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Dynamite Chicken | 
| Director: Ernie Pintoff Actors: Joan Baez, Lenny Bruce, Ron Carey, Ace Trucking Co., Marshall Erwin Efron Studio: Tango Entertainment Category: DVD
Buy New: $6.59
New (8) Used (9) from $4.80
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 90861
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 76 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 844628090568 EAN: 0844628090568 ASIN: B000EF5MS6
Theatrical Release Date: 1970 Release Date: March 21, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Is Lenny Bruce Really in this movie? April 12, 2009 English Major (Redmond) Sorry I see no other way to ask this. Looking for Lenny Bruce I got this, but there is a picture of Richard Pryor on the Front. Did Lenny even make a feature film?
Brilliant Collage of Clever Images February 7, 2009 Francois Rabelais (Antifa) Excellent Film!!! It does a great job of taking the clothes off of the already naked emperor. Many poignant parallels with today's problems as it was made during the bombing of Vietnamese people. It attacks racism, nationalism & small-mindedness in general, in a lighthearted, brave & funny way. Slaps complacent conformists upside the head! Maybe that's why you get a lot of, "I can't figure this one out," sorta reviews on it. Because this film was created as a non-linear collage of images & outtakes, it may go over the head of someone used to typical Hollywood flicks that spell out every banal detail with canned laughter. Some really clever insights in the film. Many witty parodies of this pyramid scheme that we all have come to love so much. An amazing use of reactions to the U.$. flag to delineate the intense schisms in this society (i.e. freedom vs. blind obedience). The Uber Alles attitude that people were fighting against then, is unfortunately still a cancer today.
Bizarre, Radical, not particularly funny, but somewhat interesting July 30, 2007 Kevin R. Oppendike (Midwestern US) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I had never heard of this movie before but it looked somewhat interesting and was only three bucks so I decided to take a chance on it. This film is sort of like a late 60's guerilla precursor to later parody compilations like The Groove Tube and Kentucky Fried Movie although it is nowhere nearly as funny or as well done as either. The whole point of this "free-form" film escaped me other than it was apparently primarily intended to mock the "establishment" circa 1969. It is a random assortment of brief sketches, monologues, film clips, musical performances, and "Hippy" political statements. There's also a fair amount of female nudity on display (if this film were rated it would be rated R). A young Richard Pryor does a number of brief monologues and a couple of sketch comedy groups (one including a young Fred Willard) do their thing, more political statements are made, there are some montages of old movies and commercials, and there are a couple of running gags which aren't that funnny. There are also some "man in the street" interviews (primarily about what the American flag means to various people). Overall this thing is pretty disjointed and doesn't make a whole lot of sense...but the DVD is cheap and possibly worth the purchase price simply as a time capsule of what the radical left was thinking around 1969-70 and also as a glimpse into what underground comedy amounted to at the time. The picture and sound quality are pretty lackluster and the DVD is obviously a direct transfer from a rather beat up print of this low budget film but is still watchable. I can't imagine anyone is ever going to bother to clean this up any further so what you see is what you get...again the price is pretty low, so taking that into account, it's okay. Certainly not for everyone (unless you still live on a commune somewhere and/or want to watch a nun do a strip tease) but I have to admit it was somewhat interesting from a historical perspective as a filmed artifact of the late 60's (as seen through the eyes of the Woodstock generation) and as a film that was clearly meant to "Stick it to the man".
Dynamite Chicken May 14, 2007 Sonceria A. Robinson 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
It was very not anything at all I did not enjoy this one. I am not sure what it was all about.....
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