In this episode of Cinema Callback, Andy and Michael discuss Scarecrow (1973), Jerry Schatzberg’s tender, wandering road movie starring Al Pacino and Gene Hackman as two drifters moving across America with little more than dreams and unresolved pasts.
Through the show’s voice-note conversation format, the hosts talk about the film’s loose, episodic structure and how it lets character take precedence over plot. They explore the evolving friendship between Pacino and Hackman, the way masculinity is expressed through vulnerability and performance, and how the film quietly dismantles the myth of the American Dream without ever announcing its intentions.
They also discuss the film’s tonal shifts from humour to devastation, its humanist perspective, and why Scarecrow remains a deeply affecting, often overlooked entry in 1970s American cinema.