Harold and Maude

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Harold and Maude

IMDB 8.0/10 (13,197 votes)
top 250: #250
Produced by Colin Higgins
Charles B. Mulvehill
Written by Colin Higgins
Starring Ruth Gordon
Bud Cort
Vivian Pickles
Eric Christmas
Cyril Cusack
Ellen Geer
G. Wood
Music by Cat Stevens
Distributed by Paramount
Release date(s) December 20, 1971 (USA)
Running time 91 min.
Language English
Budget $1,200,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Harold and Maude is a movie directed by Hal Ashby in 1971. The film, featuring light humor, dark humor, and existentialist drama, centers around the exploits of a morbid young man -- Harold -- who drifts away from the life that his detached mother prescribes him as he falls in love with septuagenarian Maude.

The film is number 45 on the American Film Institute's list of 100 Funniest Movies of all time[1], number 42 on Bravo's 100 Funniest Movies and on IMDB's list of the best 250 movies ever made. In 1997, it was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress [2]. It is particularly noteworthy as having an enormous and zealous cult following.

The film was a commercial failure when it was released although the critical reception was extremely positive. The screenplay upon which the film was based was written by Colin Higgins, and published as a novel[3] in 1971. The movie was shot in the San Francisco Bay Area. Harold and Maude was also a play on Broadway for some time.

The movie has given rise to two new words: "Harolding" (hanging around cemeteries) described by Douglas Coupland in "Harolding in West Vancouver" (1996); and "Maudism" or "Maudianism", the philosophy of living each day to the fullest.[4]. This may also have a link to the phonetically-identical philosophy of Modism.

The entire soundtrack for the movie is by Cat Stevens.

Contents

The film first introduces us to Harold, an alienated young man from a wealthy family who lives in a large mansion with his domineering mother. Harold stages realistic mock-suicides. This has evidently been going on for so long that his mother takes no notice, other than when Harold causes a particular mess with his fake blood. For amusement, Harold attends funerals of people he doesn't know. At these he repeatedly sees Maude, a 79-year-old woman who befriends him. Maude is very much his opposite: a senior citizen, energetic, impulsive, and light-hearted. The two form an unlikely friendship.

Hal Ashby, the director of the film, was part of the San Francisco youth culture, and in this film, he posits the doomed youth of the alienated against the vital age of actually believing and caring in something like the Holocaust survivors had to do in order to survive, contrasting nihilism with purpose. Maude's past is revealed in a glimpse of the concentration camp ID number tattooed on her arm.

Harold is part of a society where he has no personal importance and existentially, therefore, he is without meaning. Maude, however, has survived and lives a life rich with meaning. It is in this existential crisis, shown against the backdrop of the Vietnam War that we see the difference of how one culture, Harold, is handling one meaningless war, while another has experienced and lived beyond another war that produced a crisis of meaning, the Holocaust.

Clearly a survivor, Maude is also a fabulist and a dreamer; seeing beauty all around her and believing in the innate goodness of the individual people (but neither the state nor the corporate structure).

  • Cinematography by: John Alonzo

The soundtrack is by Cat Stevens, and includes two songs, "Don't Be Shy" and "If You Want To Sing Out, Sing Out", which he composed specifically for the movie and which were unavailable for over a decade on vinyl or cassette (they were later released on the compact disc Footsteps in the Dark). No official soundtrack for Harold and Maude was released in the US, though a vinyl LP soundtrack was released in Japan.

These songs are in the order in which they appear in the movie.

  1. "Don't Be Shy"
  2. "On The Road To Find Out"
  3. "I Wish, I Wish"
  4. "Miles From Nowhere"
  5. "Tea For The Tillerman"
  6. "I Think I See The Light"
  7. "Where Do The Children Play?"
  8. "If You Want To Sing Out, Sing Out"
  9. "Trouble"

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.


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