PROGRAM CATEGORY
U.S. Cinema: Documentary view all ›
GENRE
Retrospective view all ›

Film School 101: Retrospective Screening

d. Frederick Wiseman, USA, 1967, 84 mins

Playing with: Future Days, d. Clay Zimmerman, USA

Titicut Follies

Essential viewing for any cinephile, Frederick Wiseman made his documentary debut with this controversial 84-minute survey of conditions that existed during the mid-'60s at the State Prison for the Criminally Insane in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Made in 1967, the film was subjected to a worldwide ban until 1992 because the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that it was an invasion of inmate privacy. The film goes behind the walls to show stark and graphic images exposing the treatment of inmates by guards, social workers, and psychiatrists. The title refers to a musical revue staged by inmates and guards. Richard Schickel, writing in Life, stated, "The repulsive reality revealed in Titicut Follies forces us to contemplate our capacity for callousness." The documentary was cited as the "Best Film Dealing with the Human Condition" at the 1967 Festival Dei Popoli (Florence) and also honored as the "Best Film" at the 1967 Mannheim International Filmweek. Robert Coles (The New Republic) wrote, "After a showing of Titicut Follies the mind does not dwell on the hospital's ancient and even laughable physical plant, or its pitiable social atmosphere. What sticks, what really hurts is the sight of human life made cheap and betrayed." - Bhob Stewart - Rovi

Date Time Venue City Availability
Oct 21 2012 11:30 am Orpheum Theatre Buy Tickets Now ›