"The two basic items necessary to sustain life, are sunshine and coconut milk... didya know that?"
Well, here it is. Another movie checked off the Best Picture Winner list. Going into this, I wasn't sure how much I would actually like this movie because it is very mature as many of the movies of the late 1960s and 1970s are. People told me I may not like or it might not be for me and stuff like that, but I decided to give it a shot. While it isn't the type of movie I would watch often, it still has some important messages about how low people will go on the streets and about friendship. Joe and Ratso's friendship was a big part of the film because Ratso knew what it was like on the streets and Joe was coming from Texas trying to make it in New York. He was naive and vunerable about the way of life in New York compared to what he came from. The performances by Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight were amazing and this movie is what established Dustin Hoffman as the character actor that he is.
The lengths they would go were hard to watch at times and a little bizarre, but what I like about these movies is that it captured the realism of the time. The way the films were shot, the coloring, the grittiness, it all just fit with how it felt. It was almost done like a documentary instead of a movie and I think that is why it won Best Picture. It was unique. Real. Vunerable. Yeah there were things that were difficult to watch, but overall it was an important movie and I am glad that I watched it. It gets 3 and a half stars from me.

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