Alice's Restaurant R

Every Generation Has A Story To Tell.
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Format:  DVD
item number:  62CX6
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DVD Details

  • Rated: R
  • Run Time: 1 hours, 51 minutes
  • Video: Color
  • Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
  • Released: March 31, 2015
  • Originally Released: 1969
  • Label: Olive

Performers, Cast and Crew:

Starring
Performer: , , , &
Directed by
Edited by
Music by
Screenplay by &
Story by
Produced by &
Director of Photography:

Entertainment Reviews:

Fresh63%

TOMATOMETER
Total Count: 16

Upright60%

AUDIENCE SCORE
User Ratings: 3,648
Rating: 4/4 -- Good work in a minor key. Full Review
Chicago Sun-Times
Oct 24, 2004
Rating: B -- Inspired by Guthrie's ballad, Arthur Penn's film is a summation of the anti-establishment, anti-Vietnam War generation, clinging to the ideal of a collectivist life in a Stockbridge commune. Full Review
EmanuelLevy.Com
Feb 10, 2006
Penn's strong sympathy with the outsider and anti-Establishment stance comes across in a film that appealed to those who could identify with this communal hippie haven, but now seems too naive and distant. Full Review
Film4
Nov 21, 2008
There are occasional flashes of wry humor and some rib-tickling sequences. But they are all too few. Full Review
Variety
May 30, 2008
in spite of the clowning of Arlo Guthrie [Alice's Restaurant] is one of the more depressing movies I've seen lately, so much more so than Easy Rider, because confusion and passivity are more demoralizing than violence. Full Review
The New York Review of Books
Mar 28, 2017
Rating: A- -- It's worth checking out for the marvelous look back at how the counterculture dropouts related to each other and to the straight older generation in the late 1960s. Full Review
Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Jul 8, 2011
Rating: 3/5 -- This is one of those time capsule films - for that it is important
Blunt Review
Apr 13, 2005

Product Description:

Arthur Penn's film, based on Arlo Guthrie's famous song of the same name, takes an exuberant look at the 1960s counterculture, draft dodging, social intolerance, law enforcement, and the hardships of growing older. Like the 18-minute song itself, ALICE'S RESTAURANT follows Arlo Guthrie (played by Arlo Guthrie) as he gets kicked out of school and travels back east to visit his old friends Alice and Ray Brock. After a huge Thanksgiving feast, Arlo is assigned the duty of disposing of the garbage. When he finds the local dump closed, he tosses the mound of garbage over a cliff, which leads to his arrest for littering. When Arlo is eventually drafted into the army and is filling out the paperwork, he finds a simple question on the back of one of the forms: Kid, have you ever been arrested' Arlo quickly discovers that the U.S. Army has a very low opinion of litterbugs.

The rambling song "Alice's Restaurant" was Guthrie's greatest success. The film version maintains the freewheeling spirit of the song while adding some new layers of character development and subplots, with Alice becoming a more central character to the story. Arlo Guthrie gives a fine performance as himself, and Pat Quinn is outstanding as the aging but bright-eyed Alice. Penn's direction balances a wild, fun-loving spirit with frank seriousness to make for a multi-layered and moving film.

Keywords:

Olive Films

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Product Info

  • Sales Rank: 19,999
  • UPC: 887090094900
  • Shipping Weight: 0.25/lbs (approx)
  • International Shipping: 1 item

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