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This movie was corny,stupid and poorly made 30 years ago and today it's unwatchable. After fastforwarding thru most of this turkey, I put it back in its box and then threw the box in the garbage.
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One of the greatest telefilms ever made, from an era in which filmmakers were first sensing the possibilities of the form. Sally Field will break your heart as Denny, the young hippie girl who returns to her mom and dad and their ultra-square suburban lifestyle, after a year or so away from home exploring the complicated hippie life with a boyfriend, "Flack" (the young David Carradine). 40s and 50s screen star Eleanor Parker is super as the icy mother; she makes the most out of a difficult role, outdoing Mary Tyler Moore's part in ORDINARY PEOPLE and doing it ten years earlier, when it was a braver career choice. Jackie Cooper is all right as the Dad, but he and Carradine are no match for the female super acting power of Field and Parker.
It's not a big blockbuster sort of picture, but it is one that you'll take to your heart, and I wonder if Sally Field ever really topped her acting work in this movie. By all means get the DVD, and revel in a different time and place.
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This movie is interesting and thought-provoking on so many different levels, that it is hard to summarize, but I will try. First of all, watching the movie makes you feel as if you've entered a 1970s time machine. The premise of the movie is about an ex-hippie (Sally Field as "Deenie") that comes home after being on the road and living the life of a hippie. When Deenie comes home, she finds the same problems and family dynamics just the way she left them; only being repeated through her younger sister. I felt that "Deenie" should have told her sister what she experienced living the life of a drugged-out hippie, so that her sister wouldn't run away and make the same mistakes. Instead, when her sister questions her about why she came home, Deenie just says, "I don't want to talk about it; it just wasn't that great, that's all." The parents in the movie are constantly talking about taking vitamins, aspirins, and sleeping pills, and the medicine cabinet is running over with pill bottles. So is it any wonder that Suzie (Deenie's younger sister) is popping downers?
The generation gap is illustrated beautifully in this movie; how many parents tend to talk AT their kids and not TO their kids. It also shows that they are oblivious to their own pill-popping behavior, and how they don't realize that Suzie is just emulating their behavior. Kids do what they see, not what they are told. Even when Deenie tries to talk to her parents about Suzie getting in deeper with drugs, the parents are too wrapped up in their own life to listen.
Excellent movie. Highly recommended.
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poo poooo im not sure but im trying to find out if this is th movie on the book go ask alice.
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when this video first aired on tv, i was a 17 year old runaway hippie chick (not PC but true), hitch hiking all over the country, smoking lots of dope, dropping lots of acid, looking for an older guy to take care of me etc. i tried coming back home a few times without success. i had a younger sister who was into her own problems. this movie floored me. years later i found it on VHS and brought it home and watched it again. despite some silly and dated stuff, it still floored me. sally field did an outstanding job presenting a bewildered child of the times. the wierd part is that those of us who were there really believed that running away and getting high was the better option compared with staying home and following the rules. the world changed so much in such a short time! i felt like my soul was dying and i just had to get out and start living. if you're older than 45 and had a troubled adolescence, this might really hit you where it hurt.
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