baker, Kevin. (2015) ‘Welcome to Fear City – the Inside Story of New York’s Civil War, 40 Years On.’ In The Guardian. Available from: https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/may/18/welcome-to-fear-city-the-inside-story-of-new-yorks-civil-war-40-years-on

Cornwell, Rupert. (2010) ‘The Teamsters, a Trade Union Like no Other.’ In The Guardian. Available from: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-teamsters-a-trade-union-like-no-other-1924647.html

Coyle, Diane. (2017) ‘When Britain went Bust.’ In Financial Times. Available from: https://www.ft.com/content/3b583050-d277-11e6-b06b-680c49b4b4c0

Lambert, Stephen. (2017) ‘Trade Unions from the Beginning to 1979.’ In North East by Lines. Available from: https://northeastbylines.co.uk/trade-unions-from-the-beginning-to-1979/

Net. E. H. (2006) ‘Mobsters, Unions and the Feds: The Mafia and the American Labour Movement.’ In EH.net. Available from: https://eh.net/book_reviews/mobsters-unions-and-feds-the-mafia-and-the-american-labor-movement/

Perlstein, Rick. (2020) Reaganland: America’s Right Turn 1976-1980. New York: Simon & Schuster.

            Skidelsky, Robert. (2010) Keynes: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Wesbury, Brian, Stein, Robert. (2019) ‘We’re All Keynesians Now.’ In Advisor Perspectives. Available from: https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2019/09/16/were-all-keynesians-now

             Unknown Author. ‘NYC in Chaos.’ In American Experience. Available from: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/blackout-gallery/

Filmography

Being There. (1979) Directed by Hal Ashby. United Artists. 130 minutes.

Blue Collar. (1978) Directed by Paul Schrader. Universal Pictures. 114 minutes.

Life of Brian. (1979) Directed by Terry Jones. Cinema International Corporation. 94 minutes.

Taxi Driver. (1976) Directed by Martin Scorcese. Columbia Pictures. 114 minutes.

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