Hallucination Generation

Hallucination Generation is a 1967 film by Edward Mann. Purportedly intended as a warning against the dangers of pill-popping Sixties hedonism along the lines of 1936's Reefer Madness, the film's primary purpose appears to have been titillation, thus landing it in the genre of exploitation cinema.

Hallucination Generation
Theatrical poster
Directed byEdward Mann
Produced byNigel Fox
Written byEdward Mann
StarringGeorge Montgomery
Danny Steinmann
Music byBernardo Segall
CinematographyFrancisco Sempere
Edited byFima Noveck
Distributed byTrans American Films
Release date
  • January 1967 (1967-01)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The film is a drama set in Spain where a small group of American young adults is living. The leader of the group is a drug dealer. The others are there living carefree lives as beatniks. The leader has more nefarious aims in mind, and uses drugs to lure the others into lives of crime. Most of the film is in black and white, but there is a psychedelic sequence depicting the purported effects of the group using LSD which was filmed in color.

It is often cited as an example of counterculture cinema.

George Montgomery is the psychedelic advisor to a circle of young expatriates living on the Isle of Ibiza. Visitor Danny Stone, who avoids taking part in the fun until his mother cuts off his allowance, seeks help in a monastery after an LSD-induced crime spree results in the murder of a Barcelona antiques dealer. The real world is black-and-white, the LSD trips are in color. Featuring Renate Kasche, Tom Baker, Marianne Kanter, and Steve Rowland. Filmed in Spain.

The film inspired a 1989 song, Hallucination Generation by the new beat band The Gruesome Twosome. [1]

gollark: Sorry, intermediate.
gollark: This is just something something mean value theorem.
gollark: It's absolutely possible to do boring rote-ish questions with more fundamental content though.
gollark: They use the same content as A-level but are actually very thinky.
gollark: Have you seen STEP and the MAT?

See also

References

  • Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film, Michael Weldon, Ballantine 1983, pp. 302


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