John Schlesinger’s The Day of the Locust adapts Nathanael West’s bitter 1939 novel into a fever dream of pre–World War II Hollywood. This isn’t your fluffy screen-fantasy: it’s a nightmarish carnival of fame-chasers gone feral, a place where even Goya would say “No thanks.” In Schlesinger’s hands, L.A. becomes Dante’s Inferno—sun-drenched, vacancy-filled, and teeming with grotesques
🎥 Hollywood as Horror Show
Schlesinger stages Hollywood not as fantasy land but a “Mecca of broken dreams,” full of faded vaudevillians, deluded starlets, and social cast-offs. There’s Tod Hackett (William Atherton), the idealistic artist, Faye Greener (Karen Black), the starlet with glitter on the outside and rot beneath, Homer Simpson (Donald Sutherland), the mute accountant obsessed with Faye, and a gallery of lowlifes crowding the San Bernardino Arms.
Rather than glamour, we get greasy pancake makeup, stale dreams, and desperation that smells like old popcorn. The cinematography (Conrad L. Hall, Oscar-nominated) bathes the chaos in disturbing beauty: sweeping shots of pools with dead horses, brothels, cockfights, and a riot that erupts at a movie premiere
👥 Company of the Grotesque
Schlesinger assembles a gallery of Hollywood lost souls—each grotesque in their own right. Donald Sutherland’s Homeris a masterpiece of passive menace: he steps out onto the street, sees a child tormenting him—and snaps, snapping the kid’s life out beneath a riot’s chaos . Karen Black’s Faye is star-struck shell, get-rich-or-die syndrome in high heels. Burgess Meredith plays the pitiable old vaudevillian-turned-salesman in heartbreaking intervals of delusion and despair
There’s a cockfighting sequence so unsettling it’s like watching civilization peck itself apart . Juvenile stars, dwarfs, lounge lizards, and studio execs populate this drama, united by the same hunger: to be seen, to be consumed, or—tragically—to survive.
🖤 Satire Laced with Indifference
Many critics say the film lets satire turn off human compassion—but that’s exactly the point. Schlesinger wants to chill your heart, to purge any pretense about Hollywood’s moral sheen. It’s satire that wounds, not tickles (LFQ)
Roger Ebert called it “daring” but noted that the characters begin to seem more like puppets than peopleCritics like Pauline Kael agreed — too much spectacle, too little interior life . Yet, even amid criticism, the performances (especially Sutherland’s and Meredith’s) stand as haunting witness to the brutality under the gloss
🎭 Dark Humor & Unsettling Twists
Humor here isn’t witty—it’s grotesque. We laugh when Faye melts down over a broken ice cream cone, but that laughter tastes like regret. We guffaw when a studio exec scoffs at a violent accident—until we realize how numb that laughter really is
Every absurd bit—child stars in crazy outfits, dwarfs playing mobsters, ruined vaudeville acts—mirrors an amoral circus. There’s no relief, only a slow burn of recognition: this is the industry we snicker at, and we’re all in it.
🎬 The Riotous Finale: When Locusts Swarm
All roads lead to the premiere at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre—The big DeMille premiere where the animals break loose. Homer’s breakdown ignites riot. The mob goes feral; a car flips. Tod’s painting of forces beyond him becomes real chaos. Hallucinatory, terrifying, intentionally over-the-top
Schlesinger doesn’t trust ambiguity here: he goes literal. Spectacle smothers subtlety. Some find that overkill—too theatrical, too on-the-nose. But when your aim is to indict an entire system, sometimes you need a riot.
🌟 The Supporting Ensemble
-
Donald Sutherland’s Homer: silent rage incarnate.
-
Karen Black’s Faye: tragic, manipulative, magnetic.
-
Burgess Meredith’s Harry: vaudeville’s rag-tag ghost.
-
William Atherton’s Tod: moral center that slowly unravels.
Every performance bleeds this film’s worldview: nobody leaves unscathed. Nobody deserves escape—but we almost wish they could.
🎯 Final Verdict: Apocalypse Chic
The Day of the Locust isn’t a feel-good movie—but if you want your cynicism served with swagger and art, it’s an unforgettable feast. It’s like watching fame catch fire and burn the moths too close.
It’s flawed—overlong, occasionally detached, overloaded with allegory. But Schlesinger hit gold: beauty in brutality, glamour in decay, laughter in despair—and chaos as catharsis.
🧾 Who Should Watch It
✔️ If you savor savage satire that spares no one.
✔️ If you enjoy era recreation with moral bite.
✔️ If you accept humanity can be both comic and grotesque.
Skip it if you need heroes, hope, or happy endings.
⭐ Rating: 4 out of 5 Starlets on Fire
The Day of the Locust never lets you forget Hollywood’s cost—you pay in dignity, innocence, or soul. That riot at the end? Not just plot—it’s prophecy. And in Schlesinger’s world, nobody walks out whole.



