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I’ve never seen this movie before, but I’ve seen the name mentioned en passant a gazillion names. Like an example of 70s filmmaking? I’m not sure. But it finally occurred to me to just buy the bluray, so now I’m watching it.
Wow, I don’t think I’ve seen any of Hal Ashby’s movies, but again, the name is so familiar.
That’s an odd-looking kid, so I wondered how whether he was supposed to be 12 or 22, but the actor turns out to be 23…
Ah ok, Maude is the Magic Pixie Dream Granny. I’m guessing she’s going to die, but the kid is going to experience Character Growth.
That’s Maude.
It’s radical to cast an older woman to play an older woman — that still doesn’t happen a lot.
Interesting wall treatment….
I like this. It’s very… 1971.
Very big.
Oops, I think we entered the third act.
I want a hallway with pictures like that!
I have never been so sad to see a plot development that I predicted at the start come to pass. Because I really, really enjoyed this movie, and I’m so disappointed that it had to end on such a cliché.
Anyway. Perhaps I should sample some of the other Hal Ashby movies anyway?
And I think the trope of the old, funny woman who represents anarchy and disregard for laws and propriety has largely disappeared? Growing up, it seemed like this — the cheeky grandmother — was a character that appeared all the time? But I can’t remember the last time I saw one of these characters…
Harold & Maude. Hal Ashby. 1971. ⚄