Marijuana (film)
Marijuana is a 34-minute 1968 anti-drug documentary film by Max Miller and distributed by Avanti Films.[1] It is narrated by Sonny Bono. It was described as "the first major film effort to center upon the use and possible risks of marijuana",[2] in which "arguments for and against its use are presented and the accumulation of arguments against is allowed to speak for itself".[3] Music for the documentary was composed by The Byrds' Gene Clark, a "bizarre" choice in his musical career, resulting in "meandering blues and pseudo-psychedelic instrumental jams".[4]
Marijuana | |
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Directed by | Max Miller |
Narrated by | Sonny Bono |
Music by | Gene Clark (composer) |
Distributed by | Avanti Films |
Release date |
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See also
- Case Study: LSD, a 1969 film also narrated by Sonny Bono
References
- Cecil E. Johnson; Malcolm M. MacDonald (1971), Society and the Environment: Contemporary Readings, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, pp. 118, 131
- 99 [plus] Films on Drugs, Educational Film Library Association, 1970
- Kaapse Bibliotekaris, vol. 16, Cape (of Good Hope, S.A.) Provincial Library Service, 1972, p. lxv
- Einarson, John (2005), Mr. Tambourine Man: The Life and Legacy of the Byrds' Gene Clark, Hal Leonard Corporation, p. 128, ISBN 978-0-87930-793-6, OCLC 57434178
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