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- Jack Nicholson’s “Drive, He Said” is a disorganized but occasionally brilliant movie about two college students and the world they, and we, inhabit. Their campus is a microcosm of the least reassuring aspects of contemporary America; the two overwhelming mental states are paranoia and compulsive competitiveness.
www.rogerebert.com/reviews/drive-he-said-1972Drive, He Said movie review & film summary (1972) | Roger Ebert
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A basketball star (William Tepper) beds a professor's wife (Karen Black), while his anti-war roommate (Michael Margotta) goes mad. Watch Drive, He Said with a subscription on Prime Video, rent on...
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Sep 10, 2012 · Nicholson's movie was nothing less than his own variant on W.R.- Mysteries of the Organism: a boldly-shot campus yarn of basketball and revolution turning on notions of Reichian sex-pol.
Drive, He Said is a 1971 American independent film directed by Jack Nicholson, in his directorial debut, and starring William Tepper, Karen Black, Bruce Dern, Robert Towne and Henry Jaglom. Based on the 1964 novel of the same name by Jeremy Larner, the film follows a disenchanted college basketball player who is having an affair with a ...
Drive, He Said Reviews. All Critics. Top Critics. All Audience. Verified Audience. Roger Moore Movie Nation. Viewed today, the picture feels off-the-cuff, an exercise in throwing this or...
Synopsis. Don’t Lie, Don’t Cheat, And Don’t Be Afraid! Hector is a star basketball player for the College basketball team he plays for, the Leopards. His girlfriend, Olive, doesn’t know whether to stay with him or leave him.
Dec 9, 2010 · Synopsis. The two most overlooked films of the BBS era, Drive, He Said and A Safe Place are daring, personal character studies, and the directorial debuts of, respectively, Jack Nicholson and Henry Jaglom. Nicholson's feverish snapshot of the early seventies concerns a disaffected college basketball player and his increasingly radical roommate.