Where were you in '62?
See it today in this Special Edition with new digitally remastered picture supervised by director George Lucas.
This Academy Award®-nominated classic, voted one of the American Film Institute's top 100 Films Of All Time, features the coming of age of four teenagers on their last summer night before college.
Rediscover drag racing, Inspiration Point and drive-ins all over again in this nostalgic look back at the early '60s. The incredible soundtrack brings you the most memorable rock 'n' roll hits of the era.
Directed by George Lucas (Star Wars) and produced by Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather Saga), this cinematic classic features a list of iconic stars before they were stars, including Harrison Ford, Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Suzanne Somers, Cindy Williams, Wolfman Jack and Mackenzie Phillips.
Capture the heart of America's last age of innocence with American Graffiti.
Special Features include Feature-Length "The Making of American Graffiti" Documentary, Interviews with director George Lucas, executive producer Francis Ford Coppola, Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Harrison Ford, Suzanne Somers and more!
George Lucas –Director
Francis Ford Coppola – Producer
George Lucas – Screenwriter
Gloria Katz – Screenwriter
Willard Huyck – Screenwriter
Reviews Counted: 37
Fresh: It's one of the all-time great feel good films, but its sly cultural commentary is what makes it the masterpiece that it is.
-Thomas Caldwell, Cinema Autopsy, April 22, 2011Fresh: A funny-serious movie with gorgeous cars and colours and an amazing feel for the artefacts of an instantly vanished era.
-, Empire Magazine, May 06, 2008Fresh: Lucas' direction is skilful and assured -- he follows several stories with wit and sensitivity -- and he's matched by his cast, the whole film perfectly evoking the end of an era.
-, Film4, May 06, 2008Fresh: A brilliant work of popular art, it redefined nostalgia as a marketable commodity and established a new narrative style, with locale replacing plot, that has since been imitated to the point of ineffectiveness.
-Dave Kehr, Chicago Reader, June 27, 2007
