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  • Heavy Traffic is everything you've heard it is... laced with some kind of bizzare sexual reference every other second (it seems) as well as totally insane violence, this brutal, bizarre and strangely sad film is worth one viewing, if for no other reason that to show that in the early '70's, Bakshi was pointing towards a concept of animated film that is only now hinted at.

    I would suggest (okay, I AM suggesting) that a lot of Anime, and the useage of animated clips in both Natural Born Killers and Kill Bill (vol. I) point back to this particular film.

    My take: watching the hero in "real time" is what the film is showing, with the animated bits being more inside of his head, until the end, where he is blown off by the beautiful woman that he dreams of, where we see one event that exists in his head (notice that it fails, but begins with an act of violence against the pinball machine, and also notice that the man playing with the artificial gunfighter is gunned down while a man >?< is getting naked in the photo booth) and another that ends with a sense that in a few seconds the Mary Tyler Moore theme song is going to begin.

    What is real? Well, in the head of someone that creates movies held by the only boundries made inside one's own head, it is a pointless question...
  • An "underground" cartoonist contends with life in the inner city, where various unsavory characters serve as inspiration for his artwork.

    Another reviewer said that people who review this film poorly are either offended by the nudity or just do not get it. The nudity (and blood) do not bother me in the slightest -- fill the screen with as many animated sex organs as you feel necessary, for all I care. On the second point, it is possible I do not get it.

    While I understand the animation was innovative for its time and that the film shows urban decay -- both with cartoons and actual locations -- I cannot help but think that it just has not aged very well. Some scenes I found excellent (such as the God segment), while others were completely forgettable. It balanced out to be average at best.

    The New York Times called it the "most original American film of the year." Could they look back now and say that again? I am not so sure.
  • Heavy Traffic is a wild ride of a movie. It's not very accessible or intelligible but it's rather fascinating as one man's delving into his own history and imagination.

    Doubtlessly a very personal movie. Sort of like 8 and a half if 8 and a half was made by a graffiti artist. A lurid and grotesque affair, itself like a piece of graffiti splattered on an inner city wall. It is deliberately unlovely in its caricature of urban life complete with racial stereotypes, italic mobsters and bizarre transsexuals.

    There's not much plot beyond these episodes of life and that's the point. Gradually the film becomes more about two alienated individuals, a cool black prostitute and an unsullied Jewish Italian Cartoonist, transcending differences in ethnoreligious background to try and make something in this bleak world even if it means being as brutal as everyone else is. I feel the usage of stereotypic images of black people, gays, jews etc. Helps even a tolerant viewer break into the mindset of people at this place and time where the colour of your skin and whether you wore a cross, crucifix or a 6 pointed star meant everything about who you are.

    There's a certain lyricism in the way the movie is handled; the way that one can try and find beauty of sorts even in the ugliest of back drops and that's what I like most about the movie; it's an artist genuinely putting a piece of themselves on the screen with less regard about how many people like it but who likes it. It's ambitious and stylized but strangely unpretentious about it since it does nothing in half measures where we meander from sordid realism to daliesque bizarrity with a kitsch twist.

    The trailer was spot on: "it's funny, but it's not a comedy; it's animated but it's not a cartoon". That sums it up pretty well.

    This didn't charm me the way some other of Bakshi's movies did but often a movie is an oblique view into the mind of the maker. Here we've had a chance to get more or less a full view.
  • A few previous critics of this work by Bakshi slam it for being "stereotypical" and thereby negative as a whole by implementing foul humor, language and at times even suggest that because it's a cartoon that it owes something to child-oriented animation. This is absolute pig swill. Bakshi's vision in Heavy Traffic is to present life on the streets as he knows it. His style is truly unique, overlaying animation onto real stills and film sequences to add to the New york flavor that exists throughout the film. An abusive Italian married to a worrying Jewish woman is part of our reality. Gays being abused and people having to worry about their jobs being taken by minority groups for less pay and benefits because they're more desperate than we are is part of our reality. Love regardless of skin color, and facing the consequences for it is SADLY part of our reality. By using animation, Bakshi is exercising his artistic abilities while setting it in times and themes he is familiar with. This film, along with the criminally banned Coonskin should be hailed as modern masterpieces not for their visual aspects, but for the truth lying beneath and his unabashed look at how life really is. Comparing this film to "Shrek" is like comparing the original Night of the Living Dead to the recent Dawn of the dead remake. Granted they're both horror, but they're lightyears apart and don't use any of the same effects techniques. One, like Heavy Traffic, was made for social commentary, whereas the remake, like Shrek, is merely for our homogenized entertainment values.
  • I will start this review saying that this was my first Ralph Bakshi film, so beyond his newer paints, i´m not really used to his style so you won't read a full on praise of the film and all the other elements that most fans of Bakshi talk about. Heavy Traffic is an animated R film, that talks about Michael and his life as the son of a struggling Thug, an old nagging Jewish mother and his Black Girlfriend that is a bartender. Though the film doesnt really sound that exciting if you talk about them like this, when you analize it after seeing it, you have the story of a Young Man that could be doomed to make the same mistakes his father was doing. The film has really strong and recognizable visuals and characters, though my knowledge of Bakshi as a film director is really limited, i do know that his characters are visually recognizable and interesting and Heavy Traffic is a really amazing film, the animation (Though in some parts a bit too laggy) really supports some of the surreal characters, all the characters have a different way lf moving, jumping, talking and such, you can understand much of them about their designs. One of the problems i have are some of the more Problematic elements like some of the more misogynistic views and the uses of certain slurs, but to be honest, the film was made in a way more different time that kinda needed something strange, sexual and even racist in the animation industry, there is a reason why this film will be celebrated in the community, because it dared to do break the image of "Cartoons are for kids" even more then Fritz the cat for all that i know. Even the problematic elements like the slurs and some of the domestic violence aren't really embraced, they are actually portrayed as twisted and as darkly comedic in some elements, thankfully most of the elements done are to the more unlikable characters. Though, some of the elements like the violence feel kinda unneeded and useless in some scenes, the animation sometimes is really crappy, the ending though it works in the idea that life is like a Pinball game is really...weird, even with the analogy, some of the characters take some stupid decisions and sadly Michael goes from just a normal but kinda tired guy to a thug in a quick scene, it kinda feels unnatural, specially for the character we had met during the whole movie. But the film is still good, not really the thing for me, but i can't deny that the film has earned it's rightful place in the Animation stotytexts, i think that one of the taglines for the film describes it best. It's animated, but it's not a cartoon, It's funny but it isn't a comedy, it's heavy, it's heavy traffic. It's not for everyone, maybe not for me, but that doesn't mean that it isnt important.
  • Heavy Traffic is, like many of Ralph Bakshi's films, a like it or hate it affair, but for those that respond to it, the film provides many a surprising attack on sensibility, decency, and what it means to get by in urban sprawl. It's almost too personal; one can see Bakshi or friends of his having gone through some of the little things in the lower ranks of New York City's daily life (particularly Brooklyn life) as depicted here. But it's this connection to a personal reality- and then a TOTAL adherence to turning this reality on its head and making it as wild, violent, and sexually deviant as possible- that is the key to the success of Bakshi's film, the best of his I've seen so far. His main character, Michael, is probably loosely based on himself; a young, would-be underground cartoonist who lives with insanely irate parents (Italian father and Jewish mother), and interacts with the neighborhood he's in with a casual attitude and a little reluctance to join in the mayhem that goes on with such kooky cats. Enter in Carole, a black bartender who won't take s*** from anyone, who teams up as a business partner, more or less, with Michael to first get cartoons off the ground, then, so it goes, misadventures in prostitution. It all leads up to an ending that isn't expected, though a sort of double-piling of shock and pleasant surprise.

    Heavy Traffic outlays Bakshi's outlook on life in a skill that could be called animated exploitation film-making. However, it's through this overloading of characters *meant* to be unattractive, sexually piggish, wretchedly racist (and, on the other side of the coin, sexist), and violent in the tradition of the Looney Tunes cartoons with the worst taste, that the film gets to the guts of the matter. It's a half-embrace, half-attack on a lack of values in a society, and as Baskhi relishes in his excess, he also is criticizing both himself for lapping it up and those in the neighborhood for being such eccentric mother-f***ers. And, as a satire should be, it's very funny, occasionally uproariously so. Scenes like Michael being pressured to get it on with the girl on the mattress on the roof, and the outcome as a sort of running gag; the scene with the song Mabeline playing, as Baskhi puts out drawings that are without much color, and look incredible for the reason that there's seemingly little effort put into the animation with the random over-the-top sexual positions; the little bits in the feuding with Michael's parents, the mother with her Jewish-star knife-holster and the father with his dedication to the "Godfather", who eats little people in his pasta, over anything really with his family; and when Michael presents "religious" cartoons to a dying old man, which to any prurient Christian taste is hilariously offensive and, well, cool.

    Bakshi is so personal at times, with his taste in color schemes, in over-lapping images with film clips, combining live-action and animation (usually with dancing ladies on one side and a lurid little twerp gawking on the other), and even likely real family photos from his own family laid in, that it levels going too far. There's a tendency for self-indulgence, however not always the bad kind, if that makes sense, and one can see how the film can and has been vehemently criticized for what it is really trying to criticize in the film. But deep down, past the creative madman in Bakshi, is also a heart; his film ends on a touching note, as abstraction turns real and a totally live scene reveals another level to Michael and Carol, as real outcasts who are both totally stubborn, and somehow meant for each other. Heavy Traffic is a one-of-a-kind affair, and the kind of under-the-radar act of an outrageous spectacle that it could only be done in the 70s. Grade: A-
  • Made in the mid-70s, it's a West Side story told mostly in animation from the imagination of the lead character, Michael. While not my favorite style of animation, Ralph Bakshi does a pretty good job of conveying confusion and an overwhelmed sense of trying to fit in. The live action sequences and old film mesh with the cartoon aspects to give a visual punch to this. Having seen it on DVD, the trailer is very, very dated. A pretty good movie though. I'd recommend it, if you have the time.
  • michael_the_nermal5 January 2009
    5/10
    Huh?
    This is the second adult-oriented animated movie I've seen with "heavy" as the first word in the title and which is also chock full of gratuitous sex and violence. I prefer "Metal" to "Traffic" because it looks better animated and engages in surrealistic sci-fi and "sword-and-sorcery" fantasy sequences. The sex in "Traffic" is also a lot more graphic. This is my baptismal into the world of Ralph Bakshi. Maybe it's not for my generation, so I really don't get what he's going for here. It's extremely weird, though not in a very pleasant or entertaining way. I'd read Bakshi was lead animator for Paramount and worked for many years at Terrytoons. "Heavy Traffic" certainly seems to draw inspiration from the old Paramount toons in terms of style, though he cartoon characters are deliberately cruder. Some characters seem like non sequiturs and are irrelevant to the plot. There are live-action segments which don't seem to make a whole lot of sense. This film's nihilistic to the nth degree. It all feels like some psychedelic LSD trip that's really not all that entertaining. Again, it's not for my generation.

    The X-rating is well-deserved. Tons of graphic sexual imagery and weird violence. NOT for anyone under 18! If I want trippy 'toons, I'll stick with "Heavy Metal" or lighter kiddie fare, such as that weird "Raggedy Ann and Andy" movie that was shown on Disney Channel way back when.
  • Heavy Traffic is only known by the hardcore Ralph Bakshi fan base and the occasional art house folk, but not by much else. Its probably due to its notorious stamp of an X rating and its inclusion of countless ethnic stereotypes that led to its obscurity. Don't be fooled, this is not a porno. It was only given the rating due to its raunchy humor, which back in 1973 was considered too edgy for the masses. It's no different than what Family Guy is doing now on network television. As far as the racism is concerned, it's brutal, but outdated. Every ethnic person In the film represents a familiar joke or stereotype of the time. Now, the movie itself is a triumph. Truly an underestimated piece of artistic genius from one of the greatest minds that has ever drawn a cartoon. Ralph pours his culture, anger, sadness, laughter and happiness into every frame of this film. Almost to a biographic extent. He considers it his favorite project, and its obvious why. From the music, to the animation, Heavy Traffic proves that its more than a cartoon, but a microcosm of urban life in the cruelest decade to live in it. If you can get past it's lack of political correctness, it's a great flick.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Michael is an underground artist in New York City who draws strips of the people he sees around him. He hooks up with the beautiful Carol, but she loses her job in a bar and so the two go searching for the high life.

    Bakshi's films are hard to find, but it's more than worth the effort. Outside of Japan, he's really the only director in the world who has managed to make adult-oriented animation features, and his films are completely unique. Heavy Traffic is his most personal and probably his best too - it sucks you into the seedy seventies world of NYC and doesn't let go. On one level it's a shocking freakshow, filled with hustlers, transsexuals, down-and-outs, hookers and thugs, but only if you're a bit of a prude. It's really just a slice-of-life series of observations; some satirical, some gross, some tragic and all rendered in a wild array of visual styles - traditional cell animation, live action, multiple composites, filters and negatives, pencil-tests (the Maybellene sequence), near-subliminal stills, real movie clips (the film Michael watches in the empty cinema is Red Dust, with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow), stock shots, what have you. If nothing else, it bombards the viewer with a myriad of dazzling visual techniques. The film has many influences (Vaughn Bode, Robert Crumb, a sudden mock-up shot of Edward Hopper's Nighthawks) but Bakshi's direction is unique and his fearless experimentation with cinematic style is both admirable and rewarding. He not only plays with animation, he plays with styles within animation, like the incredible bullet-in-the-head moment, or the whole Mother Pile / Wanda The Last sequence. If the film has a weakness, it's that it's a bit episodic - crazy New York nights - but it's so overloaded with wild ideas and freaky moments that it doesn't spoil the flow, but just contributes to the freewheeling anarchy. The voice cast are cool, notably Atkinson, and there's a fabulous score by Ed Bogas and Ray Shanklin, featuring a memorable soul-fuelled cover of the traditional ballad Scarborough Fair. An acquired taste, for sure, but a must for real fans of animation, and check out any of Bakshi's other films (particularly Wizards and Cool World).
  • Warning: Spoilers
    No real plot, basically a collection of events from the life of an angry young Italian-Jewish man named Michael inter-spliced with him playing pinball in an arcade, the one bright spot in his life being a black hooker named Carole.

    This is one mean, nasty, disgusting little film that is so relentlessly bleak and uncompromising in telling the viewer that life is a hopeless Hell that it's unbearable, and the incredibly bad animation does not help. Did I mention that the characters are mostly unsympathetic? Some genuinely funny dark humor isn't enough to relieve the strain.

    While I applaud Ralph Bakshi's efforts & desire to use animation for adults and show it could be used for more than just entertaining kids, he really drops the ball with this one, allegedly his personal favorite. Hell, his Lord of the Rings and American Pop, flawed as they were, were better than this.
  • beastiebcw11 March 2004
    10/10
    Genius
    This film is one you'll pretty much love or hate. I think to those who don't like it . . . either you're sensitive to the nudity, issues it covers, or other content material, or maybe you just don't understand it.

    Sometimes confusion can lead to hatred. But the film is without a doubt visually stimulating. IMDB voters are giving it crap ratings, yet I agree with the people who give out star ratings, for this piece got 3.5 stars out of 4. And it deserves it. It's groundbreaking, and such a perfect posterchild for the 70s in terms of seedy animation and urban decay.

    Well done Bakshi, well done.
  • Heavy Traffic isn't as good as Fritz the Cat but far better than everything that came after that. I have no clue what was edited to secure an R rating but even the Maybelline scene was graphic. The movie is an interesting take on life in 50s or 60's. I recommend this over Coonskin, Hey, Good Lookin, American Pop, Fire And Ice or his Lord of the Rings. It's definitely not for children. It's closer to an NC-17 in terms of the graphic nudity and a graphic sexual image. You might find his ideas and themes interesting. It took a couple of views to really enjoy it. I recommend Heavy Traffic to anyone 18 and above.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First off, I don't give a damn about political correctness so no points off. Second, I grew up in the inner city so no points off for grittiness.

    However, I do want to watch a movie with something interesting to say other than people are mean to each other and out for their own self-interest. That's 90 percent of the movie. His dad is a POS Italian misogynistic womanizer works for the mob. His mom is a bitter Jewish shrew. He's just a lost asshole animator who wants to sell "Wizards".

    Feel free to watch it if you're wasted and want to watch some poorly drawn violent dark stupidity.

    Oh, btw, everything is excusable since Bakshi is making a statement about society. Sure. His "statement" about society is that it's violent and sucks.
  • by Dane Youssef

    This is rumored to be animation-pioneer Ralph Bakshi's favorite among all his projects. And no wonder. This is his story! A 22-year old Jewish-Itallian spends his time playing pin-ball non-stop and drawing. He still lives with his parents, an Itallian man who cheats on his wife and a Jewish woman who's so emotionally torqued up--such a drama queen, that when Angelo comes home after a night with his lady, she hits him over the head with a frying pan and sticks his head in the oven.

    There's always domestic unrest in any family, particularly with interracial married couples who lived in the Bronx around this time. But they're so wound-up, so ready to snap--they come to blows and sharp instruments a little too quickly.

    Way too quickly, in fact. Angelo and Ida's Punch-and-Judy relationship--coupled with the problems that reside outdoors in the Bronx--Michael seems doomed to have some of it rub off on him. "You hang around garbage long enough, you start to stink," as they say.

    But Michael has an outlet for his angst and confusion. Rather than fall into the trap many around him seem to, he vents himself at the drawing board. He draws a lot of the people and places in the Bronx. Although he seems to dislike many of them, they're so broad and colorful and wired, they translate easily to caricatures.

    Bakshi takes us to all the usual haunts we visit in his movies--trashy ghetto neighborhoods with buildings that look condemned, dirt-cheap apartments, behind the wheel of cars, rooftops, nightclubs, bars, brothels.

    The lives of all of the Bronx inhabitants: Jews, Itallians, blacks, drag queens, junkies, vagrants, hookers, cops, thugs and the like. And by using animation, Bakshi (and Michael) sort of illustrate their world and their eccentricity, which is so dangerous, it borderlines on insanity.

    I wasn't particularly crazy about the disco remix of "Scarlbrough Fair." What can I say? I fell in love with the original.

    But I suppose it does fit in with the nature of the film. Bakshi uses a lot of shots of Michael playing pinball. He's a big pinball fanatic. It's obviously a metaphor, perhaps for the hectic universe in which Michael bounces from one scenario to another, for which he's constantly out of place.

    Carol is a black woman who works at a local bar where Michael draws on the roof. She's loud, she's opinionated, she's passionate. And she really seems to be about something. She's not just an ethnic joke.

    Like all bars, there are lots of colorful locals there, plenty of dangerous ones to be sure.

    Michael tries to score free drinks with his art. But that's all he tries to score Michael's no ladies' man and he knows it. He's a deep, sensitive, skilled artiste. And a sitting duck for some of the louder, tougher guys who make up the city.

    It doesn't help matter that he's a virgin and everyone knows it. At one point, some greasers try to hook him up with a loose woman who's eager to have it with a guy who's so fresh and green. Although this leads to a disaster. Even his own father tries to hook him up. Now there's a true loving father for you.

    Michael has an eye for Carol (many people at the bar she tends do), not because he's dying to get laid like nearly every other male. But he seems to genuinely feel something real for her. When she offers it up to him in gratitude for a favor, he faints. He wants her, but he's just not ready.

    Ida is fussy and over-protective of her son, just like a mother hen. Or rather a Jewish mother. Angelo wants his son to be more of a "man's man." Like all of Bakshi's films, this contains a lot of graphic violence and sexual images, as well as caricatures in the ethnic vein.

    But surprisingly, in the strangest way, it contains real heart, as well as some sweetness. The relationship between Michael and Carol has to be seen. Bakshi could've made her just an archetype like everyone else and he didn't. She's just as developed and human and relative as dear Michael is. These two deserve one another.

    "Heavy Traffic" is wildly imaginative and thrilling in all it's glory. Like "Being John Malkovich," we actually feel like we're inside the author's head rather than his film. This truly ranks as Bakshi's best. He deserves more credit for this than "Fritz The Cat." How much of all this take place in Michael's mind and how much of it takes place in his reality? Maybe they're one and the same. Maybe not. Maybe we're supposed to figure it out. It up to us. Just like Michael's life is up to him.

    The characters in the city are so damn cartoonish and erratic already, they transfer them into cartoon characters without losing anything in the translation.

    Bakshi doesn't paint a pretty picture of the city and it's locals. But then again, he never has, has he? That's one of the things he's known for.

    But that's not the only thing. Let's hope that when he goes... he'll be remembered for a lot of things.

    Especially this one. It is... not only his best, not only one of the year's best... but of the best.

    --For Ralph Bakshi, for film, forever, Dane Youssef
  • Nostrama20 July 2021
    Ignore the negative reviews granted the movie dates poorly, Bakshi laregly did things to be offensive to get attention, so giving this movie negative reviews under todays standards and culture shows people lack the ability to understand how things were back in the time the film was made the best thing to do would be accept that the movie was one of bakshis "doing it because i can" style,
  • I just finished watching this film, and I couldn't be more in awe. It's definitely one of the most bizarre pieces of true Art that I have seen in recent years, and yet the naked honesty is instantly resonant on a very deep level. This a a very dark look at one short period in a young artist's life in what seems to be New York. Ralph is not afraid to show the extreme in the ordinary, the sublime in the tragic, the sparkling filth that charges the air with horror and magic. This is our world, and his, with all the petty bitterness and hope that goes with it. I am saddened by those who say this film is garbage; I was at times horrified, laughing, moved, angered, and yet I emerged from the experience hopeful. I have rarely ever seen such a pure and rich depth of feeling as with this film. Ralph Bakshi is indeed a Master of our time, and the fact that he is still fairly obscure is a terrible waste. See this film, but keep the kids far away, it's rated R for a reason.
  • sluggo531 December 2003
    This movie has edged out Tom Green's execrable "Freddy Got Fingered" for the number-one spot on my list of the worst films ever made. This movie is aggressively repellent. It's the worst kind of nihilistic shlock, absolutely reveling in its own amorality and childish obsession with violence, sex, degradation, squalor, and, of course, plenty of crudely-drawn genitalia. There is not a single glimmer of humanity in this freak show. It's literally the worst film I've ever seen.
  • I positively love animation, and I loved Heavy Traffic. In fact it ties with American Pop as my personal favourite of Ralph Bakshi's films, with Hey Good Lookin' and Coonskin not far off. The story is personal, with some fun and often moving moments, for me this is one of Bakshi's least vague movies story-wise. The satire is satire that really bites hard and all the better for it and the characters have a lot of likability. The soundtrack always has been one of my things-to-look-for in animated movies and here it is wonderful, beautiful but also moody and atmospheric. And then there is the animation, it has a charming rough-around-the-edges look to it with enough of Bakshi's style evident, and the backgrounds look gorgeous. Overall, personal and interesting, one of Bakshi's very best. 9/10 Bethany Cox
  • This was the film that Ralph Bakshi wanted to make before Fritz the Cat, a film about an underground animator in New York who is actually human in design. There's obviously some element of autobiography at play, but only to some limited degree. There are also some motifs that come into play that repeat from Fritz, mostly this desire to escape New York like it's a prison. It's also a slightly better film than Bakshi's previous film, even if Bakshi's worst impulses and general inability to tell a single, sustained story for 75 minutes are still on evident display.

    Michael (Joseph Kaufmann) is a twenty-three year old animator living with his Italian father, Angelo (Frank de Kova) and Jewish mother, Ida (Terri Haven). Angelo (whose design looks a whole lot like Homer Simpson by some weird coincidence) is a low-level flunky in the Italian mob who spends his nights out and bragging to an attractive young blonde about his respect in the neighborhood. The situation leads to loud, extended fights between father and mother that demonstrates the uncomfortable line that Bakshi tries to toe, and often fails at. The violence between mother and father is really violent while there's an emphasis on a certain level of realism while also using heavily stylized character designs. Hitting someone with a frying pan sends blood everywhere, but it doesn't actually hurt them any worse than Wile E. Coyote is ever hurt. There's an abundance of real images as backgrounds in an effort to more firmly root the story in a real New York, but violence is both supposed to mean something and not mean anything at the same time. It's a microcosm of Bakshi's general incoherence between his stylistic choices and the things he seems to be trying to say.

    Much like Fritz, the film is more of a series of vignettes than a singular story, but the pieces hang together more comfortably here. The core of the film is a relationship between Michael, the perennial virgin, and the attractive black bartender Carole (Beverly Hope Atkinson) that he gives drawings to for free drinks before he gets her fired by falling through the skylight of the bar. This all happens while a legless regular, Shorty, dotes on her unsuccessfully and a transvestite masochist picks up a burly construction worker who beats him up after finding out his secret. It's interesting that the transvestite is designed in similar ways as a minstrel show character would be.

    Carole ends up crashing in Michael's room, much to the chagrin of Angelo who hates that she's black. The scene that introduces Carole to Michael's family is the sort of puerile comedy that Bakshi loved to revel in. Angelo brings a large woman home to take Michael's virginity which leads to another knock out fight between father and mother while the woman aggressively goes after Michael as Carole comes out of the bathroom to Angelo's anger. The scene ends with the woman going down on Michael while Ida climbs on top of the larger woman to try and stop her, and the bed collapses. I mean...it's obviously supposed to be hilarious, but I found it mostly just uncomfortable.

    Where the movie works best really is the relationship between Carole and Michael, however that doesn't mean that it works all that well. For instance, she never brings up this major comical sequence even though her supposed boyfriend was doing such things right in front of her. In order to get work, Carole gets a job at a dancing club where Michael ends up acting as her pimp, and the relationship deteriorates because of the financial strain. And then Michael gets shot in the head because Angelo hates that Michael is dating a black girl so much he puts out a contract on him. I mean...this movie really isn't all that good. It is an improvement on Fritz the Cat, though.

    It all ends up being the thoughts of a real-life Michael playing a pinball machine. The use of the repeated visual motif of the pinball machine throughout the film points to Bakshi's obviousness in making his point, mostly that being in New York is like getting knocked around in a pinball machine. Anyway, it ends up being a further obvious metaphor where Michael had been imagining an animated version of his life with people he knew or just saw (sort of like The Wizard of Oz, I suppose), and he sees the real life version of Carole leaving a bar. He pursues her, talks to her, and gets her to dance with him in a park. Aw...if we could only find love in this world...

    Yeah, obvious message is obvious.

    Obvious messages can be fine in fiction if packaged compellingly, though, and Heavy Traffic is simply just not that compelling. Bakshi seems to have had no idea how to tell a sustained story over the course of about 80 minutes. His vignettes step on each other's toes, preventing any kind of narrative momentum from ever building, while he engages in his worst impulses in individual sequences that never really fit into anything else around it. Still, there's still something here, something seemingly more personal to Bakshi himself since the story seems a bit more autobiographical than Fritz had been. That gives a greater focus on Michael's actual story when it's around that helps create a more solid skeleton on which to attach all of the other ideas he has, even if they don't fit. I'm also disappointed that his art style hasn't really advanced at all, still looking flat without shadows or even shading.

    It's an improvement on Fritz the Cat, but it's still not good.
  • haildevilman30 March 2006
    R.B.'s best by far. I'm wondering how much of this is autobiographical. The only question being if it's 100% or not.

    Great characters. Seemed like more kept getting introduced then brushed off. It's like everyone knows everyone.

    Not for people squeamish about un-P.C. humor here. Every race took a few hits in the 'stereotyping' department. I think R.B. just tried to make fun of all of them.

    Mobbed-up Italians, Guilt-ridden (and inducing) Jews, uptight whites, flaming gays, and Jive-talking blacks. And the lead character's J.D. friends trying to hook him up.

    And did anyone notice the vintage strip show playing in the background during the bar scene? Looked like it was from the 1940's.

    Great film.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I felt that this movie was rather stupid than "an underrated gem" as some reviewer described it.

    There was no story in this at all, all you see is women sticking their boobs out, people taking drugs, men's pants going down and seeing their penises.

    What do they have in meaning? Absouletely nothing!

    Yeah I know the cartoonist is the lead character but, he ain't doing a good job really.

    I would definitely give this movie a 0/10 if I had the chance to do on here! It's lame, rubbish and just again, it has no meaning.
  • Made after the X-Rated animated film, "Fritz the Cat," Ralph Bakshi's "Heavy Traffic" is considered to be his greatest work. Like all of Bakshi's films, it emerged amidst a storm of controversy due to its sexual and violent animated content. However, once the viewer gets beyond the shock of seeing an animated film with adult attitude, the symbolic details and creative genius of the work becomes apparent.

    The film follows a young animator as he struggles to get out of his domestic situation, and to sell his films. The film is an extremely personal account of director Bakshi's own early life. As the story unfolds, the viewer sees the difficulties of growing up in an economically and socially depraved household, as well as in a racist environment. The main character struggles to find out who he is, and what he must do to free himself of all the restrictions around him. This is all a symbolic representation of Bakshi's own struggle to have his bold and adult natured animated films accepted among critics and the film world.

    As for the creative efforts of the film, it is incredible and fascinating. Bakshi brilliantly meshes a wonderful musical soundtrack with all styles of creative animated symbolism, without losing its personal human touch. The end result is a creative animated masterpiece about growing up and becoming a free and confident adult, while challenging the contraints of society and the censors.
  • I just saw this for the first time on DVD. It's an excellent transfer.

    Heavy Traffic must've been controversial back in '73, and caused quite a splash. But I really don't see why. This is a case where, if the movie had been made completely as live-action, no one would mention it today. The rambling and sometimes incomprehensible plot, extremely stereotyped characters, and subtle-as-a-Mack-Truck "social commentary" would've consigned this to a celluloid footnote.

    Some of the animated sequences are clever, but without a strong plot and good characters, I found them to be interesting, but not compelling.
  • Maybe I'm missing valuable prior knowledge about the director's life and works, or about 70's New York, but what a chaotic mess this movie turned out to be.

    The plot is going nowhere and lacks a lot of explanation in the beginning in regards to why the protagonist and his relatives do the things they do, why they make certain choices in life and why they behave like this. The extremely chaotic direction doesn't help with comprehending anything... Even if it's very personal and based on the director's life, that's no reason to leave out details that make the story more understandable. (A story isn't even necessary in a movie either, but now it's just messy for no reason).

    The choice in what to animate and where to throw in life action or other more realistic scenes isn't working well for me either. It brings more chaos to the story and takes away from what is supposedly animated satire. Animation on a realistic backdrop just makes the animation more like a simple cartoon and less serious.

    Altogether to me it just feels like someone trying too hard to be edgy in many ways possible. Too many ideas and concepts at once when it comes to the direction and the life action/animation mix choices. Too much over the top gore and sex (which I usually really don't mind, but in this case, it didn't seem to add much to the movie). The amount of gore doesn't help with raising this to the level of a convincing and serious animated satire either.
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