¡The Hired Hand
¡Movie

 Description
[Machine Translation] The end of wandering - The setting sun sets on a man's shoulder. The heartbreaking youth of "Easy Rider" wanders like the wind through the Great West! The legendary American New Cinema, directed by and starring Peter Fonda for the first time, was described as "a Western as beautiful as a painting. In 1966, he played the cool and ferocious motorcycle gang leader Heavenly Blues in "Wild Angel," a pioneering film that created the biker movie boom that swept the U.S. In 1967, he starred in "The White Day," a film about the drug culture, including LSD, that was spreading across the country at the time. In 1967, Peter Fonda starred with Dennis Hopper in "Noontime Illusions," a film about drug culture, including LSD, which was spreading across the United States at the time, and in 1969, Peter Fonda created the monster film "Easy Rider," which grossed $33 million on a production budget of approximately $300,000 and broke all Hollywood conventions. Two years later, in 1971, Fonda made "The Wandering Cowboy," his first film as a director, which became an icon of the counterculture and a charismatic star. The film's motorcycle- and drug-free Western genre, its novel themes, its pursuit of thoroughly realistic detail, and its unprecedented use of overlapping and slow-motion imagery were beyond the understanding of Universal, the film's distributor, which had hoped for a return to the style of Easy Rider. In the end, Universal did not understand the film, and the film was not released to the public. In the end, Universal did not understand the film, and it had to be released reluctantly, and quietly disappeared. After that, the film seemed to have been completely buried in the U.S. and Japan, with only occasional TV broadcasts of a version that had been edited to shreds and with a completely different story. However, the film received overwhelming support from some people and became a legendary film. In Japan, the film was ranked as one of the best films of all time at the time of its release by many critics, including the master director Kon Ichikawa, and in the U.S., Quentin Tarantino, Martin Scorsese, and other big names praised the film. Co-starring in the film is Warren Oates, who became a close friend of Peter Fonda's for many years after appearing in the film, and they both lived together in Paradise Valley, Montana. Warren Oates is a famous actor from the 1960s and 1970s who has been an integral part of Sam Peckinpah's and Monte Hellman's films. The film was shot by Vilmos Zsigmond, who won an Academy Award for "Encounter with the Unknown," with art by Lawrence G. Paul ("Blade Runner"), and music by Bruce Langhorne, the folk guitar virtuoso who was the model for Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tamblyn Man. The film was produced by a cast and crew of young, up-and-coming talent who would go on to become top-notch filmmakers. In 2001, 30 years after its initial release, the film was revived in a director's cut version by editor Frank Mazzola, producer William Hayward, and Peter Fonda, who stripped away all the unnecessary details. The film was also released in theaters in the U.K., and was a long-running hit for eight weeks in Japan, where it was shown in a late roadshow at the Shibuya Cine Saison. --A man leaves his wife and daughter in search of freedom, and after seven years of wandering, decides to return home with his best friend with whom he has been wandering. His wife does not easily accept his sudden return, but he gradually regains her trust as a husband by working diligently as a hired hand. However, this also means that he has to say goodbye to his friend...

Original Release Year: 1971

凌 Credits
Peter Fonda
Verna Bloom
Warren Oates
Bruce Langhorne


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