Radio Days is a 1987 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Woody Allen. It is a nostalgic look at the golden age of radio during the late 1930s and 1940s, focusing on a working-class family living in Rockaway Beach, New York. The film weaves together various vignettes, blending the lives of the family members with the radio programs they listen to daily. It also features an ensemble cast.
During the late 1930s and early 1940s young Joe lived with his modest American Jews family in Rockaway Beach. His mother always listened to Breakfast with Irene and Roger. His father kept his occupation secret. Joe later found out that he was ashamed of being a taxi driver. Other family members were Uncle Abe and Aunt Ceil, grandpa and grandma, and Aunt Bea. The latter was a serial dater, always on the lookout for a potential husband but either was too picky or dated married men.
Joe's own favorite radio show was The Masked Avenger. It made him dream of buying a secret decoder ring. In Joe's fantasy the Masked Avenger looked like a hero, but in reality the voice actor was short and bald. Other radio memories are stories about sporting heroes, news bulletins about World War II, a report of a Martian invasion (similar to the real-life 1938 radio broadcast), and a live report of the search for a little girl who fell into a well (similar to the real-world incidents of Kathy Fiscus and Floyd Collins).
With his friends from school Joe was searching for German aircraft from the top of local buildings, but instead they saw a woman undressing in her bedroom. She later turned out to be their substitute teacher. Alone on the coast Joe saw a German U-boat, but he decided not to tell anyone because they wouldn't believe him.
Joe was fascinated by the glitz and glamour of Manhattan, where the radio broadcasts were made. He visited the Radio City Music Hall, and described it as the most beautiful thing he ever saw.
Joe collected stories of radio stars, including that of Sally White, whose dreams of becoming famous were hampered by her shrill voice and Brooklyn accent. Starting as a cigar salesgirl she got stuck on the roof of the radio building with Roger, who was cheating on Irene. After she witnessed a crime the gangster Rocco wanted to kill her, but following his mother's advice he ended up using his connections to further her career. She takes speech classes and finally became a reporter of celebrity gossip.
On New Year's Eve Joe was brought down from his room to celebrate the transition to 1944. Simultaneously the radio stars gathered on the roof of their building. The narrator concludes that he will never forget those radio voices, although with each passing of a New Year's Eve they seem to glow dimmer and dimmer.
The amusement park young Joe walks by in the film is the old Rockaway Playland located in Rockaway Beach, New York. The park was in its last year of operation when the film was being made and was subsequently closed and demolished.
In his four-star review, noted critic Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times described Radio Days as Allen’s answer to Federico Fellini’s Amarcord and referred to it as "so ambitious and so audacious that it almost defies description. It's a kaleidoscope of dozens of characters, settings and scenes - the most elaborate production Allen has ever made - and it's inexhaustible, spinning out one delight after another." Vincent Canby of The New York Times referred to Allen as the "prodigal cinema resource" and spoke of the film saying, " Radio Days ... is as free in form as it is generous of spirit."
David Denby wrote for New York that: "... The real glue, however, is the lullingly beautiful popular music of the period — Cole Porter, Al Dubin and Harry Warren, big-band jazz, crooners, torch singers, Carmen Miranda. The music, perfectly matched to images of old wood and brick buildings and old glamour spots, produces a mood of distanced, bittersweet nostalgia. Radio Days becomes a gently satiric commemorations of forgotten lives." Variety called it "one of Allen's most purely entertaining pictures," adding that "Radio Days is not simply about nostalgia, but the quality of memory and how what one remembers informs one's present life."
In a poll held by Empire magazine of the 500 greatest films ever made, Radio Days was voted number 304.
Stanley Kubrick loved Radio Days so much that, according to his brother-in-law Jan Harlan, he watched it "twice within two days, because 'it was like watching a home movie,' he told me... He absolutely adored it."
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