Breaking Away

US (1979): Drama/Comedy

Peter Yates lovingly directs Steve Tesich's uncondescending and three-dimensional portrayal of a group of friends coming-of-age in a Middle American college town. Dennis Christopher stars as Dave Stoller, a recent high school graduate in Bloomington, Indiana, who is caught with his friends -- Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern, Jackie Earle Haley -- coasting between high school and deciding what to do with the rest of their lives. The four friends are snobbishly looked down upon by the college students of the town as "cutters," since they were born in Bloomington and their parents worked in the local limestone quarries that built the university. Dave wants to be a champion bicycle racer and he idolizes the Italian racing team -- so much so that he speaks, thinks, and acts Italian, all to his father's (Paul Dooley) forlorn exasperation. Dave falls for a college girl (Robyn Douglass), but is ashamed to admit he is a cutter and poses as an Italian exchange student to impress her. Dave is particularly excited when his heroes -- the Italian racers -- come to town for a race. But they are even more snobbish than the college students and rely on dirty tricks to keep Dave from winning a race against them. After that ordeal, Dave throws away his false identity and convinces his friends to enter the university's "Little 500" bicycle race against the college students. This light-hearted and heartwarming tale was a surprising word-of-mouth success at the box-office. Barbara Barrie, who plays Dave's mom, moved into the 1980-81 TV series of the same name that was spawned by this film. (Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide)


· Writing (Best Screenplay written directly for the screen) 1979: Steve Tesich


· Best Picture 1979: Peter Yates - Producer (20th Century-Fox)
· Supporting Actress 1979: Barbara Barrie
· Directing 1979: Peter Yates
· Music Scoring Awards (Best Original Song Score and Its Adaptation or Best Adaptation Score) 1979: Patrick Williams

5 nominations, 1 Award