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Alice's Restaurant

  • 1969
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Alice's Restaurant (1969)
A cinematic adaption of Arlo Guthrie's classic song story.
Play trailer3:37
1 Video
99+ Photos
SatireComedyDramaMusic

A cinematic adaption of Arlo Guthrie's classic story-song.A cinematic adaption of Arlo Guthrie's classic story-song.A cinematic adaption of Arlo Guthrie's classic story-song.

  • Director
    • Arthur Penn
  • Writers
    • Arlo Guthrie
    • Venable Herndon
    • Arthur Penn
  • Stars
    • Arlo Guthrie
    • Patricia Quinn
    • James Broderick
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writers
      • Arlo Guthrie
      • Venable Herndon
      • Arthur Penn
    • Stars
      • Arlo Guthrie
      • Patricia Quinn
      • James Broderick
    • 57User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:37
    Official Trailer

    Photos153

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    + 147
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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Arlo Guthrie
    Arlo Guthrie
    • Arlo
    Patricia Quinn
    Patricia Quinn
    • Alice
    • (as Pat Quinn)
    James Broderick
    James Broderick
    • Ray
    Pete Seeger
    Pete Seeger
    • Pete Seeger
    Lee Hays
    • Lee Hays
    Michael McClanathan
    Michael McClanathan
    • Shelly
    Geoff Outlaw
    • Roger
    Tina Chen
    Tina Chen
    • Mari-chan
    Kathleen Dabney
    • Karin
    William Obanhein
    William Obanhein
    • Officer Obie
    Seth Allen
    Seth Allen
    • Evangelist
    Monroe Arnold
    • Blueglass
    Joseph Boley
    Joseph Boley
    • Woody
    Vinnette Carroll
    • Draft Clerk
    Sylvia Davis
    • Marjorie
    Simm Landres
    • Jacob
    Eulalie Noble
    Eulalie Noble
    • Ruth
    Louis Beachner
    • Dean
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writers
      • Arlo Guthrie
      • Venable Herndon
      • Arthur Penn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews57

    6.34.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7hokeybutt

    The First Full-Length Motion Picture Music Video?

    ALICE'S Restaurant (3+ outta 5 stars) Maybe not one of the best movies of the '60s but it is definitely worth checking out... as a sort of time capsule if nothing else. This was an "establishment" movie designed to cash in the popularity of the then-popular folk song by Arlo Guthrie. They got Arlo to star as himself... as well as several of his actual friends and acquaintances of the time... even the actual police officer who arrested him for the incident described in the song. Considering its mercenary intent the movie is a lot better than it has any right to be. This may not be one of director Arthur Penn's best movies but he definitely gets the most out of the concept. Guthrie now says that the movie is more of a version of what the straight world *thought* the hippie movement was all about rather than what it was *actually* about... with that in mind the movie still paints a pretty good picture of the times. Guthrie is a low-key performer but he definitely has some screen charisma... resembling a baby-faced Bob Dylan at times. This could be considered one of the first full-length motion picture music videos.
    jt1999

    End of an era.

    As most students of 1960s filmmaking are aware, "Alice's Restaurant" was director Arthur Penn's unsuccessful follow-up to "Bonnie and Clyde." It was based on -- or rather inspired by -- a good idea: Arlo Guthrie's famous autobiographical song, which told the humorous and ironic tale of two run-ins with the "establishment," as we used to say, during a Thanksgiving in Stockbridge, Mass., and a subsequent draft board examination in New York City.

    Thirty-three long years later, seeing this cultural artifact from the late '60s is less like watching a story unfold than stepping into a time machine. The good, bad and tragic aspects of that turbulent era are all represented here, and the past -- as observed from our tainted and narcissistic age of SUVs, AIDS and the Internet -- seems positively innocent. And -- with a few obvious exceptions -- idyllic.

    The 1960s may have been a tumultuous era, but those years embodied one crucial concept sorely missing from today's society: youthful idealism. Way back when -- before a six-figure salary became the college student's holy grail, when saving the world was more important than earning a law degree -- young people were actually passionate -- about freedom, about peace, about the long- term prospects for humanity. If that passion has not completely vanished, it has certainly been redirected -- and not, in my view, toward a positive or productive end.

    Whether Penn's film works or not as a cinematic adaptation of Guthrie's song, whether it successfully mixes deadpan humor (hippies vs. bureaucratic clods) with tragedy (the dark side of drug use) seems almost irrelevant now. The movie succeeds in capturing a remarkable moment in time, a short period when the future may have been uncertain, but there was still a brilliant ray of sunshine at the end of the tunnel -- and a youthful force propelling us toward it.

    The hippie movement may have been naive, but it was a movement nonetheless, and a positive form of rebellion. As seen in the film, young people often used the word "peace" instead of "goodbye" -- not just as a pleasant sentiment at the end of a conversation, but as a serious reminder of what was important -- that nothing was more vital than global, harmonious accord, to "live as one." That spirit may have died with John Lennon; it may have left this Earth with Jerry Garcia. In any case, it's pretty much gone now, and already -- except, perhaps, within a few small, nostalgic circles -- nearly forgotten.

    Today, the concepts of "peace" and "love" seem hopelessly quaint. The era of Flower Power has long since passed, and most young people would readily agree that All You Need is Cash -- the majority of them knowing infinitely more about money markets than peaceful coexistence. Teenagers who once joined together to enjoy music, freedom and a sense of community (Woodstock) have been replaced by a disenfranchised generation who angrily rape, steal and burn (Woodstock '99). Somewhere along the line, the hopeful enthusiasm of folk music and rock'n'roll gave way to the fury of punk, rap and hip-hop. Freeform artistic expression (Prog-Rock, Pop Art, tie-died clothes, experimental filmmaking) was discarded in favor of nihilism and self-mutilation (Industrial/ Goth-Rock, Heavy Metal, piercings and tattoos). The ray of hope faded. "Make Love, Not War" degenerated into "Show Us Your Tits." The "us" decade ('60s) became the "me" decade ('70s). And now -- God help us -- we are firmly entrenched in what surely would've made the founding fathers wish they'd never been born: the"whatever" century.

    This apathetic new millenium has ushered in not a glorious Odyssey of space exploration or a Brave New World of modern medicine -- but terrorism, fear, ignorance and intolerance. Politically, Ashcroft's medical marijuana raids and "President" Bush's environmental atrocities likely cause even die-hard liberals to fondly recall the days of Tricky Dick! Who could have ever imagined?!

    And so "Alice's Restaurant" is another tragic arrow through our empty, modern- day heart -- a damning reminder of just how low this country has sunk, how far a nation of bloodless, soulless opportunists has strayed from the garden. Think of it! Once, this country poured its life blood into electing leaders who would end war and famine; now, we waste millions trying to impeach them for receiving blow jobs.

    Jim Morrison was 35 years ahead of his time. The '60s -- in retrospect -- was the beginning. And this, now, is the end.

    Peace.
    9j-knutsson

    One groovy flick

    This excellent film was written by my late screen writing teacher Venable Herndon, but I saw it and fell in love with it long before I took his class.

    It manages to be both good humored and effortlessly profound at the same time. The recruitment scenes are hysterically funny. I miss movies with this laid-back quality. A lot of people are adverse to this type of loose narrative structure, but since almost every flick and TV show has such a rigid structure why can't the rest of us have a couple of films to ourselves.

    The final shot of Alice's Restaurant with all its beautiful ambiguity has affected me more than the final shot of the "Searchers" every time I've seen it. It manages to celebrate something and take it with a grain of salt at the same time. Hurrah for the director of photography!

    A beautiful trip all round.
    Felix-28

    Watch it on its own terms

    This movie is generally not highly regarded. Criticisms refer to the lack of plot or "aimlessness" and draw unfavourable comparisons with the song.

    It is hardly ever appropriate to criticise a film by comparing it with the source from which it is derived. The film is a work in its own right, and it is no criticism to say that it is not like something else. There is no reason why a comic song should not be used as the basis for a tragic movie. The only such comparison that has any validity is one which uses the source work as a basis for demonstrating how a weakness in the derived work could have been avoided; or conversely, one which contrasts a virtue in the derived work with a corresponding deficiency in the source work.

    On its own terms, "Alice's Restaurant" succeeds very well as a movie. The song on which it is based does no more than provide a sequence of events around which the movie is constructed. It is not a narrative; it is a portrait of a particular time and a particular section of American society. It meanders, but it is never tedious; there is always something interesting to see on the screen. It demonstrates how that section of society, or the representatives of it with whom the film is concerned, although rejecting many of the rules by which American society has historically been governed, nevertheless accepts that society's basic values and cannot avoid the consequences of the rejection of some of the rules. It is not a great movie, but it is a very good one.

    I rate it as about 7.5 out of 10. The film that I find most similar to it is the French film "Round Midnight"; not because of its subject-matter, but because of its dreamy, unhurried mood.
    beeryusa

    Don't buy it if you think it's about the song.

    Those who write complaining that the movie isn't like the song are missing the point. The movie isn't about the song, nor is the movie supposed to be based around the song. The movie merely includes the song - and some events in Arlo Guthrie's life in the 1960s. Get over the fixation about the song and you might begin to see what the movie is about.

    Alice's Restaurant is about life and loss, and the traps we allow ourselves to get caught up in. It's about addiction, youth, anarchy, death, and aimlessness. It's a celebration and a lament for all those things.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After discovering that the character "Officer Obie" was modeled after him, actual Stockbridge (Massachusetts) Sheriff William Obanhein demanded that he play the role himself. His reason: "If anyone is going to make a fool out of me, it might as well be me!"
    • Goofs
      32'45'': Flipped shot: the bulb is on Officer Obie's right, and the word "chief" on Obie's hat appears like in a mirror. Two shots later, the bulb is on the left, and the hat reads "chief" in normal letters.
    • Quotes

      Arlo: Group W is where they put ya if you may not be moral enough to join the army after committin' your special crime. There was all kinds of mean, nasty ugly-lookin' people on the bench there. There was mother rapers... father stabbers... father rapers... Father rapers! Sittin' right there on the bench next to me!

    • Alternate versions
      Originally rated "R" when released in 1969. In 1970 the film was re-edited to be re-rated "GP" by the MPAA.
    • Connections
      Featured in Arthur Penn (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Pastures of Plenty
      Written by Woody Guthrie

      Performed by Pete Seeger (uncredited) and Arlo Guthrie (uncredited)

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    FAQ27

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 27, 1970 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ресторан Еліс
    • Filming locations
      • Lenox, Massachusetts, USA(Cranwell Prep School)
    • Production companies
      • Elkins Entertainment
      • Florin
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,991,240
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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