

The Rain People
"Rain people are very fragileā¦one mistake in love and they dissolve."
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When a housewife finds out she is pregnant, she runs out of town looking for freedom to reevaluate her life decisions.
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The Rain People Reviews

Wuchak
September 21, 2024**_Coppola's mundane and melancholy late ā60ās arthouse road movie_** A 30-ish wife on Long Island (Shirley Knight) needs to just get away and so enters her station wagon and drives west. To where? She doesnāt know, but she picks up an ex-college football player (James Caan) before meeting a motorcycle cop (Robert Duvall). āThe Rain Peopleā (1969) was made three years before Francis Ford Coppola became famous with āThe Godfather.ā It was his first movie in which he had total creative control, writing and directing on the road without producers breathing down his neck. The story was inspired by Francisā mother curiously leaving home for a few days when he was a kid. Itās about a womanās haphazard search for freedom from the manacles of domestic life. Unlike the domineering male protagonists of āPattonā (which he wrote), the Corleone patriarchs and Kurtz in āApocalypse Now,ā Coppola shows us here several females manipulating men: Natalie with Kilgannon, Gordon and even Vinny; Ellen with Kilgannon and her father; and Rosalie with her dad. Interestingly, it's the express opposite of Francisā previous movie, the fun āFinianās Rainbow,ā which was based on the 1947 Broadway hit. One is an energetic musical with a large cast while this has an everyday, depressing tone, made with a small cast & crew. While neither were successful at the box office, they both went on to garner cult followings after Coppolaās great success in the 1970s-90s (of course he had a few movies that didnāt do so well, but what else is new?). I can see where many viewers would find āThe Rain Peopleā dull, but it features a daring premise and has historical significance, not to mention some notable cast members. Plus, itās a quality period piece for the late ā60s. In regards to the commendable premise, Natalie loves her husband, but is uncertain about the responsibility of having his child and so instinctively flees the scene. Ironically, Killgannon becomes her surrogate āchildā on her road odyssey wherein she struggles with her obligations. Concerning the āhistorical significance,ā the industry proudly cites āStand Up and Be Countedā as the first flick to address womenās liberation, which it overtly does. But this came out three years prior and few people noticed at the time because itās so covert. It was ahead of its time. Francis originally intended to include a scene at the end to clear up what Natalie decides to do from there, but it wasnāt needed because everything is explained in her monologue. Listen. It runs 1 hour, 41 minutes, and was shot over the course of five months in several American states with a 10-person crew (along with a smattering of locals). The locations include: Garden City (opening shot), Manhattan (Lincoln Tunnel) & Hofstra University, New York; the Pennsylvania Interstate; Harrisonburg, Virginia (restaurant scene); Clarksburg (the drive-in theater) & Weston, West Virginia; Chattanooga, Tennessee (the parade); Brule (the burning house) & Ogallala (the reptile ranch), Nebraska; and other places for exterior shots. GRADE: B/B-
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