8/10
A Movie I Couldn't Forget
26 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I, too, last saw this movie when it was shown as a TV movie in the early seventies but I have never forgotten it. The scenes around the swimming pool, the hitch-hiking scenes, Susie's confrontations with her parents. Seeing it recently I thought it was an excellent movie about a runaway, who returns home and after a couple of days realises why she left in the first place. 1970 was still awash with the "summer of love", yet the film is never preachy and avoids the "peace, love and happiness, who needs a job, pointing the finger at the establishment" heaviness. In many homes (my included) it was abide by our rules or leave - and many teenagers did.

Sally Fields plays Denise, who has come home disillusioned with the hippie life style adopted by her boyfriend, Flack (David Carradine) - begging for money in the streets, looking in garbage bins for food or eating cast off meals. She arrives home to hugs and kisses but it doesn't take her long to realise her parent's haven't changed and are driving her younger sister to repeat the same mistakes she made. Hollywood veterans Jackie Cooper and Eleanor Parker are great as the parents who are only calm when their children are conforming to their idea of normalcy. Denise is caught in the middle - knowing what life on the streets is like, she wants to conform, to be what her parents expect but she also wants to help Susie (Lane Bradbury). Susie is taking meths and Denise witnesses a huge showdown as the parents search frantically through her room - looking for drugs, but she has them steathily hidden in the medicine cabinet. There is a pointed scene at the doctors when Denise, after grudgingly confiding in the doctor, then realises that he is going to report back to her mother on their chat. I thought it was an excellent bit of acting by Fields as frightened and shaken, she knows things haven't changed.

There is a subplot that involves Flack, and his efforts to find Denise - stealing cars, a fumigation truck and even an ice cream van. At last he finds her and there is almost a mini explosion by the pool - everyone shouting, Flack, who is pleading with her to go with him to Canada, Susie, telling her to follow her heart and go with him, the parents telling everyone to sit down and shut up!! Denise goes inside to think but when she returns Flack has gone. Susie has gone as well, not with Flack but to become another "runaway". The film ends in a very down beat and sombre way. When all the recriminations and the tears have stopped, Denise, now the dutiful daughter, helps her mother with breakfast, pondering on the fact that after almost losing 2 daughters, her parents still do not realise their behaviour is to blame.

Highly Recommended.
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