American Bandstand guru Dick Clark did not dig flower power. When "In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida" was a thing, he still was into Bobby Darin. During his short tenure as a film producer at American-International Pictures, he intended a film to show the decrepit existence of hippies for what it really was. Despite how much he may have succeeded in Psych-Out, this remains a key film for those who are nostalgic for the flower power era. Today, this film seems naive, but honestly so was much of the era, but it probably captures the “Summer Of Love” better than any other narrative film.
Movies under the radar and far from the multiplexes: rescued from dusty video store shelves and beyond!
Tuesday, January 5, 2021
Psych-Out (1968; Richard Rush)
Lost And Found Video All-Stars:
Adam Roarke,
Bruce Dern,
Dean Stockwell,
Dick Clark,
Gary Kent,
Jack Nicholson,
Laszlo Kovacs,
Max Julien,
Richard Rush,
Susan Strasberg,
The Seeds,
The Strawberry Alarm Clock
The Trip (1967; Roger Corman)
Would you drop acid with Bruce Dern?
Before Peter Fonda made the trailblazing Easy Rider with his co-star Dennis Hopper, he was already a counterculture icon from The Trip, in the role of Paul Grove, a TV commercial director on the verge of a divorce from Sally (Susan Strasberg) who falls in with some Hollywood hippy-dippy types, and eventually goes on his first cosmic journey of LSD at Bruce Dern’s pad (see above). The rest of the film is that long day’s journey through a burning brain where reality and illusion jam on a merry-go-round. It’s Blowup for the Monkees generation, it’s Chappaqua filmed as a cartoon.
Lost And Found Video All-Stars:
Bruce Dern,
Dennis Hopper,
Dick Miller,
Jack Nicholson,
Luana Anders,
Peter Fonda,
Roger Corman,
Susan Strasberg
Monday, November 2, 2020
The Secret Lives of Dentists (2003; Alan Rudolph)

Alan Rudolph's films are just the things for which this site seems made. For a quarter century, discerning viewers seeking departure from the usual homogenized Hollywood fare could count on a new work from the writer-director every year or two. His studies of human nature were often ensemble pieces like those of his mentor Robert Altman, yet unique in their own rights for their moody, dreamlike atmospheres, and quirky shifts in narrative tone or genre. Even though they were often imperfect (as are most unique works of art), they were often haunting experiences that lingered for days afterwards.
Lost And Found Video All-Stars:
Alan Rudolph,
Campbell Scott,
Craig Lucas,
Dennis Leary,
Florian Ballhaus,
Hope Davis
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Johnny Gunman (1957; Art Ford)
Martin E. Brooks, best known to our generation as Rudy in TV's The Six Million Dollar Man and its spinoff The Bionic Woman, has a rare feature-film leading man credit as "Johnny G.", one of the two underlings of mobster Lou Caddy who are left in charge of his territory while their head honcho is sent up the river for a stretch.
Lost And Found Video All-Stars:
Ann Donaldson,
Art Ford,
Bernard Fine,
Carrie Raddisson,
Johnny Seven,
Martin E. Brooks,
Vinegar Syndrome,
Walter Holcombe
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
X-Ray (1981; Boaz Davidson)

Lost And Found Video All-Stars:
Barbi Benton,
Boaz Davidson,
Menahem Golan,
Scream Factory,
The Cannon Group,
Yoram Globus
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