BEAUTY & STYLE
grainy 70s grit
Films defined by the visual and tonal texture of 1970s American cinema at its most unvarnished: visible grain, available or naturalistic light, muted earth-tone palettes, location shooting in decaying urban environments, and a mid-budget rawness that makes the world onscreen feel genuinely inhabited rather than constructed — the aesthetic of a society fraying at its institutional seams, captured with a camera that refuses to flatter. The register includes both authentic period works and modern films (Inherent Vice, The Master) that deliberately replicate this texture as a formal choice. Distinct from neon-nights (which is about chromatically saturated artificial nocturnal light as active aesthetic element) by being defined instead by daylight grime, grain, and institutional drabness rather than electric color; distinct from sleek-modern (which prizes controlled, polished visual design) by embracing roughness, imperfection, and the feeling that the camera caught life rather than composed it.

Taxi Driver
1976

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
1974

Mean Streets
1973

Dog Day Afternoon
1975

Easy Rider
1969

The French Connection
1971

Midnight Cowboy
1969

The Last Picture Show
1971

The Killing of a Chinese Bookie
1976

Days of Heaven
1978

The Panic in Needle Park
1971

Dazed and Confused
1993

The Conversation
1974

Christiane F.
1981

Straw Dogs
1971

Summer of Sam
1999

Vanishing Point
1971

Maniac
1980

Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid
1973

Zabriskie Point
1970

In Cold Blood
1967

Don't Torture a Duckling
1972

The Crazies
1973

Rabid Dogs
1973

Rolling Thunder
1977