Hair

Hair

1979 "Let the sunshine in!"
Hair
Hair

Hair

7.5 | 2h1m | PG | en | Drama

Upon receiving his draft notice and leaving his family ranch in Oklahoma, Claude heads to New York and befriends a tribe of long-haired hippies on his way to boot camp.

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7.5 | 2h1m | PG | en | Drama , Comedy , Music | More Info
Released: March. 15,1979 | Released Producted By: United Artists , CIP Filmproduktion GmbH Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Upon receiving his draft notice and leaving his family ranch in Oklahoma, Claude heads to New York and befriends a tribe of long-haired hippies on his way to boot camp.

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Cast

John Savage , Treat Williams , Beverly D'Angelo

Director

Stuart Wurtzel

Producted By

United Artists , CIP Filmproduktion GmbH

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Reviews

preppy-3 This takes place in the late 1960s. Claude Bukowski (John Savage) travels from Oklahoma to NYC to join the Army. While in NY he falls in with a group of hippies. They sing and dance about 1960s issues. Claude also falls for rich beautiful Sheila Franklin (Beverly D'Angelo). They all try to prevent Claude from going but he does...and finds basic training is a living hell.The plot is kind of vague as are the characters but this still works. The songs are great, the acting is on target, the costumes are VERY colorful and the dancing is energetic and directed by the legendary Twyla Tharp. Naturally it's dated but you get caught right up in it. Also, like the stage play this has female AND male nudity! This was a bomb when it came out in 1979 but has since developed a cult following. Highly recommended. Look for the late Nell Carter singing "White Boys".
johnny-burgundy Hair (1979) This is a musical anti-war drama film based on the 1968 Broadway musical Hair: An American Tribal Love-Rock Musical. It is about a draftee who meets a tribe of long-haired hippies on his way to the army. They introduce him to their environment of drugs, unorthodox relationships and free love. The film received generally favorable reviews from film critics at the time of its release. At the 37th Golden Globe Awards, the film was nominated for a Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy. Despite this, it did poorly at the box office. Treat Williams was nominated for New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture - Male. It's one of the better translations of a musical film and cultural gem.
DKosty123 This might be one of the more over rated films on IMDb. For some reason this film was made with no connections to the original play. The 3 writers who worked on this do not have any really great work and 2 of them did no writing credits except the musical book on this film. That work is straight from a play with great music. The play was 1967 and this film is 12 years later. The writers who did work on the original play made changes in the plays characters which make little sense.That gap is an issue. While the film does keep the Vietnam Anti-War theme intact, though it really mentions it very little, it tries to take the hippie movement and make it mainstream in 1979. It was not even mainstream in 1967. Hippies were created by the media to influence a generation of teenagers to try and expand their horizons by tuning in a dropping out. While the media image has an iconic value, a lot of what is presented here is just incorrect.This is not your present Democratic view, as a lot of the music in this one is now considered politically incorrect by modern Democrats. In the 1967 it is not even right. Democrats in 1967 and 1968 were protesting Vietnam, but they were not accepting diversity as this movie portrays. About half the party was supporting George Wallace and segregation then and would continue to do so until Wallace was shot in 1972. Even after that modern Democrats would use racism to divide Americans, rich from poor. Hippies that existed were people who were liberated, which early on in this film is shown, but then there is little in common with these characters and what was the real world. Central Park in the 1960's was full of crime and muggers. They would have eaten these hippies in the park alive. Hippies were more of a reality on the West Coast as California had much less poverty in the 1960's. Cute though is the sequence with the police horses legs, and the other horsing around.The skinny dipping sequence is strange in that several people strip and go in the water, but only the last 2 people in actually come out of the water with their clothes having been stolen.The music is the best thing about this film, as several songs are now golden oldies from the era. The PC people must cringe though at the songs referring to Sodomy, Masterbation, White People, and Black People. The plot towards the end of the film of the Military swaps and road trip of the stolen car to get there are kind of absurd. So is the character whose extremely pregnant at the beginning of the movie and looks less so at the end of the film.This film should have a warning that it tries to reflect the 1960's reality, but instead creates a fantasy 1960's that has almost nothing to do with what was real then. There is only a little of the war protests, and no real peace movement stuff here.Once again, the 12 year gap here has created a movie that you have to try to accept as reality, but needs a reality check. Enjoy the music here and wish that the original message of the stage play survived.That message is not here, and is so removed now it might never be found.
TheBlueHairedLawyer Hair is a musical about the hippie counterculture. Hippies generally are pacifists; they're against established institutions, parental values, war, pollution, and they live for drugs, free love (as much sex as possible) and peace on earth. For the most part they were just a lot of kids who wanted to try new things and make a difference. Well, they didn't succeed in creating world peace or ending war forever, but they did have quite an impact on society. Because they were against racism, sexism and homophobia, people learned a lot around that time about how people are all the same regardless of their race, gender or orientation. Hippies brought in new clothing styles and hair styles that on occasion are still worn today. They influenced music and books, movies and television. Not like the lazy, texting zombies of 2015 at all. They were the revolutionary generation, whereas today's generation is the couch potato generation.One of the many reasons people, mainly guys, became hippies was to avoid being drafted into the war. That's what happened to Claude, the main character of Hair. He soon makes friends with a hippie group in New York City (for the most part they look like hobos in flamboyant clothes). The leader of the group, George Burger, becomes his best friend and the hippie group crashes a party, sings about getting their hair cut and Claude gets stoned. After a falling out between Claude and the hippies, Claude joins the army after all, but when the hippies visit him and he goes AWOL, George gets on the plane going to Vietnam to take his place instead... getting killed overseas.Hair isn't just about hippies, it's a timeless message about how the world needs to learn to get along. We don't need to stop pollution or take drugs or have casual sex, we just need to learn to live together, everyone on the planet. Hopefully someday a generation like this one will come around again, hopefully kids will turn off their cellphones and glowing screens and wake up, try to make a difference in the world. Hair is one of the most interesting movies I've ever seen, it's been performed live as a play recently as well, and if you ever get the chance to see either version, don't pass it up.I also recommend Running With Scissors (2006), Pay It Forward (2000) and Harold & Maude (1971).