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What's The Point? The Legendary 1971 Animated In Fred Wolf's ‘60s-nostalgic, yet remarkably consistent 1971 animation landmark, The Point, it is unclear at first what is in fact trying to be said. An obvious touchstone is that benchmark of filmed cult fables, Joseph Losey's The Boy with the Green Hair (1948). Indeed, similar messages of acceptance, peace, and even governmental subversion permeate and help to constitute the point, so to speak.
There is so much honesty and brilliance, so much more going on in The Point. At the beginning of the film, a young boy is about to "turn off, read: go to bed in this modern world. His father, voiced by Ringo Starr (and in other prints, Dustin Hoffman and Alan Thicke), suggests a bedtime story rather than the lad's usual winding down to the television creepily built into his bedside wall. As a matter of conditioning, the boy turns it on anyway, but as he becomes absorbed in the story, the television becomes expressionistically static a mind controlling image destroyed by the power of this child's once-latent imagination. In the land of The Point, everything has a physical point, buildings, people, animals … well, actually the pudgy, shortened legs and massive amounts of facial hair of the citizenry, hallmarks of hippy animation both, prove to be somewhat rounded. An artist carries a circle painting into the museum (a giant hand sign points to its entrance). The action is implied, perhaps to parallelly stimulate the viewer's imagination, but more likely to cut animation costs. We hear cries and boos. He exits, returning later with the same painting but a triangle this time, and is met with cheers. Oblio, a young boy unusually voiced by a young boy (Mike Lookinland who was Peter Brady) rather than the convention of using a woman, is introduced as kind, someone who "weathered life in an ordinary groove." Oblio drives the narrative. The surrogate, though, is Arrow, who holds the majority of reaction shots the essential piece of narrative filmmaking that promotes audience engagement via identification.
Oblio and Arrow wander sadly through the pointless forest. Unable to continue without a good cry, Oblio stops. In the most bizarre scene in a children's movie, aside possibly from the chicken beheading scene in Mel Stuart's Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory made the same year, his tears gather visual and symbolic significance, suggesting the psychedelic transformation of all mundane things ahead. A beautiful visual accompaniment to Nilsson's poignant, elliptical "Think About Your Troubles," the animation of the next segment is similarly amazing, adding to, feeding the tune. A trail of tears through a teacup, swirling to the ocean, which is fed to its fish, that are swallowed by a whale who dies and, "everybody knows, when a body decomposes/the basic elements are given back to the ocean (which) tastes just like a teardrop." Disturbingly, the whale is shown rotting into the ocean. The ocean streams into the tap. The tap flows into the teapot and the teapot flows into the teacup. Point being, problems are small in an infinite, cyclical universe. Case (and ellipsis) closed. With that utter expression completed, the journey can now begin. Oblio and Arrow encounter the uber-psychedelic and arrow-covered Pointless Man, who proclaims, "A point in every direction is the same as no point at all." He appears throughout the journey to talk about the lack of a point in every character Oblio and Arrow encounter. Then the pair encounter a gigantic, soulful rock-man who claims, "Ain't necessary to possess a point to have a point." He also says that we see only what we want, adding, "Everyone here is stone." Indeed. Oblio spots some gigantic, round dancing women who are certainly pointless, physically anyway. He begins here to form his perspective on the situation. Merriment, he decides, is their point. Suddenly Oblio is carried away by a gigantic bird. In a sophisticated trick, the scene quickly shifts back to the storytelling. Now again in the bedroom, the boy's father asks him how he knows it is such a large bird. This is when we know that the entire narrative, filmically, is controlled by this child's imagination.
May 2004 | Issue 44 ACCESS: As one Amazon reviewer lamented, this DVD has no extras, not even a trailer. At least it's cheap. Check the usual sources. A detailed Harry Nilsson website can be found here. ALSO: More animation |
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New book from the
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Action! Interviews with Directors
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