#20 - Grease
Randal Kleiser, 1978

In the 1950s, a group of high school seniors must navigate the obstacles caused by their love lives.
Grease is quite the love-or-hate proposition as it takes the 1970s' affinity for 1950s' nostalgia and churns out an unapologetically high-camp musical that celebrates the coolest parts of the decade; big cars, leather jackets, dance contests, drive-ins, and so forth. It's anchored by the central plot involving John Travolta's Danny and Olivia Newton-John's Sandy, who start the film having shared a fleeting summer romance full of tenderness and whatnot; however, when the preppy Sandy shows up at the same school as Danny, he decides to act tough in front of his greaser friends, thus complicating things for both Sandy and him. That's without mentioning the various other plots involving their respective friend groups and various would-be rivals, but obviously plot is not a major concern here. However, a musical is arguably only as good as its numbers, and for the most part they're extremely lacking. I'll cop to liking the "Greased Lightnin'" sequence and maybe "Summer Nights" at a stretch, but that's about it as everything else see-saws between the overplayed and the forgettable. As such, the bulk of Grease becomes a seriously grating chore to sit through in ways that not even the sheer charm of '70s Travolta or the setting's '50s aesthetic can adequately balance out.
Randal Kleiser, 1978

In the 1950s, a group of high school seniors must navigate the obstacles caused by their love lives.
Grease is quite the love-or-hate proposition as it takes the 1970s' affinity for 1950s' nostalgia and churns out an unapologetically high-camp musical that celebrates the coolest parts of the decade; big cars, leather jackets, dance contests, drive-ins, and so forth. It's anchored by the central plot involving John Travolta's Danny and Olivia Newton-John's Sandy, who start the film having shared a fleeting summer romance full of tenderness and whatnot; however, when the preppy Sandy shows up at the same school as Danny, he decides to act tough in front of his greaser friends, thus complicating things for both Sandy and him. That's without mentioning the various other plots involving their respective friend groups and various would-be rivals, but obviously plot is not a major concern here. However, a musical is arguably only as good as its numbers, and for the most part they're extremely lacking. I'll cop to liking the "Greased Lightnin'" sequence and maybe "Summer Nights" at a stretch, but that's about it as everything else see-saws between the overplayed and the forgettable. As such, the bulk of Grease becomes a seriously grating chore to sit through in ways that not even the sheer charm of '70s Travolta or the setting's '50s aesthetic can adequately balance out.
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Iro's Top 100 Movies v3.0
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