Movie Description When Sally Hyde's (Jane Fonda) husband, a ramrod-straight marine captain, Bob Hyde (Bruce Dern), is sent to Vietnam, she leaves the isolated world of the officer's quarters and begins volunteer social work at the veterans hospital. There her unthinking support of the war and her blindness to its effects are challenged by meeting the crippled men struggling to recover, psychologically as well as physically, from their time in country. Many, like Luke Martin (Jon Voight), now a paraplegic, are embittered and full of unfocused, uncontrollable rage, which he takes out on the prim, controlled Sally. Interestingly, they went to the same large high school, but she was a pretty, popular cheerleader type and he was just a guy in the back of the class. Gradually, as she changes politically (always signaled by changes in hair and fashion) and he recovers emotionally, they become friends and then lovers. This causes a sexual awakening in Sally that furthers her transformation from a repressed wife to an independent woman. Then her husband comes home.
Hal Ashby's film, with its classic rock soundtrack and lush photography by Haskell Wexler, submerged its politics in a warm nostalgia, although it was made just a few years after the war ended. Still, its theme of individual transformation, both political and sexual, struck a chord with baby boomer audiences who all felt, to varying degrees, that they had done the same thing.
| Credits | | Producer: | Jerome Hellman | | Cast: | Charles Cyphers, Kenneth Augustine, Mary Jackson, Tresa Hughes |
| Details | | Edition: | Letterboxed; Contemporary Classics |
Notes Theatrical Release: February 15, 1978.
In her personal life Jane Fonda was very active in the antiwar movement.
Editorial Reviews "...[Fonda] has uncannily reincarnated herself in type and period..." Combs
"...A still-affecting time-capsule movie, this was an uncommonly high-profile Hollywood effort..." USA Today - Mike Clark (04/19/2002)
"As a meditation on the effects of war, on the scars it leaves, it's an astonishing work. The leads are uniformly excellent..." Uncut - Michael Bonner (07/01/2004)
"[D]irected with shaggy ambience by Hal Ashby." Premiere - Andy Webster (11/01/2005)
Awards 1978Academy AwardsBest ActorJon Voight, 1978Academy AwardsBest ActressJane Fonda, 1978Academy AwardsBest Original ScreenplayNancy Dowd, 1978Academy AwardsBest Original ScreenplayRobert C. Jones, 1978Academy AwardsBest Original ScreenplayWaldo Salt, 1978CannesBest ActorJon Voight
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