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IMDbPro

Punishment Park

  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
8.1K
YOUR RATING
Punishment Park (1971)
Pseudo-documentary purporting to be a film crews's news coverage of the team of soldiers escorting a group of hippies, draft dodgers, and anti-establishment types across the desert in a type of capture the flag game. The soldiers vow not to interfere with the rebels' progress and merely shepherd them along to their destination.
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
48 Photos
Political ThrillerDramaThriller

"Punishment Park" is a pseudo-documentary purporting to be a film crews's news coverage of the team of soldiers escorting a group of hippies, draft dodgers, and anti-establishment types acro... Read all"Punishment Park" is a pseudo-documentary purporting to be a film crews's news coverage of the team of soldiers escorting a group of hippies, draft dodgers, and anti-establishment types across the desert in a type of capture the flag game. The soldiers vow not to interfere with t... Read all"Punishment Park" is a pseudo-documentary purporting to be a film crews's news coverage of the team of soldiers escorting a group of hippies, draft dodgers, and anti-establishment types across the desert in a type of capture the flag game. The soldiers vow not to interfere with the rebels' progress and merely shepherd them along to their destination. At that point, ha... Read all

  • Director
    • Peter Watkins
  • Writer
    • Peter Watkins
  • Stars
    • Patrick Boland
    • Kent Foreman
    • Carmen Argenziano
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    8.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Watkins
    • Writer
      • Peter Watkins
    • Stars
      • Patrick Boland
      • Kent Foreman
      • Carmen Argenziano
    • 60User reviews
    • 74Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Trailer

    Photos48

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Patrick Boland
    • First Tribunal Defendant
    Kent Foreman
    • Defendant in the tribunal
    Carmen Argenziano
    Carmen Argenziano
    • Jay Kaufman, Tribunal Defendant
    Luke Johnson
    • Defendant in the tribunal
    Katherine Quittner
    Katherine Quittner
    • Nancy Smith
    Scott Turner
    Scott Turner
    • James Arthur Kohler, Tribunal Defendant
    Stan Armsted
    Stan Armsted
    • Charles Robbins
    Mary Ellen Kleinhall
    Mary Ellen Kleinhall
    • Allison Mitchner
    Mark Keats
    • William C. Hoeger, Tribunal Chairman
    Gladys Golden
    Gladys Golden
    • Mary Jurgens, Tribunal Member
    Sanford Golden
    Sanford Golden
    • Sen. Harris
    George Gregory
    • Mr. Keagan
    Norman Sinclair
    Norman Sinclair
    • Alfred J. Sully - Tribunal Member
    Sigmund Rich
    • Prof. Hazlett
    Paul Rosenstein
    Paul Rosenstein
    • Paul Reynolds - Tribunal Member
    Lee Marks
    Lee Marks
    • Robert J. Donovan, FBI Agent
    Sandy Cox
    • Stenographer
    Fred Franklyn
    Fred Franklyn
    • James Daly, Defense Attorney
    • (as Frederick Franklyn)
    • Director
      • Peter Watkins
    • Writer
      • Peter Watkins
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews60

    7.78K
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    Featured reviews

    Lomedin

    Reality through the lens of illusion

    I first knew of this film because of a quote at the beginning of a song. After a little research, I found that it came from this film and, finding the synopsis interesting, watched it. I found several other mind-blowing quotes, and a sense of fear that normally lies controlled under all the illusory security and freedom our governments force unto us via the media machinery and embedded social standards to keep the masses happy in their ignorance. I am not strange to that feeling, since I may know too much for my own good, and also like to do my best to fight this putrid system we were all born into. Punishment Park is shocking because it is happening. I've seen it. While your average Joe rants about the increase in taxes while drowning his frustration in a can of beer, there are others who actually take action. And are at risk of suffering the torments of the so-called "law" in the name of a distorted justice and self-created ideals such as patriotism or morality. The "judges" portrayed in this film do exist, full of absurd and obsolete ideas, believing to be the voice of reason, while those who actually speak sense are treated like criminals, gagged and beaten by the arm of the law, individuals just like any other people who, by the almighty and imaginary power of state, are given the authority to command and do as they please with the common citizen. This movie is not a false documentary. It's a depiction of what has been happening for years in America, in Europe, in Asia, in every continent and with every government. You, thinking you can be as free as you can possibly imagine, whose biggest worries are what to have for dinner, take heed. The body lying on the pavement could be you, murdered by those who claim to come in the name of peace. "At another time, the honorable thing or the right thing to do might be to be a policeman or to be President. Right now, I think the honorable thing to do is to be a criminal"
    DJ Inferno

    Just a few words...

    Who´s not for the state is against it.

    Against a constitution which distinguishes itself with being conservative and contradictory in its foundations.

    "Punishment Park" is a great portrait about the Nixon era, that hasn´t lost anything from its explosiveness till today.

    This film is banned in America, but it should be seen by everyone - especially by US-citizens...
    Djangokitty

    Amazing film!!!!!!

    As someone who was dealing with the draft board the year this was made, I was absolutely astounded by the truth of it's vision. The haircuts, clothes, figures of speech, that was what it looked and felt like at the time. Contrary to popular memory, everyone wasn't a hippy with a few "bad" people who were for the war. It WAS scary! I may be wrong, but I do believe that most of the dialogue of the trial section, anyway, was written from various quotes such as from the trial of the Chicago 7. If you want to see something amazing, imagine that on national TV!!! It was on national TV!!!!

    Great movie!!!
    tjackson

    A lost classic of strength and purpose.Find it. See it.

    I had to see this movie with French subtitles, as I understand it was unavailable for 30 years. I can see why. As a mock documentary, it thinly disguises a diatribe against American society during the Vietnam era - the country's hypocrisy and its culture of violence. It is a forthright piece of agit-prop mock verite filmmaking that I can imagine would easily provoke strong reactions among the youth and among the left during that divisive era. That, of course, is its strength and its purpose. The narrative itself cuts between two scenarios. Neither is meant to be 'realistic'; each is exaggerated for impact and to push the metaphoric value of the situation. On one hand, you have a group of radicals neatly representing various factions of the left - a feminist, a pacifist, a revolutionary, a black activist, a political activist, a musician for free expression. They are brought one by one before a kind of kangaroo court made up of various bigoted, closed minded fascistic pro-war, `America Love it or Leave it' types. These 'pigs' are there to determine the guilt of these left wing 'subversives' and then give them a choice - fifteen years in a federal prison or - Punishment Park. The second scenario involves a group of radicals who have been sentenced to Punishment Park and are about to find out what that means. This story provides a second metaphor concerning American injustice and its cults of violence, division, and oppression. This group must get across the desert in 90 to 100 degree heat to a final destination, where the American flag has been placed. They have two hours to get a head start before a group of p***ed off and bloodthirsty troopers and National guardsman will attempt to hunt them down. They must then surrender or be shot. The chances - obviously - are slim. By going back and forth between these two scenes - the absurd tirades of right wing bigots against the left to the hopeless cause of radicals running for freedom in Punishment Park - the point is made quite clear. The effect of the relentless documentary style and of the film's punishing politics keeps your interest and still manages to incite and indict. Many of Watkins' images recall images of the 60's - assassinated radicals, dead blacks, assaults by National Guardsmen, gags in court, and strong echos of the McCarthy hearings. The cumulative effect is strong stuff. Where it could have gotten silly and where it could feel dated - it still disturbs. It is a fabulous premise for a political satire. It would work well now with the neo digital Verite style of the Blair Witch Project in practice and the purloined presidency of George W. and his oppressive cronies in charge.
    10Jenabel_Regina_del_Mundo

    another chillingly accurate depiction of days of future present from Watkins

    You can't watch a film like Peter Watkins' "Privilege," a story of the exploitation of a pop music performer by big business, the state, and even organized religion, without thinking of creatively degenerate commodities like Michael Jackson or Britney Spears, who hawk corporate giants like Pepsi or some other poison for money. Or any number of entertainers, in music or movies, who become tools of political parties or commercial religious interests like Scientology and Kabbalah. A film like Privilege must have seemed almost like science fiction when released in 1967, so fantastic was its premise. Today we tend to take celebrity endorsements for granted, giving little thought to its more alarming implications. Watkins' vision has not only become reality, we tacitly accept this reality as "normal."

    Now consider Punishment Park. As Privilege challenges the viewer to examine what is being sold to us, and why, Punishment Park demands that we reckon with what is being taken from us, and why.

    Heaven help America, and for that matter the world, if contemporary politicians get their hands on this film. It is already so close to reality, that in viewing it recently, I experienced a genuine, nauseating feeling of anxiety.

    Watkins again skillfully employs a documentary-style narrative. Whereas in Privilege some rough edges to this technique were apparent, in Punishment Park it has been honed to sharp, seamless perfection. The sense of realism is enhanced by disarmingly unpretentious, economical, believable portrayals by the entire cast. This is the kind of acting Hollywood has completely turned its back on, to its detriment, in favor of cosmetically perfect image projections. The cast has first-rate material to work with in Watkins' screenplay.

    Many cinematic visionaries have tried to shake the viewer out of their complacent, false sense of security. No one has ever achieved this result with such stark and chilling accuracy as Peter Watkins does here.

    "What seems quite clear now, is that instead of trying to bring the estranged and excluded Americans, such as these people, back into the national community, the Administration has chosen to accept and exploit the present division within the country, and to side with what it considers is the majority. Instead of the politics of reconciliation, it has chosen the politics of polarization."

    To paraphrase one of the characters, we don't have to call them pigs because they know what they are. Better than we do.

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    Related interests

    Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford in All the President's Men (1976)
    Political Thriller
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Many of the "actors" were not acting in a traditional sense. In the introduction, Peter Watkins says many protesters were real-life protesters, and most soldiers were real-life conservatives. All improvised lines based on their opinions. There were no rehearsals.
    • Goofs
      In her tribunal closing statement, Alison Mitchner makes reference to the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States, and uses the phrase "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness". This phrase is in the second sentence of the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution.
    • Quotes

      Mary Jurgens, Tribunal Member: [shouting] You are immoral!

      Jay Kaufman, Tribunal Defendant: I am not immoral.

      [she continually interrups with shouting]

      Jay Kaufman, Tribunal Defendant: You want me to tell you what's immoral? War is immoral! Poverty is immoral! Racism is immoral! Police brutality is immoral! Opression is immoral! Genocide is immoral! Imperialism is immoral! This country represents all those things!

    • Crazy credits
      There are no opening credits at all. The title doesn't appear until halfway through the closing credits.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hagan Reviews: Punishment Park (2017)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Punishment Park?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 10, 1972 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Strafpark
    • Filming locations
      • San Bernardino Mountains, California, USA(Location)
    • Production companies
      • Churchill Films
      • Françoise Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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