Horrible "character study" stinker, with Jack Lemmon suffering from a common comedian affliction: the desperation to "prove" himself in a dramatic role. Chip on shoulder, and all that... Plus a solid dose of "I wanna win an Oscar too, but I can't because they make me do comedies!"
Hilariously enough, I wrote the paragraph above without knowing that he'd actually won one of those ridiculous "awards" for this very movie! Whoever voted for this movie must have had one helluva powerful and diverse basket of the latest Tim Leary goodies to pick from. And because 5,000 people vote for who gets to "win" those silly little statuettes, that's a LOT of goodies, i.e. baddies... Someone's always getting rich through frying Hollywood's brains. Their suppliers are making billions in revenue annually.
Sillier still, he had already "won" this "award" 18 years prior (as Supporting Actor though) for the comedy-drama "Mister Roberts". Perhaps this 2nd "Oscar" finally quenched his greed for "acceptance" and "respeC". He was finally free to do more comedy, going back to the business of filling his pockets, because dramas like this do NOT support a lush lifestyle in Beverly Hills. They only temporarily bless the actor's bloated ego.
One reading of the script, and a bell must have rung, a light-bulb must have switched on in Lemmon: "yeah, this is anti-Establishment stuff, and even more importantly a boring social drama, i.e. my chance to finally get a Best Actor Oscar!" Do not doubt this for a second. Odds are that's how things went down in 1972. Or, perhaps, Lemmon really did think that this terrible script was great, in which case that wouldn't speak very highly of him. (Not that the other option serves as a compliment for his character either.)
STT, which in abbreviated form reminds me of something really icky (and very common in Hollywood), is a tiresome social drama about the supposedly despondent middle class - who in the writer's opinion are close to mass-suicide - and about how dead the American Dream is, about allegedly deplorable capitalist America... i.e. the usual left-wing pessimistic hippie-era nonsense, the usual Hollywood propaganda we've been getting incessantly since the late 60s. This bomb has the Frankfurt School written all over it, but considering who wrote and stared in it - no surprise whatsoever.
Aside from the socio-political drivel, this turkey features very dull and uninvolving characters, almost no plot, and dialogues so dreary (and even dated) that you'd have to rewind occasionally to keep track of the non-plot. It's kind of tough to follow a plot-free movie, you know. Naturally, I didn't rewind, though I did fast-forward once or twice. But there is also cringe: the male-fantasy scenes in which the empty-headed brainwashed hippie girl invites middle-aged Lemmon for some "balling" is just plain embarrassing. I did say STT was dated... and cringy... and very boring. Just plain awful.
I expected a solid movie (because the plot outlines on most internet sites don't warn you about these things) but got a pile of junk instead. The 70s gave us some of cinema's very best produce, a great film decade, and yet this monotonous turkey got far more recognition at the time than some movies light-years superior to this piffle. Time has however proven the irrelevance of this picture. How many people have this "classic" on their top 50 or top 100 lists? In a sense this is the "Out Of Africa" of its era, or at least a minor version of it, because it won "just" two Oscars as opposed to the 57 won by the awful Mery Streep vehicle - which nobody is interested in either.