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IMDbPro

FTA

  • 1972
  • R
  • 1h 43min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
511
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
FTA (1972)
Trailer 1
Riproduci trailer2:00
1 video
3 foto
CommediaMusicaSatiraUn documentario

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAvailable for the first time since it mysteriously disappeared in 1972 after only one week in theaters, this raucous film is a riveting slice of the Vietnam anti-war movement.Available for the first time since it mysteriously disappeared in 1972 after only one week in theaters, this raucous film is a riveting slice of the Vietnam anti-war movement.Available for the first time since it mysteriously disappeared in 1972 after only one week in theaters, this raucous film is a riveting slice of the Vietnam anti-war movement.

  • Regia
    • Francine Parker
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Michael Alaimo
    • Len Chandler
    • Pamela Donegan
  • Star
    • Jane Fonda
    • Donald Sutherland
    • Pamela Donegan
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,4/10
    511
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Francine Parker
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Michael Alaimo
      • Len Chandler
      • Pamela Donegan
    • Star
      • Jane Fonda
      • Donald Sutherland
      • Pamela Donegan
    • 19Recensioni degli utenti
    • 46Recensioni della critica
    • 75Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    FTA
    Trailer 2:00
    FTA

    Foto2

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali11

    Modifica
    Jane Fonda
    Jane Fonda
    • Self
    Donald Sutherland
    Donald Sutherland
    • Self
    Pamela Donegan
    • Self
    Len Chandler
    • Self
    Michael Alaimo
    • Self
    Holly Near
    • Self
    Paul Mooney
    Paul Mooney
    • Self
    Rita Martinson
    • Self
    Peter Boyle
    Peter Boyle
    • Self
    Steve Jaffe
    Steve Jaffe
    • Self
    Yale Zimmerman
    • Self at the Piano
    • Regia
      • Francine Parker
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Michael Alaimo
      • Len Chandler
      • Pamela Donegan
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti19

    6,4511
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7tavm

    FTA was a fascinating time capsule of an anti-war revue featuring a couple of Hollywood stars

    So after a year of enduring a "long wait" listing on Netflix, I finally got FTA in the mail yesterday and just watched it on DVD. A chronicle of Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland's travails through the Pacific Rim with their fellow players for the title tour during 1971, we not only see them performing their skits and songs, we also see the disillusioned soldiers commenting on how they don't really understand or like the orders they're having to take during the then-current events of the Vietnam War. I was especially fascinated by the Philippines segment as both of my parents are from there and had left it long before that time. I liked many of the songs that were performed. The skits, not as much, but there were some amusing ones like Sutherland and a fellow player's play-by-play commentary of war as if they're at a football game! It seemed to drag near the end but still, I'm glad I watched FTA. Update: 10/5/14-There's a nice extra of Ms. Fonda talking about her experiences during the FTA tour. Well worth seeking on the disc.
    9haildevilman

    Pro Peace and Pro Troops

    This is like those old CSO shows during world War II with Bob hope and the Andrews Sisters.

    Trade Europe for Viet Nam and bring in Fonda, Sutherland, and Boyle and there's the diff.

    While the social commentary between the acts was clearly against the war, no soldiers were catching heat for it. It was made clear that they deserved pity too. Despite Fonda's semi-traitorous politics, she never really was angry at the common men. It's the brass and the suits that catch it here.

    And it's amusing seeing Donald Sutherland combine his 'Hawkeye' character from M*A*S*H and "Oddball" from Kelly's Heroes and throw in a dash of Ed Sullivan. He still sounds like he's got a mouth full of grits.

    Rumors say that Peter Boyle's scenes were used against his will. But I'm not sure of the facts.

    Hearts & Minds with humor. Worth a look...IF you can find it.
    10jayroth6

    FTA: Now more than ever!

    http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/rothermel010409.html FTA -- Now More Than Ever by Jay Rothermel

    FTA (Dir. Francine Parker, 1972).

    Preamble: "This film was made in association with the servicewomen and men stationed on the United States bases of the Pacific Rim, together with their friends whose lands they presently occupy." Accepting his Oscar for Best Actor, Sean Penn jokingly referred to the Academy as lovers of "commies and homos." It's a tribute to the low level of politics among our cultural workers today that Sean Penn would be surprised at acknowledgement of his performance. The Academy loves movies about exceptional heroes, whether they are overcoming physical disabilities, sports team segregation, the Holocaust, or the Roman Empire.

    The entertainment industrial complex also loves it when its celebrities serve as a prophylactic for US humanitarian imperialism in countries like Sudan or Tibet. (Poor Rose McGowan, conversely, hasn't been heard or seen since expressing understanding for what motivated men and women in Ireland to join the IRA.) All of which brings us to the opposite end of the movie food chain, far from the heights of Oscardom: FTA, Francine Parker's documentary about the "Free the Army" tour. Washington and Wall Street long ago erased this movie. The miracle of globalized media today, however, means we can sit at home and watch it on DVD or its showing on that greener-than-green parrot cage called the Sundance Channel.

    What strikes the viewer first about FTA is the humility, sense of proportion, and optimism the film has about events it depicts. We are a long way here from the old Michael Moore bazooka and the longeurs of Ken Burns, Inc.

    There are many similarities between FTA and the great rock concert documentaries of the same period: only a few lines of narration for context, and then getting out of the way of the performances.

    FTA the movie was long ago blacklisted from theaters, just as FTA the traveling political musical extravaganza was blacklisted from history. A key part of the "culture war" trumpeted by media and academic hacks of the Bill Bennett-David Horowitz-Rush Limbaugh variety (and which is itself part of a larger 30 year war against the gains of the labor, civil rights, women's, and anti-war movements) is the depiction of the those opposed to the Vietnam War as "stabbing our troops in the back." One tonic effect of FTA's DVD release and Sundance showing is to put the lie to that libel. As Washington's invasion and war against the people of Vietnam proceeded, one of the greatest concentrations of anti-war sentiment and activism was found among GIs themselves. The script for the FTA revue itself was drawn exclusively from material GIs published in their own anti-war newspapers.

    FTA was the product of a flourishing anti-war culture. Today we see this culture boiled down to a History Channel "flower power" documentary, histories like Tom Brokaw's Boom, and the memoirs of Senators and ex-Senators like John Kerry and Bob Kerry. But Vietnam's war of independence at its height inspired militants around the world, from Che Guevara's guerillas to the 1968 strikers in France.

    One of the great pleasures of FTA is the forthright energy of the performers and their audience. The GIs heard their own thoughts -- salty, sarcastic, and full of gallows humor and solidarity at the same time -- repeated back to them. The leaps of consciousness over just a few years as they rejected each rationale of the Washington war machine confirmed the anti-war movement's strategy of orienting to these "workers in uniform." The cast of the FTA revue is filled with gifted performers. They continued with their artistic careers after the U.S. anti-war tide receded. It is a pleasure to see them in their youth, energized by work that gave shape to the feelings of the immense majority. Between concerts they marched in solidarity with local activists protesting Washington's devastating "military base colonialism" in the Philippines, Okinawa, and Japan.

    Today one of the movie FTA's great strengths is its potential as a recruiting tool. It is the perfect length to have classes, meetings, and potlucks built around it. The moral authority of the movie is without equal: completely ignoring the pundits and the bi-partisan Wall Street war party in Washington, it lets the anti-war GIs speak for themselves.

    Jay Rothermel lives in Cleveland, Ohio.
    5ghigau

    Doesn't age well.

    Like Fonda's facelift(s) this film has aged poorly. Sutherland, a Canadian, never had any skin in the game. Fonda was (is) the definition of white privilege. It is hard to imagine the fate of a black man who climbed aboard an anti-aircraft gun in North Vietnam.

    I headed for Vietnam in March 1972. I did not need this film to help me see the ethics of what I was doing. Fonda was preaching to the choir, so self-absorbed that she was oblivious to see that she was in it for the fame and Hollywood acceptance, not saving anyone else.

    The film was egotistical when it was made, and it still is. It's restoration is another act of egotism. "look at me daddy; look at me."

    Jane will always be Jane. I just wish she would stop trying to pull me into her entourage. I get to be both proud and ashamed of my Distinguished Flying Cross. She will never have one!! Even better, I don't want her in my fan club. I think I will die gracefully. I wish her the same.
    6SnoopyStyle

    time capsule

    Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland headline an anti-war tour around military establishments. In the opening, Jane claims that there is a large contingent of military personnel opposed to the war. This is their response to the Bob Hope patriotism and pro-war USO tours. The film was pulled quickly after Jane's Hanoi visit and most copies destroyed. This is a very compelling time capsule. The anti-war movement can be portrayed as lamb to the slaughter. In this case, this group is quite confrontational. I am especially struck by the lyrics from the Okinawa singing group. This is unapologetically anti-Americanism. Some of this goes over the line for me but I didn't live through that time. As a film, it's a little rough technically at times. The filmmaking is not the best but that is not the most important.

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      The movie opened in theaters in 1972 the same week that Jane Fonda made her controversial trip to Hanoi, North Vietnam. Within a week of its release, American-International Pictures withdrew it from circulation. Director Francine Parker speculated that "calls were made from high up in Washington, possibly from the Nixon White House, and the film just disappeared."
    • Connessioni
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      Written by Len Chandler

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 22 novembre 1972 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • F.T.A.
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Hawaii, Stati Uniti
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Duque Films
      • Free Theater Associates
      • Indochina Peace Committee (IPC) Films
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 43min(103 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.78 : 1

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