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Psych-Out
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Directed by Richard Rush.
Jennie (Susan Strasberg) travels to San Francisco to locate her hippie brother Steve (Bruce Dern). She meets Stoney (Jack Nicholson) in a coffeehouse and he helps her look for Steve, who Stoney has seen in his various attempts to start a rock & roll band. Stoney and his pals transform the square girl into a swinging hippie chick, complete with a mod miniskirt. Along with their buddy Dave (Dean Stockwell), they search for Steve amidst the psychedelic splendor of the Haight-Ashbury hippie haunts. Dave is killed by a car when he wanders around in an STP-induced stupor. LSD, marijuana, and the good and the bad sides of hippie life are illustrated with non-judgmental accuracy. The soundtrack of the movie is a musical gem, complete with the international smash "Incense and Peppermints" by the Strawberry Alarm Clock. (The group reached the top of the charts with the song in October 1967.) Also on hand are the Seeds, although they don't get to perform their best-known song, "Pushin' to Hard." (Seeds lead singer Sky Saxon would gain as much notoriety as an acid casualty as he would from his musical ability.) Also adding music are the Storybook and Cryque Boenzee. The latter group contained Rusty Young and George Grantham, who would join with former Buffalo Springfield members Richie Furay and Jim Messina from the legendary, long-lived country-rock band Poco. This time-capsulized gem was produced by Dick Clark, the world's oldest teenager. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
This early entry from future Stunt Man auteur Richard Rush is a colorful, exciting time capsule from the flower-power era. Psych-Out remains fresher today than many of the other "hippie lifestyle" films of the late '60s, mainly due to the sheer amount of talent involved. Rush directs the proceedings with economic skill, utilizing plenty of real San Francisco locations to atmospheric effect and combining Laszlo Kovacs' kinetic photography with a punchy editing style to create plenty of exciting set pieces that keep the film's tempo moving ever forward. Psych-Out also benefits from a gaggle of future stars in its cast. Susan Strasberg makes a likable enough heroine, but the show is stolen from her outright by three backup characters: Jack Nicholson shows off the charm that he'd soon parlay into stardom as her romantic interest, Dean Stockwell provides charismatic support as the sarcastic yin to Nicholson's yang, and future blaxploitation icon Max Julien steals a few scenes as a good-time compatriot with a taste for psychedelics (his hallucinatory fight scene with a group of junkyard thugs is a highlight). There is also a brief, but memorable, turn from Bruce Dern as the lost brother that sets the template for the many lunatics he'd play in the years to come. All in all, Psych-Out is the kind of quickie exploitation item you'd expect from the title and plot summary but it's so exuberant and stylish that its charm is tough to deny. Any cult movie fan with a yen for 1960s-set films should add this one to their list. ~ Donald Guarisco, All Movie Guide
 

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