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The
1970s decade refers to the years from
1970 to
1979, also called
The Seventies.
In the Western world, the focus shifted from the social
activism of 1960s to social activities for one's own pleasure eg sex, such as cocaine-fuelled, hedonistic all-night parties at discotheques and
swinging parties. The seventies were considered by
Tom Wolfe as the "Me Decade." The one exception is the activism of the
environmentalism movement.
The perception of the established institutions of nuclear family, religion and trust in one's government continued to lose ground during this time. Major developments of the
sexual revolution included the awareness of the
Combined oral contraceptive pill#Social and cultural impact on social-interactional relationships, and an increase in divorce rates,
Single parent, and
pre-marital sex. By the end of the decade, the
feminist movement had helped change women's working conditions. The
Gay Rights movement became prominent, and the hippie culture, which started in the 1960s, peaked in the early 1970s and carried on through the end of the decade. The United States' withdrawal from its extensive military involvement in
Vietnam and the resignation of
Richard Nixon helped bring about a sense of malaise and mistrust in political authority.
The United States experienced an
economic recession, but the economy of Japan prospered. The economies of many third world countries continued to make steady progress in the early 1970s, because of the green revolution. They might have thrived and become stable in the way that Europe recovered after the war through the Marshall Plan; however, their economic growth was slowed by the oil crisis.
Worldwide trends
The
ethos of the 1970s emerged from a transition of the global social structure. It reflected the transition from the decline of
Colonialism since the end of
World War II to globalization and the rise of a new middle class in the developing world.
Globally, the 1970s had several features that were similar and definitive across economic levels and regions. These aspects and essence that make up global essence of the 1970s are the defining points of the 1970s: the
Bretton Woods system and its subsequent failure, the impact of the combined oral contraceptive pill on social-interactional dynamics, the rising of the Black community and the
1973 oil crisis.
The developing nations experienced economic growth that came in the wake of political independence. However, several
African economies declined and political states became dictatorial regimes. Many Middle Eastern democracies crumbled into chaotic regimes with pseudo-democratic governments.
The 1970s ethos in much of the developing world was characterized by the constant need to re-define social norms to newer socio-economic systems. As well, people were influenced by the rapid pace of change of the new social influences and the constant aspiration for a more egalitarian society in cultures that were long colonised and have an even longer history of hierarchical social structure.
The first
Rhytidectomy were attempted in the 1970s.
The
green revolution of the late 1960s brought about self sufficiency in many developing economies. At the same time an increasing number of people began to seek urban prosperity over agrarian life. This consequently saw the duality of transition of diverse interaction across social communities amid increasing
information blockade across social class.
Other common global ethos of the seventies world include:
increasingly flexible and varied gender roles for women. More women could enter the work force rather than remain housewives. However, the gender role of men remained as that of a bread-winner. The period also saw unprecedented socioeconomic impact of an ever-increasing number of women entering the non-agrarian economic workforce, and the sweeping cultural-religious impact of the
Iranian revolution toward the end of the 1970s.
The global experience of the cultural transition of the 1970s and an experience of a global
zeitgeist revealed the interdependence of economies since World War II, and showed the huge impact of American economic policies on the
world.
Economy
The 1970s was perhaps the worst decade of Western World and American economic performance since the
Great Depression. Although there was no severe economic depression as witnessed in the
1930s, economic growth rates were considerably lower than previous decades. As a result, the 1970s adversely distinguished itself from the prosperous postwar period between 1945 and 1968. Then, the world economy was buoyed by the Marshall Plan and the robust American economy. However, the high standing enjoyed by the American economy gradually became discomposed by years of loose domestic spending (particularly the Great Society campaign) and funding for the Vietnam war. The oil shocks
Arab Oil Embargo and
1979 energy crisis added to the existing ailments and conjured high inflation throughout much of the world for the rest of the decade. Soaring oil prices compelled most American businesses to raise their prices as well, with inflationary results.
The average annual inflation rate from 1900 to 1970 was approximately 2.5 percent. From 1970, however, the average rate hit about 6 percent, topping out at 13.3 percent by 1979. This period is also known for "stagflation", a phenomenon in which inflation and unemployment steadily increased, therefore leading to double-digit interest rates that rose to unprecedented levels (above 12% per year). The prime rate hit 21.5 in December 1980, the highest in history. By the time of 1980, when President
Jimmy Carter was running for re-election against Ronald Reagan, the Misery index (economics) (the
sum of the unemployment rate and the inflation rate) had reached an all-time high of 21.98 percent.
In Eastern Europe, Soviet-style command economies began showing signs of stagnation, in which successes were persistently dogged by setbacks. The oil shock increased East European, particularly Soviet, exports, but agriculture became a growing annoyance to such economies.
Oil crisis
Economically, the seventies were marked by the energy crisis which peaked in 1973 and 1979 (see 1973 oil crisis and
1979 oil crisis). After the first oil shock in 1973,
gasoline was rationed in many countries. Europe particularly depended on the Middle East for oil; the U.S. was also affected even though it had its own oil reserves. Many European countries introduced car-free days. In the U.S., customers with a license plate ending in an odd number were only allowed to buy gasoline on odd-numbered days, while even-numbered plate-holders could only purchase gasoline on even-numbered days. The experience that oil reserves were not endless and technological development was not
sustainable development without harming the environment ended the age of
modernism. As a result,
environmentalism rose substantially.
Social movements
Environmentalism
The seventies started a mainstream affirmation of the environmentalism early activists from the '60s, such as Rachel Carson and Murray Bookchin had warned of. The
moon landing that had occurred at the end of the previous decade transmitted back concrete images of the earth as an integrated, life-supporting system and shaped a public willingness to preserve nature. On April 22, 1970, the
United States celebrated its first Earth Day in which over two thousand colleges and universities and roughly ten thousand primary and secondary schools participated.
Feminism
Feminism in the United States got its start in the
1960s, but began to take flight starting in 1970, with the fiftieth anniversary of the passage of the
Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (which legalized female suffrage).
With the anthology
Sisterhood is Powerful and other works being published at the start of the decade, feminism started to reach a larger audience than ever before.
Gay rights
See also: List of 'years in gay rights'#1970s, symbol of the Gay Rights Movement, was first flown in 1978 in
San Francisco. This is the current version, flying over the The Castro, San Francisco, California in June 2005
The Stonewall riots, which occurred in New York City in June
1969, are generally considered to have ignited the modern gay rights movement, in America (Canada,
England and
Wales had already decriminalised
homosexuality in
1967). In the
1970s, in western countries and especially so in major urban centers, gay and lesbian people
The closet as never before (even as many others remained closeted) and a vocal and visible gay-rights movement coalesced in an unprecedented way.
Considering the profound stigma still attached to homosexuality at the dawn of the 1970s, the movement, although still nascent, saw tremendous gains over the course of the decade. The American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from its list of psychiatric disorders in 1973. Gay-rights ordinances were passed by several cities, beginning with
Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1972, and in 1977 Quebec became the first jurisdiction larger than a city or county in the world to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation in the public and private sectors.
For the first time, a few openly gay people were elected to political office in the United States. In
1977 Harvey Milk, a politically active gay man in the emerging gay neighborhood The Castro, was elected to the Board of Supervisors in San Francisco, California. Milk and liberal San Francisco mayor George Moscone were
Moscone-Milk assassinations the following year. In 1979 their assassin,
Dan White, received a sentence of voluntary manslaughter. The anger the gay community felt about the murders and about White's light sentence further galvanized the movement (see White Night Riots).
The increasing visibility of gay people also generated a backlash during the seventies. In perhaps the most discussed anti-gay rights campaign of the decade, singer Anita Bryant led a successful drive in 1977 to repeal a gay-rights ordinance in Miami-Dade County, Florida. The new openness about homosexuality proved disconcerting to some
heterosexuals who had been accustomed to gay and lesbian people remaining closeted and politically silent.
Canada author Robertson Davies wrote during the decade that "the love that dare not speak its name" (referencing the famous
Lord Alfred Douglas quotation, also quoted by
Oscar Wilde during his court case in
1895) "has become the love that won't shut up." On October 14
1979, approximately 100,000 people marched in Washington, D.C., in the largest pro-gay rights demonstration up to that time.
Technology
The birth of modern computing was in the 1970s. The world's first general microprocessor — the Intel 4004, came out on November 1971. The C (programming language) was developed early in the decade with the
Unix operating system being rewritten into it in 1973. With "large-scale integration" possible for integrated circuits (microchips) rudimentary personal computers began to be produced along with pocket calculators. Notable
home computers released in North America of the era are the
Apple II family, the
TRS-80, the
Commodore PET, and Atari 8-bit family and the PC-8000 Series in Japan.
The availability of affordable personal computers led to the first popular wave of internetworking with the first bulletin board systems. In 1976, Cray Research, Inc. introduced the first supercomputer, the Cray-1, which could perform operations at a rate of 240,000,000 calculations per second. Supercomputers designed by Cray continued to dominate the market throughout the 1970s. The 1970s was also the beginning of the video game era. Atari established itself as the dominant force in home video gaming, first with its home version of the
arcade game Pong and later in the decade with the
Atari 2600 console (originally called the Video Computer System). By the end of the decade, the scene was set for the Golden Age of Arcade Games.
The 1970s were also the start of Fiber Optics. In 1970 Corning glass announced that it had created a glass fiber so clear that it could be used to communicate pulses of light. Soon after, GTE and AT&T began experiments to transmit sound and image data using fiber optics, which transformed the communications industry.In automotive technology, post 1973, saw direction in both the United States and Europe turn away from the large and heavy mainstream automobiles, and towards lightweight, fuel efficient and environmentally conscious vehicles. The
Lotus Esprit was an example of a 1970s supercar, producing high performance from a small engine. The
Volkswagen Golf GTI of 1974 made the concept of a performance
hatchback part of automotive mainstream thinking, though it had many precedents.
The United States lagged badly in the development of compact and fuel-efficient vehicles, a side effect of industrial inexperience on the part of the manufacturers in Detroit, and two giants of the industry,
General Motors and
Ford both produced vehicles that fell drastically short of customer desires and economic demands; In the case of GM the
Chevrolet Vega and for Ford the
Ford Pinto. The most easily recognized and iconic compact cars for the 1970s were the
AMC Gremlin and the
AMC Pacer produced in the United States by the
American Motors Corporation.
Automotive historians have also described the period as 'the era of poor quality control', and manufacturers internationally produced vehicles that have now become by-words for poor technological integration. Notably, the 1970s saw the introduction in the automotive field of novel technologies that would begin to mature in the 1990s and 2000s as viable alternative propulsion sources, such as
hybrid vehicles, Stirling engines, as well as solar-electric and pure-electric vehicles. The integration of the computer and robot, particularly in Japan, saw unprecedented improvements in mass-produced automotive quality. Japanese manufacturers began at this time to make their presence felt in international markets at about this time.
During the 1970s,
microwave ovens experienced a surge in popularity as price and size decreased rapidly towards the end of the decade.
Compact audio cassette tapes also continued to surge in popularity after their introduction in the
1960s. VHS and
Betamax waged a war as the primary recording and video devices beginning in
1976, but by the end of the decade VHS had become the dominant format.
Culture
Emerging social perspectives
Universities became friendlier and less authoritarian towards students. This was reflected in the corporate culture of the 1970s, where the hierarchy between
supervisor and subordinates became increasingly flat. This had influence in social interaction and family relationship as well. The nuclear family rose to prominence in the first world and the role of
women in nuclear families took radical shift from those of earlier generations. With the rise of nuclear family and liberal attitudes towards social structure came new perspectives to child rearing and education. The 70s saw a decline in attendance to boarding schools and a rise of local
day schools. The role of the nuclear family and the parent was increasingly noticed and given new impetus. Social norms and laws were increasingly framed in favour of women.
Music
The seventies were a time when a new generation of young people were exposed to new media and hence newer ideas in almost every field. TV and motion picture brought to varied audiences images, lifestyles and music from diverse regions and peoples. This led to the emergence of a new vocabulary and experimentation in music. After the war the second generation of German musicians began experimenting with music, these included Experimental music and the tradition of Krautrock or Kraut music, rooted in the experimental classical music. This later influenced both
art rock and
progressive rock as well as the punk rock and New Wave (music) genres. The main exponents of progressive rock include Genesis (band),
Yes (band), Emerson, Lake & Palmer and
Pink Floyd. The experimental nature of progressive rock is exemplified in songs such as Pink Floyd's "
Echoes (Pink Floyd song)". Also the start of "Metal" in many forms began with the British bands Deep Purple,
Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath even though "Metal" was in a very early and experimental state.
One of the first events of the 70s was the
breakup of the Beatles in 1970. However, the seventies were also when many legendary rock music bands started, or hit their peak, including ABBA, Black Sabbath, Queen (band),
Kansas (band), Boston (band),
Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull (band),
Electric Light Orchestra,
Lynyrd Skynyrd,
AC/DC, Fleetwood Mac, Status Quo,
Family (band),
Free (band),
Aerosmith,
Badfinger, the
Eagles,
Kiss (band),
Heart (band), Rush (band),
The Who, The Doors, Uriah Heep (band),
Deep Purple, and
Van Halen. In Europe, there was a surge of popularity in the early decade for glam rock, thanks largely to the rise of T. Rex (band),
Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel,
Gary Glitter and
David Bowie, and bands like Slade and
Sweet (band).
We also saw the rise of Alternative Pop music with the soft, velvety tones of the brother and sister duo the
Carpenters. The group went on to become the biggest selling artists of the decade (1970–1980). The first half of the 1970s saw many jazz musicians from the Miles Davis school achieve cross-over success through
jazz fusion. Particularly notable were the
Mahavishnu Orchestra,
Return to Forever, created by Chick Corea, and Weather Report, built upon the keyboards and saxophone of Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter, respectively. No European band could rival these American successes, all eventually signed to the
CBS label, incidentally. In Germany,
Manfred Eicher started the ECM (record label) label, which quickly made a name for 'chamber jazz' through the likes of Jan Garbarek,
Keith Jarrett and Terje Rypdal. These two movements attracted many fans of progressive rock after its destruction by punk in 1976–77.
Another experimentation in
European classical music was brought about by composers such as Philip Glass, Steve Reich and
Michael Nyman, with what was to be called
Minimalist music. This was a break from the intellectual serial music of the tradition of
Arnold Schoenberg which lasted from the early
1900s to
1960s. Minimalist music sought to appreciate simple music with systematic patterns repeated in complex variations.
These experimentations were also used in several movies made in the early 1970s. In world music the musical collaboration of violinists
Yehudi Menuhin and L. Subramaniam was appreciated by a large audience.
The commercial cinemas around the world tended to imitate nuances of disco beats in their movies to present their movies as western and upbeat. These included the increasingly popular Kung-fu movies in far East Asia and
Bollywood movies from
India. One of the most successful European groups of the decade was the quartet
ABBA. The Swedish group, who are still the most successful group from their country, first found fame when they won the Eurovision Song Contest 1974. They became one of the most widely known European groups ever, and were the decade's biggest sellers. "Waterloo" and "Dancing Queen" are two of ABBA's most popular songs.
To many people, the Seventies will be most remembered for the rise in disco music. First creeping into dance clubs in the mid-seventies (with such hits as "Hustle (dance)" by
Van McCoy), songstresses like
Donna Summer, Gloria Gaynor, Dalida and Anita Ward popularized the genre and were described in subsequent decades as the "disco divas." The Village People scored a Top Ten hit with "YMCA (song)" and the
Bee Gees had a string of #1s following their collaboration on the
Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.
As quickly as disco's popularity came, however, it fell out of favor with the new decade, due to a religious revival and the rise of conservatism. Disco became associated with gays and minorities and conservatives such as Steve Dahl spoke out against disco and held demonstrations against it. Due to this tremendous backlash, disco effectively died in 1981. Along with the demise of disco came the end of the orchestrations and musical instruments (such as strings) which had become associated with disco. Electronic and synthesized music quickly replaced the lush orchestral sounds of the 1970s and rock music resurged in popularity with New Wave bands such as Blondie (band) and
Devo, who both formed their respective bands in the seventies. Many of the aforementioned singers who became popular during the disco era found themselves out of tune with the 1980s, and were out of work for many years, until a renewed interest in disco brought many of them back to the forefront. Many songs from the disco era are still very popular dance hits and receive continuous airplay in nightclubs throughout the world.
The mid-seventies saw the rise of punk music from its protopunk/garage band roots in the 1960s and early 1970s. The Ramones, the
Sex Pistols, and
The Clash were some of the earliest acts to make it big in both the United Kingdom and the United States. Groups like the Clash were noted for the experimentation of style, especially that of having strong
reggae influences in their music. Punk music has also been heavily associated with a certain
punk fashion and absurdist humor which exemplified a genuine suspicion of mainstream culture and values.
Towards the end of the decade,
Jamaican reggae music, already popular in the
Caribbean and
Africa since the early 1970s, became very popular in the United States and in Europe, mostly because of reggae superstar and legend Bob Marley as well as his band,
The Wailers (reggae), his former bandmate
Peter Tosh and other artists like
Burning Spear and
Jimmy Cliff.
Country music remained very popular in the U.S. In 1977 it became more mainstream after
Kenny Rogers became a solo singer and scored many hits on both the country and pop charts. He achieved the biggest crossover success ever for the genre (although he would later be replaced by Garth Brooks).
Waylon Jennings was very big and
Willie Nelson released Red Headed Stranger.
Top music acts in Australia/New Zealand included
Sherbet (band),
Skyhooks,
Dragon (band),
Hush (band) and the
Ted Mulry Gang.
Cinema
World cinema
In cinema all over the world, the seventies brought about vigor in adventurous, cool and realistic complex narratives with rich cinematography and elaborate scores. The cultural interaction between aided with TV and visual media and the rise in motion picture technology ushered in a new period of motion picture making.
In European cinema, the failure of the Prague Spring brought about nostalgic motion pictures reminiscent of the ones that celebrate the 1970s itself. These movies expressed a yearning and as a premonition to the decade and its dreams. The Hungary director István Szabó made the motion pic
Szerelmesfilm (1970), which is a nostalgic portrayal and a premonition of the fading of the young 1970s ethos of change and a friendlier social structure.
The Italy director
Bernardo Bertolucci made the motion picture
The Conformist (film) (1970). German movies after the war asked existential questions especially the works of
Rainer Fassbinder. The movies of the Sweden director Ingmar Bergman reached a new level of expression in motion pictures like
Cries and Whispers (1973). Young German directors made movies that came to be known as the German New Wave. It was the voice of a new generation that had grown up after the second world war. These included directors like Wim Wenders, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg and
Werner Herzog.
Wim Wenders made movies that explored psychological states of humans in situations intimate and significant to the characters. He made
Die Angst des Tormanns beim Elfmeter (The Goalkeeper's Fear of the Penalty Kick) in
1962. It was based on a novella by Peter Handke. He further explored this realm in the motion picture
Alice in den Städten (Alice in the Cities),
1964. Hans-Jürgen Syberberg created a sensation in 1967 with the motion picture
Andy Drew: ein Film aus Deutschland (Hitler a film from Germany). It was a seven hour movie which attempted to investigate Hitler under the shadows of
Richard Wagner art and
Nazism nationalism. This was followed by the expressionist movie
Woyzeck (
1969) by Werner Herzog.
Asian cinema of the 1970s catered to the rising middle class fantasies and struggles. In the Bollywood cinema of
India this was epitomised by the movies of Bollywood superhero Amitabh Bachchan. These movies portrayed adventurous plots with car chase trying to imitate hollywood movies like
The French Connection (film), presented music with Disco beats and also presented the young middle class man as an "
angry young man". The women on the other hand were shown as ones who have adopted western values and outfits especially by heroines like
Parveen Babi (who was featured on the cover of
TIME for a story on Bollywood's success) and
Zeenat Aman.
However towards the very end of the 1970s, especially after the steep rise in land prices in urban areas and the decline in employment security, the heroines were seen more often as
saree-women striving to have a prosperous middle class
family especially heroines like Jayaprada and
Hema Malini. In this way the cinema of Asian region becomes a
sociological statement of the social-economic times of the region and its people.Other movie industry of the region produced fine masterpieces like in
Malayalam cinema.
Adoor Gopalakrishnan made
Swayamvaram in 1962, which got wide critical acclaim. This was followed by the movie
Nirmalyam by
M.T. Vasudevan Nair in 1963.
Hollywood
The decade opened with Hollywood facing a financial slump, reflecting the monetary woes of the nation as a whole during the first half of the decade. Despite this, the seventies proved to be a benchmark decade in the development of cinema, both as an art form and a business. With young filmmakers taking greater risks and restrictions regarding language and sexuality lifting, Hollywood produced some of its most critically acclaimed and financially successful films since its supposed "golden era."
In the years previous to 1970, Hollywood had began to cater to the younger generation with films such as
The Graduate. This proved a folly when anti-war films like
R.P.M. and
The Strawberry Statement (film) became major box-office flops. Even solid films with
bankable stars, like the Pearl Harbor epic
Tora! Tora! Tora!, flopped, leaving studios in dire straits financially. Unable to repay financiers, studios began selling off land, furniture, clothing, and sets acquired over years of production. Nostalgic fans bid on merchandise and collectibles ranging from
Judy Garland sparkling red shoes to MGM own back lots.
More of the successful films were those based in the harsh truths of war, rather than the excesses of the '60s. Films like
Patton (film), about the
World War II general, and
MASH (film), about a Korean War field hospital, were major box-office draws in 1970. Honest, old-fashioned films like
Five Easy Pieces,
Summer of '42, and the Erich Segal adaptation,
Love Story (1970 film), were commercial and critical hits. (
Love Story and
Summer remain, as of 2005, two of the most successful films in Hollywood history.
Summer, costing $1,000,000 USD, brought in $25,000,000 at the box office, while
Love Story, with a budget of $2,200,000, earned $106,400,000).
One of the most insightful films of the decade came from the mind of a Hollywood outsider, Czechoslovakian director
Miloš Forman, whose
Taking Off (film) became a bold reflection of life at the beginning of the seventies. The
1971 film satirized the American middle class, following a young girl who runs away from home, leaving her parents free to explore life for the first time in years. While the film was never given a wide release in United States, it became a major critical achievement both in America and around the world (garnering the film high honors at the
Cannes Film Festival and several BAFTA Award nominations).
An adaptation of an
Arthur Hailey novel would prove to be one of the most notable films of 1970, and would set the stage for a major trend in seventies cinema. The film,
Airport (film), featured a complex plot, characters, and an all-star cast of Hollywood A-listers and legends.
Airport followed an airport manager trying to keep a fictional Chicago airport operational during a blizzard, as well as a bomb plot to blow up an airplane. The film was a major critical and financial success, helping pull
Universal Studios into the black for the year. The film earned senior actress
Helen Hayes an Oscar for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and garnered many other nominations in both technical and talent categories. The success of the film launched a slew of disaster film-related films, many of which following the same blueprint of major stars, a melodramatic script, and great suspense.
Three
Airport sequels followed in 1974, 1977, and 1979, each successor making less money than the last.
1972 brought
The Poseidon Adventure (film), which starred a young Gene Hackman leading an all-star cast to safety in a capsized luxury liner. The film earned an Academy Awards for visual effects (and Best Original Song for "
The Morning After", as well as numerous nominations, including one for its notable supporting star,
Shelley Winters, but its sequel in
1979 was far less successful.
The Towering Inferno (film) teamed
Steve McQueen and Paul Newman against a fire in a San Francisco skyscraper. The film cost a whopping $14 million to produce (expensive for its time), and won Academy Awards for Cinematography, Film Editing, and Best Original Song.
The same year, the epic
Earthquake (film) featured questionable effects (camera shake and models) to achieve a destructive 9.9 earthquake in Los Angeles. Despite this, the film was one of the most successful of its time, earning $80 million at box office. By the late seventies, the novelty had worn off and the disasters had become less exciting. 1977 brought a terrorist targeting a
Rollercoaster (film), a
1978 The Swarm (film) of bees, and a less-than-threatening
Meteor (film) in 1979.
1971 brought a rebirth of the action film: three years after the influential
Bullitt,
The French Connection (film), starring Gene Hackman, brought suspense to new heights with an adrenaline-broiling car chase through the streets of New York City, while
Get Carter featured gratuitous nudity and
A Clockwork Orange (film) featured much blood and gore to complement its complex story.
African American filmmakers also found success in the seventies with such hits as
Shaft (1971 film) and
Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, and more questionable films, such as
Blacula and
Blackenstein. Like other sequels in the seventies,
Shaft went on to have two more adventures, each less successful than the last.
An adaptation of a
Mario Puzo novel,
The Godfather, became one of the best-loved and most respected works of cinema upon its release in
1972. The three-hour epic followed a Mafia boss, played by Marlon Brando, through his life of crime. Beyond the violence and drama were themes of love, pride, and greed.
The Godfather went on to earn $134 million at American box office, and $245 million throughout the world. It won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Screenplay. Its director Francis Ford Coppola was passed over in favor of
Bob Fosse and his musical,
Cabaret (film), which also earned an Oscar for its star,
Liza Minnelli.
The Godfather: Part II followed in 1974, with roughly the same principal cast and crew, earning Oscars for star
Robert De Niro, its director, composer, screenwriters and art directors. The film also earned the Best Picture Oscar for that year.
Not all of the "street smart" urban related films were 100% live action. Director Ralph Bakshi would initially release the 1st animated full length feature specifically oriented towards adults (Fritz the Cat) then move on to two other features that dealt with the mafia and other ethnic-related urban issues. Both Heavy Traffic and Coonskin (the latter renamed as Streetfight) would prove that this kind of material could be handled effectively in the animation genre. Bakshi would later produce fantasy oriented films (Wizards and The Lord of the Rings) before the decade ended.
Sean Connery returned to the role of
James Bond in 1971 in
Diamonds Are Forever (film) after having
George Lazenby fill in for one outing in 1969.
Roger Moore succeeded Connery in 1973 with an adaptation of
Ian Fleming's
Live and Let Die (novel) which was the most successful of his Bond films in terms of admissions.
Live and Let Die (film) was followed by an adaptation of
The Man with the Golden Gun (film) in 1974, which at the time garnered the lowest box office taking of any Bond film before it. After its release Harry Saltzman co-owner of
Danjaq with
Albert R. Broccoli sold his half to United Artists causing a 3 year gap until the next Bond film, the longest gap since the start of the franchise in 1962. The series picked up again in 1977 with
The Spy Who Loved Me (film) and ended the decade with
Moonraker (film) in 1979, which was the highest grossing Bond film (not adjusting for inflation) of all time until
GoldenEye in 1995.
Other successful films would soon take Bond's place in the seventies. It was at this time that the
blockbuster (entertainment) was born. While the 1973 horror classic
The Exorcist (film) was among the top five grossing films of the seventies, the first film given the blockbuster distinction was 1975
Jaws (film). Released on
June 20th, the film about a series of horrific deaths related to a massive great white shark was director
Steven Spielberg's first big-budget Hollywood production, coming in at a cool $9 million in cost. The film slowly grew in ticket sales and became one of the most profitable films of its time, ending with a $260 million dollar gross in the United States alone. The film won Academy Awards for its skillful editing, chilling score, and sound recording. It was also nominated for Best Picture that year, though it lost to
Miloš Forman's
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (film) (which also won acting awards for
Jack Nicholson and Louise Fletcher).
The massive success of
Jaws was eclipsed just two years later by another legendary blockbuster and film franchise. The George Lucas science-fiction epic
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (at the time called simply
Star Wars) hit theater screens in May of
1977, and became a major hit, growing in ticket sales throughout the summer and the rest of the year. In time earning some $460 million, the good versus evil fantasy set in space was not soon surpassed. The film's breathtaking visual effects won an Academy Awards. The film also won for
John Williams (composer) uplifting score, as well as art direction, costume design, film editing, and sound.
A New Hope effectively removed any specter of studio bankruptcy that had haunted the studios since early in the decade.
When a television film,
The Star Wars Holiday Special, was released as a spin-off from
A New Hope in 1978, it failed to receive the status of the original film, and was deemed a flop. It would be two years until the
Star Wars series would be revived with
The Empire Strikes Back. Another success in visual effects came the same year as
A New Hope, with Spielberg's
Close Encounters of the Third Kind, another blockbuster and alien contact set in the wilderness. For the picture, Spielberg received his first Oscar nomination for directing.
Throughout the seventies, the horror film developed into a lucrative genre of film, starting in 1973 with the terrifying
The Exorcist, directed by William Friedkin and starring the young
Linda Blair. The film saw massive success, and the first of its sequels was released in 1977.
1976 brought the equally creepy suspense thriller,
Marathon Man, about a man who becomes the target of a former Nazi dentist's torment after his brother dies. The same year, the
Devil himself made an appearance in
The Omen, about the spawn of
Satan, as did its first sequel,
1978's
Damien: Omen II.
Halloween (also 1978) was a precursor to the "slasher" films of the 1980s and
1990s with its psychopathic Michael Myers. Cult horror films were also popular in the seventies, such as Wes Craven's early gore films
The Last House on the Left (1972 film) and
The Hills Have Eyes (1977 film), as well as Tobe Hooper's
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
In the mid-seventies movies began to reflect the disenfranchisement brought by the excesses of the past twenty years. A deeply unsettling look at alienation and city life,
Taxi Driver earned international praise, first at the Cannes Film Festival and then at the Academy Awards, where it was nominated for Best Leading Actor (Robert De Niro), Best Supporting Actress (
Jodie Foster), Best Score (Bernard Herrmann), and Best Picture.
All the President's Men (film) dealt with the impeachment of Richard Nixon, while
Network (film) portrayed greed and narcissism in both American society and television media. The film won Oscars for Best Actor (
Peter Finch), Best Actress (Faye Dunaway), Best Supporting Actress (Beatrice Straight), and Best Screenplay (
Paddy Chayefsky). Thanks to a stellar cast, experienced director, and a poignant story,
Network became one of the largest critical successes of 1976.
Another film,
Rocky, about a clubhouse boxer (played by Sylvester Stallone) who is granted a world championship title fight won the Best Picture Academy Awards that year. The film also became a major commercial success and spawned four sequels through the rest of the seventies and eighties having a fifth sequel released in theaters Christmas 2006. 1978 brought the successful sequel,
Jaws 2, which featured the same cast, but without
Steven Spielberg. Another tailor-made blockbuster, Dino De Laurentiis
King Kong (1976 film) was released, but to less than stellar success.
King Kong did mark the first time a film was booked to theaters before a release date, a common practice today.
The success of Woody Allen's
Annie Hall in
1977 stirred a new trend in moviemaking.
Annie Hall, a love story about a depressed comedian and a free-spirited woman, was followed with more sentimental films, including Neil Simon's
The Goodbye Girl,
An Unmarried Woman starring
Jill Clayburgh, the autobiographical
Lillian Hellman story,
Julia (film), starring
Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave, and
1978's
Heaven Can Wait (1978 film) and
International Velvet.
Younger audiences were also beginning to be the focus of cinema, after the huge blockbusters that had attracted them back to the theater. John Travolta became popular in the pop-culture landmark films,
Saturday Night Fever, which introduced Disco to middle America, and
Grease (film), which recalled the world of the 1950s. Comedy was also given new life in the irreverent
National Lampoon's Animal House, set on a college campus during the 1960s.
Up in Smoke, starring Cheech and Chong, was another irreverent comedy about marijuana use became popular among teenagers. The new television comedy program, "
Saturday Night Live," launched the careers of several of its comedians, such as Chevy Chase, who starred in the
1978 hit
Foul Play with rising star Goldie Hawn ;
John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd with their blues musical act made into a motion picture,
The Blues Brothers (made in 1979, released in 1980). John Belushi had played in
National Lampoon's Animal House. Blockbusters like
Superman (1978 film), starring former
Love of Life actor
Christopher Reeve, were also still popular.
The decade closed with two films chronicling the
Vietnam War, Michael Cimino's
The Deer Hunter and Francis Ford Coppola's
Apocalypse Now. Both films focused on the horrors of war and the psychological damaged caused by such horrors.
Christopher Walken and director
Michael Cimino earned Oscars for their work on the film, which earned a Best Picture Academy Awards.
Robert De Niro and
Meryl Streep were also nominated for their work in
The Deer Hunter.
Apocalypse Now won for cinematography and sound, and earned nominations for Robert Duvall and Coppola.
1979 saw the poignant
Kramer vs. Kramer, the inspiring
Norma Rae, and the nuclear thriller,
The China Syndrome.
Alien (film) scared summer movie-going audiences of 1979 with its horrible monster from outer space, achieving similar success that Jaws had seen four years earlier. Meanwhile,
The Onion Field and
...And Justice for All (film) focused on the failures of the American judicial system. The year ended with Hal Ashby's subtle black comedy
Being There and
The Muppet Movie, a family film based on the
Jim Henson puppet characters.
Television
United Kingdom
In 1967 BBC Two had started trials of their new colour service, and it was gradually rolled out over the next few years.
BBC One and ITV followed suit in 1969, so by 1970 the viewer had three colour channels from which to choose: BBC1, BBC2 and ITV. Although U.S. imports occupied a significant proportion of airtime, there was a substantial amount of high quality in-house production too.
The BBC, supported by its licence fee and with no advertisers to placate, continued fulfilling its brief to entertain and inform. The
Play for Today was a continuation of the
Wednesday Play which had run from the mid '60s. As the title implied, it presented TV drama which had relevance to current social and economic issues, done in a way calculated to intrigue or even shock the viewer. As well as using established writers, it was effectively an apprenticeship for new ones who were trying to make a name for themselves;
Dennis Potter,
The
1970s decade refers to the years from 1970 to 1979, also called
The Seventies.
In the Western world, the focus shifted from the social activism of
1960s to social activities for one's own pleasure eg sex, such as cocaine-fuelled, hedonistic all-night parties at
discotheques and swinging parties. The seventies were considered by
Tom Wolfe as the "Me Decade." The one exception is the activism of the
environmentalism movement.
The perception of the established institutions of
nuclear family, religion and trust in one's government continued to lose ground during this time. Major developments of the sexual revolution included the awareness of the Combined oral contraceptive pill#Social and cultural impact on social-interactional relationships, and an increase in divorce rates, Single parent, and
pre-marital sex. By the end of the decade, the
feminist movement had helped change women's working conditions. The Gay Rights movement became prominent, and the
hippie culture, which started in the
1960s, peaked in the early 1970s and carried on through the end of the decade. The United States' withdrawal from its extensive military involvement in
Vietnam and the resignation of
Richard Nixon helped bring about a sense of malaise and mistrust in political authority.
The
United States experienced an
economic recession, but the economy of Japan prospered. The economies of many third world countries continued to make steady progress in the early 1970s, because of the
green revolution. They might have thrived and become stable in the way that
Europe recovered after the war through the
Marshall Plan; however, their economic growth was slowed by the oil crisis.
Worldwide trends
The ethos of the 1970s emerged from a transition of the global social structure. It reflected the transition from the decline of
Colonialism since the end of World War II to
globalization and the rise of a new middle class in the developing world.
Globally, the 1970s had several features that were similar and definitive across economic levels and regions. These aspects and essence that make up global essence of the 1970s are the defining points of the 1970s: the
Bretton Woods system and its subsequent failure, the impact of the
combined oral contraceptive pill on social-interactional dynamics, the rising of the Black community and the 1973 oil crisis.
The developing nations experienced economic growth that came in the wake of political independence. However, several
African economies declined and political states became dictatorial regimes. Many
Middle Eastern democracies crumbled into chaotic regimes with pseudo-democratic governments.
The 1970s ethos in much of the developing world was characterized by the constant need to re-define
social norms to newer socio-economic systems. As well, people were influenced by the rapid pace of change of the new social influences and the constant aspiration for a more egalitarian society in cultures that were long colonised and have an even longer history of hierarchical
social structure.
The first
Rhytidectomy were attempted in the 1970s.
The
green revolution of the late 1960s brought about self sufficiency in many developing economies. At the same time an increasing number of people began to seek urban prosperity over
agrarian life. This consequently saw the duality of transition of diverse interaction across social
communities amid increasing information blockade across
social class.
Other common global ethos of the seventies world include:
increasingly flexible and varied gender roles for women. More women could enter the work force rather than remain housewives. However, the gender role of men remained as that of a bread-winner. The period also saw unprecedented socioeconomic impact of an ever-increasing number of women entering the non-agrarian economic workforce, and the sweeping cultural-religious impact of the
Iranian revolution toward the end of the 1970s.
The global experience of the cultural transition of the 1970s and an experience of a global zeitgeist revealed the interdependence of economies since World War II, and showed the huge impact of American economic policies on the
world.
Economy
The 1970s was perhaps the worst decade of Western World and American economic performance since the Great Depression. Although there was no severe
economic depression as witnessed in the 1930s, economic growth rates were considerably lower than previous decades. As a result, the 1970s adversely distinguished itself from the prosperous postwar period between 1945 and 1968. Then, the world economy was buoyed by the
Marshall Plan and the robust American economy. However, the high standing enjoyed by the American economy gradually became discomposed by years of loose domestic spending (particularly the
Great Society campaign) and funding for the
Vietnam war. The oil shocks
Arab Oil Embargo and 1979 energy crisis added to the existing ailments and conjured high inflation throughout much of the world for the rest of the decade. Soaring oil prices compelled most American businesses to raise their prices as well, with inflationary results.
The average annual inflation rate from 1900 to 1970 was approximately 2.5 percent. From 1970, however, the average rate hit about 6 percent, topping out at 13.3 percent by 1979. This period is also known for "stagflation", a phenomenon in which inflation and unemployment steadily increased, therefore leading to double-digit interest rates that rose to unprecedented levels (above 12% per year). The prime rate hit 21.5 in December 1980, the highest in history. By the time of 1980, when President
Jimmy Carter was running for re-election against Ronald Reagan, the
Misery index (economics) (the
sum of the unemployment rate and the inflation rate) had reached an all-time high of 21.98 percent.
In Eastern Europe, Soviet-style command economies began showing signs of stagnation, in which successes were persistently dogged by setbacks. The oil shock increased East European, particularly Soviet, exports, but agriculture became a growing annoyance to such economies.
Oil crisis
Economically, the seventies were marked by the energy crisis which peaked in 1973 and 1979 (see 1973 oil crisis and 1979 oil crisis). After the first oil shock in 1973,
gasoline was rationed in many countries. Europe particularly depended on the Middle East for oil; the U.S. was also affected even though it had its own oil reserves. Many European countries introduced car-free days. In the U.S., customers with a license plate ending in an odd number were only allowed to buy gasoline on odd-numbered days, while even-numbered plate-holders could only purchase gasoline on even-numbered days. The experience that oil reserves were not endless and technological development was not
sustainable development without harming the environment ended the age of
modernism. As a result,
environmentalism rose substantially.
Social movements
Environmentalism
The seventies started a mainstream affirmation of the environmentalism early activists from the '60s, such as
Rachel Carson and
Murray Bookchin had warned of. The
moon landing that had occurred at the end of the previous decade transmitted back concrete images of the earth as an integrated, life-supporting system and shaped a public willingness to preserve nature. On
April 22, 1970, the
United States celebrated its first Earth Day in which over two thousand colleges and universities and roughly ten thousand primary and secondary schools participated.
Feminism
Feminism in the United States got its start in the 1960s, but began to take flight starting in 1970, with the fiftieth anniversary of the passage of the
Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (which legalized female suffrage).
With the anthology
Sisterhood is Powerful and other works being published at the start of the decade, feminism started to reach a larger audience than ever before.
Gay rights
See also: List of 'years in gay rights'#1970s, symbol of the Gay Rights Movement, was first flown in 1978 in San Francisco. This is the current version, flying over the
The Castro, San Francisco, California in June 2005
The Stonewall riots, which occurred in New York City in June
1969, are generally considered to have ignited the modern
gay rights movement, in America (
Canada, England and
Wales had already decriminalised
homosexuality in 1967). In the 1970s, in western countries and especially so in major urban centers, gay and lesbian people The closet as never before (even as many others remained closeted) and a vocal and visible gay-rights movement coalesced in an unprecedented way.
Considering the profound stigma still attached to homosexuality at the dawn of the 1970s, the movement, although still nascent, saw tremendous gains over the course of the decade. The American Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from its list of psychiatric disorders in 1973. Gay-rights ordinances were passed by several cities, beginning with Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1972, and in
1977 Quebec became the first jurisdiction larger than a city or county in the world to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation in the public and private sectors.
For the first time, a few openly gay people were elected to political office in the United States. In 1977
Harvey Milk, a politically active gay man in the emerging gay neighborhood
The Castro, was elected to the Board of Supervisors in
San Francisco, California. Milk and liberal San Francisco mayor
George Moscone were Moscone-Milk assassinations the following year. In 1979 their assassin, Dan White, received a sentence of
voluntary manslaughter. The anger the gay community felt about the murders and about White's light sentence further galvanized the movement (see
White Night Riots).
The increasing visibility of gay people also generated a backlash during the seventies. In perhaps the most discussed anti-gay rights campaign of the decade, singer
Anita Bryant led a successful drive in 1977 to repeal a gay-rights ordinance in Miami-Dade County, Florida. The new openness about homosexuality proved disconcerting to some
heterosexuals who had been accustomed to gay and lesbian people remaining closeted and politically silent. Canada author Robertson Davies wrote during the decade that "the love that dare not speak its name" (referencing the famous
Lord Alfred Douglas quotation, also quoted by Oscar Wilde during his court case in 1895) "has become the love that won't shut up." On
October 14 1979, approximately 100,000 people marched in
Washington, D.C., in the largest pro-gay rights demonstration up to that time.
Technology
The birth of modern computing was in the 1970s. The world's first general microprocessor — the Intel 4004, came out on November 1971. The C (programming language) was developed early in the decade with the
Unix operating system being rewritten into it in 1973. With "large-scale integration" possible for
integrated circuits (microchips) rudimentary personal computers began to be produced along with
pocket calculators. Notable
home computers released in North America of the era are the
Apple II family, the
TRS-80, the
Commodore PET, and
Atari 8-bit family and the PC-8000 Series in Japan.
The availability of affordable personal computers led to the first popular wave of
internetworking with the first
bulletin board systems. In 1976, Cray Research, Inc. introduced the first supercomputer, the Cray-1, which could perform operations at a rate of 240,000,000 calculations per second. Supercomputers designed by Cray continued to dominate the market throughout the 1970s. The 1970s was also the beginning of the video game era. Atari established itself as the dominant force in home video gaming, first with its home version of the
arcade game Pong and later in the decade with the Atari 2600 console (originally called the Video Computer System). By the end of the decade, the scene was set for the Golden Age of Arcade Games.
The 1970s were also the start of Fiber Optics. In 1970 Corning glass announced that it had created a glass fiber so clear that it could be used to communicate pulses of light. Soon after, GTE and AT&T began experiments to transmit sound and image data using fiber optics, which transformed the communications industry.In automotive technology, post 1973, saw direction in both the United States and Europe turn away from the large and heavy mainstream automobiles, and towards lightweight, fuel efficient and environmentally conscious vehicles. The
Lotus Esprit was an example of a 1970s
supercar, producing high performance from a small engine. The Volkswagen Golf GTI of 1974 made the concept of a performance hatchback part of automotive mainstream thinking, though it had many precedents.
The United States lagged badly in the development of compact and fuel-efficient vehicles, a side effect of industrial inexperience on the part of the manufacturers in Detroit, and two giants of the industry,
General Motors and Ford both produced vehicles that fell drastically short of customer desires and economic demands; In the case of GM the
Chevrolet Vega and for Ford the
Ford Pinto. The most easily recognized and iconic compact cars for the 1970s were the AMC Gremlin and the AMC Pacer produced in the United States by the
American Motors Corporation.
Automotive historians have also described the period as 'the era of poor quality control', and manufacturers internationally produced vehicles that have now become by-words for poor technological integration. Notably, the 1970s saw the introduction in the automotive field of novel technologies that would begin to mature in the 1990s and 2000s as viable alternative propulsion sources, such as
hybrid vehicles, Stirling engines, as well as solar-electric and pure-electric vehicles. The integration of the computer and robot, particularly in Japan, saw unprecedented improvements in mass-produced automotive quality. Japanese manufacturers began at this time to make their presence felt in international markets at about this time.
During the 1970s, microwave ovens experienced a surge in popularity as price and size decreased rapidly towards the end of the decade.
Compact audio cassette tapes also continued to surge in popularity after their introduction in the
1960s. VHS and
Betamax waged a war as the primary recording and video devices beginning in 1976, but by the end of the decade VHS had become the dominant format.
Culture
Emerging social perspectives
Universities became friendlier and less authoritarian towards students. This was reflected in the corporate culture of the 1970s, where the hierarchy between
supervisor and subordinates became increasingly flat. This had influence in social interaction and
family relationship as well. The
nuclear family rose to prominence in the first world and the role of
women in nuclear families took radical shift from those of earlier generations. With the rise of nuclear family and liberal attitudes towards social structure came new perspectives to child rearing and education. The 70s saw a decline in attendance to
boarding schools and a rise of local day schools. The role of the nuclear family and the parent was increasingly noticed and given new impetus. Social norms and laws were increasingly framed in favour of women.
Music
The seventies were a time when a new generation of young people were exposed to new media and hence newer ideas in almost every field. TV and motion picture brought to varied audiences images, lifestyles and music from diverse regions and peoples. This led to the emergence of a new vocabulary and experimentation in music. After the war the second generation of German musicians began experimenting with music, these included
Experimental music and the tradition of
Krautrock or Kraut music, rooted in the experimental classical music. This later influenced both
art rock and progressive rock as well as the
punk rock and
New Wave (music) genres. The main exponents of progressive rock include Genesis (band), Yes (band),
Emerson, Lake & Palmer and
Pink Floyd. The experimental nature of progressive rock is exemplified in songs such as Pink Floyd's "Echoes (Pink Floyd song)". Also the start of "Metal" in many forms began with the British bands Deep Purple,
Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath even though "Metal" was in a very early and experimental state.
One of the first events of the 70s was the breakup of the Beatles in 1970. However, the seventies were also when many legendary rock music bands started, or hit their peak, including ABBA, Black Sabbath, Queen (band),
Kansas (band),
Boston (band),
Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd,
Jethro Tull (band), Electric Light Orchestra, Lynyrd Skynyrd, AC/DC, Fleetwood Mac,
Status Quo, Family (band), Free (band),
Aerosmith,
Badfinger, the Eagles, Kiss (band),
Heart (band), Rush (band), The Who,
The Doors,
Uriah Heep (band),
Deep Purple, and Van Halen. In
Europe, there was a surge of popularity in the early decade for glam rock, thanks largely to the rise of
T. Rex (band), Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel, Gary Glitter and
David Bowie, and bands like
Slade and Sweet (band).
We also saw the rise of Alternative Pop music with the soft, velvety tones of the brother and sister duo the
Carpenters. The group went on to become the biggest selling artists of the decade (1970–1980). The first half of the 1970s saw many jazz musicians from the Miles Davis school achieve cross-over success through jazz fusion. Particularly notable were the
Mahavishnu Orchestra,
Return to Forever, created by Chick Corea, and Weather Report, built upon the keyboards and saxophone of Joe Zawinul and
Wayne Shorter, respectively. No European band could rival these American successes, all eventually signed to the CBS label, incidentally. In Germany, Manfred Eicher started the
ECM (record label) label, which quickly made a name for 'chamber jazz' through the likes of
Jan Garbarek,
Keith Jarrett and Terje Rypdal. These two movements attracted many fans of progressive rock after its destruction by punk in 1976–77.
Another experimentation in European classical music was brought about by composers such as
Philip Glass, Steve Reich and Michael Nyman, with what was to be called Minimalist music. This was a break from the intellectual serial music of the tradition of Arnold Schoenberg which lasted from the early
1900s to
1960s. Minimalist music sought to appreciate simple music with systematic patterns repeated in complex variations.
These experimentations were also used in several movies made in the early 1970s. In world music the musical collaboration of violinists Yehudi Menuhin and L. Subramaniam was appreciated by a large audience.
The commercial cinemas around the world tended to imitate nuances of disco beats in their movies to present their movies as western and upbeat. These included the increasingly popular Kung-fu movies in far East Asia and Bollywood movies from India. One of the most successful European groups of the decade was the quartet ABBA. The Swedish group, who are still the most successful group from their country, first found fame when they won the Eurovision Song Contest 1974. They became one of the most widely known European groups ever, and were the decade's biggest sellers. "Waterloo" and "Dancing Queen" are two of ABBA's most popular songs.
To many people, the Seventies will be most remembered for the rise in
disco music. First creeping into dance clubs in the mid-seventies (with such hits as "
Hustle (dance)" by Van McCoy), songstresses like
Donna Summer,
Gloria Gaynor,
Dalida and Anita Ward popularized the genre and were described in subsequent decades as the "disco divas." The Village People scored a Top Ten hit with "
YMCA (song)" and the
Bee Gees had a string of #1s following their collaboration on the
Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.
As quickly as disco's popularity came, however, it fell out of favor with the new decade, due to a religious revival and the rise of conservatism. Disco became associated with gays and minorities and conservatives such as
Steve Dahl spoke out against disco and held demonstrations against it. Due to this tremendous backlash, disco effectively died in
1981. Along with the demise of disco came the end of the orchestrations and musical instruments (such as strings) which had become associated with disco. Electronic and synthesized music quickly replaced the lush orchestral sounds of the 1970s and rock music resurged in popularity with New Wave bands such as
Blondie (band) and
Devo, who both formed their respective bands in the seventies. Many of the aforementioned singers who became popular during the disco era found themselves out of tune with the
1980s, and were out of work for many years, until a renewed interest in disco brought many of them back to the forefront. Many songs from the disco era are still very popular dance hits and receive continuous airplay in nightclubs throughout the world.
The mid-seventies saw the rise of
punk music from its protopunk/
garage band roots in the
1960s and early 1970s.
The Ramones, the
Sex Pistols, and
The Clash were some of the earliest acts to make it big in both the United Kingdom and the United States. Groups like the Clash were noted for the experimentation of style, especially that of having strong
reggae influences in their music. Punk music has also been heavily associated with a certain
punk fashion and absurdist humor which exemplified a genuine suspicion of mainstream culture and values.
Towards the end of the decade,
Jamaican reggae music, already popular in the
Caribbean and Africa since the early 1970s, became very popular in the
United States and in Europe, mostly because of reggae superstar and legend Bob Marley as well as his band, The Wailers (reggae), his former bandmate Peter Tosh and other artists like Burning Spear and Jimmy Cliff.
Country music remained very popular in the U.S. In 1977 it became more mainstream after Kenny Rogers became a solo singer and scored many hits on both the country and pop charts. He achieved the biggest crossover success ever for the genre (although he would later be replaced by Garth Brooks).Waylon Jennings was very big and
Willie Nelson released Red Headed Stranger.
Top music acts in Australia/New Zealand included Sherbet (band),
Skyhooks,
Dragon (band),
Hush (band) and the Ted Mulry Gang.
Cinema
World cinema
In cinema all over the world, the seventies brought about vigor in adventurous, cool and realistic complex narratives with rich cinematography and elaborate scores. The cultural interaction between aided with TV and visual media and the rise in motion picture technology ushered in a new period of motion picture making.
In European cinema, the failure of the Prague Spring brought about nostalgic motion pictures reminiscent of the ones that celebrate the 1970s itself. These movies expressed a yearning and as a premonition to the decade and its dreams. The Hungary director István Szabó made the motion pic
Szerelmesfilm (
1970), which is a nostalgic portrayal and a premonition of the fading of the young 1970s ethos of change and a friendlier social structure.
The
Italy director
Bernardo Bertolucci made the motion picture
The Conformist (film) (1970). German movies after the war asked existential questions especially the works of
Rainer Fassbinder. The movies of the
Sweden director Ingmar Bergman reached a new level of expression in motion pictures like
Cries and Whispers (1973). Young German directors made movies that came to be known as the
German New Wave. It was the voice of a new generation that had grown up after the second world war. These included directors like
Wim Wenders,
Hans-Jürgen Syberberg and
Werner Herzog.
Wim Wenders made movies that explored psychological states of humans in situations intimate and significant to the characters. He made
Die Angst des Tormanns beim Elfmeter (The Goalkeeper's Fear of the Penalty Kick) in 1962. It was based on a novella by Peter Handke. He further explored this realm in the motion picture
Alice in den Städten (Alice in the Cities), 1964. Hans-Jürgen Syberberg created a sensation in 1967 with the motion picture
Andy Drew: ein Film aus Deutschland (Hitler a film from Germany). It was a seven hour movie which attempted to investigate Hitler under the shadows of Richard Wagner art and Nazism nationalism. This was followed by the expressionist movie
Woyzeck (1969) by Werner Herzog.
Asian cinema of the 1970s catered to the rising middle class fantasies and struggles. In the Bollywood cinema of India this was epitomised by the movies of Bollywood superhero
Amitabh Bachchan. These movies portrayed adventurous plots with car chase trying to imitate hollywood movies like
The French Connection (film), presented music with Disco beats and also presented the young middle class man as an "
angry young man". The women on the other hand were shown as ones who have adopted western values and outfits especially by heroines like
Parveen Babi (who was featured on the cover of
TIME for a story on Bollywood's success) and
Zeenat Aman.
However towards the very end of the 1970s, especially after the steep rise in land prices in urban areas and the decline in employment security, the heroines were seen more often as
saree-women striving to have a prosperous middle class
family especially heroines like
Jayaprada and
Hema Malini. In this way the cinema of Asian region becomes a
sociological statement of the social-economic times of the region and its people.Other movie industry of the region produced fine masterpieces like in
Malayalam cinema. Adoor Gopalakrishnan made
Swayamvaram in 1962, which got wide critical acclaim. This was followed by the movie
Nirmalyam by M.T. Vasudevan Nair in 1963.
Hollywood
The decade opened with Hollywood facing a financial slump, reflecting the monetary woes of the nation as a whole during the first half of the decade. Despite this, the seventies proved to be a benchmark decade in the development of cinema, both as an art form and a business. With young filmmakers taking greater risks and restrictions regarding language and sexuality lifting, Hollywood produced some of its most critically acclaimed and financially successful films since its supposed "golden era."
In the years previous to 1970, Hollywood had began to cater to the younger generation with films such as
The Graduate. This proved a folly when anti-war films like
R.P.M. and
The Strawberry Statement (film) became major box-office flops. Even solid films with bankable stars, like the Pearl Harbor epic
Tora! Tora! Tora!, flopped, leaving studios in dire straits financially. Unable to repay financiers, studios began selling off land, furniture, clothing, and sets acquired over years of production. Nostalgic fans bid on merchandise and collectibles ranging from Judy Garland sparkling red shoes to
MGM own back lots.
More of the successful films were those based in the harsh truths of war, rather than the excesses of the '60s. Films like
Patton (film), about the
World War II general, and
MASH (film), about a
Korean War field hospital, were major box-office draws in 1970. Honest, old-fashioned films like
Five Easy Pieces,
Summer of '42, and the Erich Segal adaptation,
Love Story (1970 film), were commercial and critical hits. (
Love Story and
Summer remain, as of 2005, two of the most successful films in Hollywood history.
Summer, costing $1,000,000 USD, brought in $25,000,000 at the box office, while
Love Story, with a budget of $2,200,000, earned $106,400,000).
One of the most insightful films of the decade came from the mind of a Hollywood outsider, Czechoslovakian director
Miloš Forman, whose
Taking Off (film) became a bold reflection of life at the beginning of the seventies. The 1971 film satirized the American middle class, following a young girl who runs away from home, leaving her parents free to explore life for the first time in years. While the film was never given a wide release in
United States, it became a major critical achievement both in America and around the world (garnering the film high honors at the
Cannes Film Festival and several
BAFTA Award nominations).
An adaptation of an Arthur Hailey novel would prove to be one of the most notable films of 1970, and would set the stage for a major trend in seventies cinema. The film,
Airport (film), featured a complex plot, characters, and an all-star cast of Hollywood A-listers and legends.
Airport followed an airport manager trying to keep a fictional Chicago airport operational during a blizzard, as well as a bomb plot to blow up an airplane. The film was a major critical and financial success, helping pull
Universal Studios into the black for the year. The film earned senior actress
Helen Hayes an Oscar for
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and garnered many other nominations in both technical and talent categories. The success of the film launched a slew of disaster film-related films, many of which following the same blueprint of major stars, a melodramatic script, and great suspense.
Three
Airport sequels followed in
1974,
1977, and
1979, each successor making less money than the last.
1972 brought
The Poseidon Adventure (film), which starred a young Gene Hackman leading an all-star cast to safety in a capsized luxury liner. The film earned an Academy Awards for visual effects (and Best Original Song for "
The Morning After", as well as numerous nominations, including one for its notable supporting star,
Shelley Winters, but its sequel in 1979 was far less successful.
The Towering Inferno (film) teamed
Steve McQueen and Paul Newman against a fire in a San Francisco skyscraper. The film cost a whopping $14 million to produce (expensive for its time), and won Academy Awards for Cinematography, Film Editing, and Best Original Song.
The same year, the epic
Earthquake (film) featured questionable effects (camera shake and models) to achieve a destructive 9.9 earthquake in
Los Angeles. Despite this, the film was one of the most successful of its time, earning $80 million at box office. By the late seventies, the novelty had worn off and the disasters had become less exciting.
1977 brought a terrorist targeting a
Rollercoaster (film), a 1978
The Swarm (film) of bees, and a less-than-threatening
Meteor (film) in 1979.
1971 brought a rebirth of the action film: three years after the influential
Bullitt,
The French Connection (film), starring
Gene Hackman, brought suspense to new heights with an adrenaline-broiling car chase through the streets of New York City, while
Get Carter featured gratuitous nudity and
A Clockwork Orange (film) featured much blood and gore to complement its complex story. African American filmmakers also found success in the seventies with such hits as
Shaft (1971 film) and
Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, and more questionable films, such as
Blacula and
Blackenstein. Like other sequels in the seventies,
Shaft went on to have two more adventures, each less successful than the last.
An adaptation of a Mario Puzo novel,
The Godfather, became one of the best-loved and most respected works of cinema upon its release in 1972. The three-hour epic followed a Mafia boss, played by
Marlon Brando, through his life of crime. Beyond the violence and drama were themes of love, pride, and greed.
The Godfather went on to earn $134 million at American box office, and $245 million throughout the world. It won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Screenplay. Its director
Francis Ford Coppola was passed over in favor of Bob Fosse and his musical,
Cabaret (film), which also earned an Oscar for its star, Liza Minnelli.
The Godfather: Part II followed in 1974, with roughly the same principal cast and crew, earning Oscars for star
Robert De Niro, its director, composer, screenwriters and art directors. The film also earned the Best Picture Oscar for that year.
Not all of the "street smart" urban related films were 100% live action. Director Ralph Bakshi would initially release the 1st animated full length feature specifically oriented towards adults (Fritz the Cat) then move on to two other features that dealt with the mafia and other ethnic-related urban issues. Both Heavy Traffic and Coonskin (the latter renamed as Streetfight) would prove that this kind of material could be handled effectively in the animation genre. Bakshi would later produce fantasy oriented films (Wizards and The Lord of the Rings) before the decade ended.
Sean Connery returned to the role of
James Bond in 1971 in
Diamonds Are Forever (film) after having George Lazenby fill in for one outing in 1969. Roger Moore succeeded Connery in 1973 with an adaptation of Ian Fleming's
Live and Let Die (novel) which was the most successful of his Bond films in terms of admissions.
Live and Let Die (film) was followed by an adaptation of
The Man with the Golden Gun (film) in 1974, which at the time garnered the lowest box office taking of any Bond film before it. After its release
Harry Saltzman co-owner of
Danjaq with
Albert R. Broccoli sold his half to
United Artists causing a 3 year gap until the next Bond film, the longest gap since the start of the franchise in 1962. The series picked up again in 1977 with
The Spy Who Loved Me (film) and ended the decade with
Moonraker (film) in 1979, which was the highest grossing Bond film (not adjusting for inflation) of all time until
GoldenEye in 1995.
Other successful films would soon take Bond's place in the seventies. It was at this time that the
blockbuster (entertainment) was born. While the 1973 horror classic
The Exorcist (film) was among the top five grossing films of the seventies, the first film given the blockbuster distinction was 1975
Jaws (film). Released on June 20th, the film about a series of horrific deaths related to a massive great white shark was director Steven Spielberg's first big-budget Hollywood production, coming in at a cool $9 million in cost. The film slowly grew in ticket sales and became one of the most profitable films of its time, ending with a $260 million dollar gross in the United States alone. The film won Academy Awards for its skillful editing, chilling score, and sound recording. It was also nominated for Best Picture that year, though it lost to Miloš Forman's
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (film) (which also won acting awards for
Jack Nicholson and
Louise Fletcher).
The massive success of
Jaws was eclipsed just two years later by another legendary blockbuster and film franchise. The George Lucas science-fiction epic
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (at the time called simply
Star Wars) hit theater screens in May of 1977, and became a major hit, growing in ticket sales throughout the summer and the rest of the year. In time earning some $460 million, the good versus evil fantasy set in space was not soon surpassed. The film's breathtaking visual effects won an
Academy Awards. The film also won for
John Williams (composer) uplifting score, as well as art direction, costume design, film editing, and sound.
A New Hope effectively removed any specter of studio bankruptcy that had haunted the studios since early in the decade.
When a television film,
The Star Wars Holiday Special, was released as a spin-off from
A New Hope in
1978, it failed to receive the status of the original film, and was deemed a flop. It would be two years until the
Star Wars series would be revived with
The Empire Strikes Back. Another success in visual effects came the same year as
A New Hope, with Spielberg's
Close Encounters of the Third Kind, another blockbuster and alien contact set in the wilderness. For the picture, Spielberg received his first Oscar nomination for directing.
Throughout the seventies, the horror film developed into a lucrative genre of film, starting in 1973 with the terrifying
The Exorcist, directed by
William Friedkin and starring the young Linda Blair. The film saw massive success, and the first of its sequels was released in
1977.
1976 brought the equally creepy suspense thriller,
Marathon Man, about a man who becomes the target of a former Nazi dentist's torment after his brother dies. The same year, the Devil himself made an appearance in
The Omen, about the spawn of
Satan, as did its first sequel, 1978's
Damien: Omen II.
Halloween (also 1978) was a precursor to the "slasher" films of the
1980s and 1990s with its psychopathic Michael Myers. Cult horror films were also popular in the seventies, such as
Wes Craven's early gore films
The Last House on the Left (1972 film) and
The Hills Have Eyes (1977 film), as well as Tobe Hooper's
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
In the mid-seventies movies began to reflect the disenfranchisement brought by the excesses of the past twenty years. A deeply unsettling look at alienation and city life,
Taxi Driver earned international praise, first at the
Cannes Film Festival and then at the
Academy Awards, where it was nominated for Best Leading Actor (Robert De Niro), Best Supporting Actress (
Jodie Foster), Best Score (
Bernard Herrmann), and Best Picture.
All the President's Men (film) dealt with the impeachment of
Richard Nixon, while
Network (film) portrayed greed and narcissism in both American society and television media. The film won Oscars for Best Actor (
Peter Finch), Best Actress (
Faye Dunaway), Best Supporting Actress (
Beatrice Straight), and Best Screenplay (
Paddy Chayefsky). Thanks to a stellar cast, experienced director, and a poignant story,
Network became one of the largest critical successes of
1976.
Another film,
Rocky, about a clubhouse boxer (played by
Sylvester Stallone) who is granted a world championship title fight won the Best Picture
Academy Awards that year. The film also became a major commercial success and spawned four sequels through the rest of the seventies and
eighties having a fifth sequel released in theaters Christmas 2006.
1978 brought the successful sequel,
Jaws 2, which featured the same cast, but without
Steven Spielberg. Another tailor-made blockbuster, Dino De Laurentiis
King Kong (1976 film) was released, but to less than stellar success.
King Kong did mark the first time a film was booked to theaters before a release date, a common practice today.
The success of Woody Allen's
Annie Hall in 1977 stirred a new trend in moviemaking.
Annie Hall, a love story about a depressed comedian and a free-spirited woman, was followed with more sentimental films, including Neil Simon's
The Goodbye Girl,
An Unmarried Woman starring
Jill Clayburgh, the autobiographical
Lillian Hellman story,
Julia (film), starring
Jane Fonda and
Vanessa Redgrave, and
1978's
Heaven Can Wait (1978 film) and
International Velvet.
Younger audiences were also beginning to be the focus of cinema, after the huge blockbusters that had attracted them back to the theater.
John Travolta became popular in the pop-culture landmark films,
Saturday Night Fever, which introduced Disco to middle America, and
Grease (film), which recalled the world of the 1950s. Comedy was also given new life in the irreverent
National Lampoon's Animal House, set on a college campus during the 1960s.
Up in Smoke, starring Cheech and Chong, was another irreverent comedy about marijuana use became popular among teenagers. The new television comedy program, "Saturday Night Live," launched the careers of several of its comedians, such as
Chevy Chase, who starred in the 1978 hit
Foul Play with rising star Goldie Hawn ; John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd with their blues musical act made into a motion picture,
The Blues Brothers (made in 1979, released in 1980).
John Belushi had played in
National Lampoon's Animal House. Blockbusters like
Superman (1978 film), starring former
Love of Life actor
Christopher Reeve, were also still popular.
The decade closed with two films chronicling the Vietnam War, Michael Cimino's
The Deer Hunter and
Francis Ford Coppola's
Apocalypse Now. Both films focused on the horrors of war and the psychological damaged caused by such horrors.
Christopher Walken and director Michael Cimino earned Oscars for their work on the film, which earned a Best Picture Academy Awards. Robert De Niro and
Meryl Streep were also nominated for their work in
The Deer Hunter.
Apocalypse Now won for cinematography and sound, and earned nominations for
Robert Duvall and Coppola.
1979 saw the poignant
Kramer vs. Kramer, the inspiring
Norma Rae, and the nuclear thriller,
The China Syndrome.
Alien (film) scared summer movie-going audiences of 1979 with its horrible monster from outer space, achieving similar success that Jaws had seen four years earlier. Meanwhile,
The Onion Field and
...And Justice for All (film) focused on the failures of the American judicial system. The year ended with
Hal Ashby's subtle black comedy
Being There and
The Muppet Movie, a family film based on the
Jim Henson puppet characters.
Television
United Kingdom
In 1967 BBC Two had started trials of their new colour service, and it was gradually rolled out over the next few years. BBC One and ITV followed suit in 1969, so by 1970 the viewer had three colour channels from which to choose: BBC1, BBC2 and ITV. Although U.S. imports occupied a significant proportion of airtime, there was a substantial amount of high quality in-house production too.
The BBC, supported by its licence fee and with no advertisers to placate, continued fulfilling its brief to entertain and inform. The
Play for Today was a continuation of the
Wednesday Play which had run from the mid '60s. As the title implied, it presented TV drama which had relevance to current social and economic issues, done in a way calculated to intrigue or even shock the viewer. As well as using established writers, it was effectively an apprenticeship for new ones who were trying to make a name for themselves; Dennis Potter,