Spring Night Summer Night

1967

Action / Drama

Plot summary

Carl and Jessie are half siblings who feel trapped by the existential and economic pressures of living in the small mining town of Canaan, Ohio. Their shared rebellion soon takes on the form of an illicit love affair depicted in interwoven sequences of lusty poeticism and ethnographic vérité. When Jessie becomes pregnant, the tension between the couple’s youthful vitality and the dire realities of rural society leads to consequences both despairing and hopeful.

Top cast

Hersha Parady as Donna
John Crawford as Father
Ron Parady as Tom
Larue Hall as Jessica
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
768.73 MB
1204*720
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 23 min
Seeds 3
1.39 GB
1792*1072
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 23 min
Seeds 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by tshary17 6 / 10

Appalachian Life After WWII

When I was a grad student at the Ohio University School of Film (M. A.1992), this was a "lost" myth of a movie from a quarter century earlier. Many of my peers were ambitiously making short films, but mustering the funds and means to make a credible feature was improbable. At the time, no one knew about any extant prints of rare feature, so I'm glad it has been restored (and the image quality is excellent).Athens, where O. U. is housed, always seemed to resist the Appalachian culture that surrounds it. Here that culture is on full display, within a poignant story that was really quite daring for its time. Those sensational aspects can overshadow the film's meditation on the decline of small towns in the '60s after the postwar boom subsided, and the restive torment that plagued youth as a result.Some aspects could have been "better" if you want to compare it to Hollywood films of the era, but as a capsule of social strife and family intrigue, this accomplished a more distinctive and authentic portrait of American life than the industry could have ever rendered.
Reviewed by TheCapsuleCritic 8 / 10

Remarkable Restoration Of A Remarkable Film.

Everything about SPRING NIGHT SUMMER NIGHT is remarkable. From the making of the movie to its unlikely odyssey through the grindhouse circuit and final rediscovery and restoration to what the filmmakers intended. It all began in 1967 with the completion of a personal project for director J. L. (Joseph) Anderson. Anderson, an instructor of film studies at Ohio University had already made 3 short films informally known as the "Bluegrass Trilogy" because of their soundtracks, in the early 1960s. Those films, FOOTBALL AS IT IS PLAYED TODAY (1961), HOW SWIVED (1962), and CHEERS (1963), are all included as part of this Flicker Alley Blu-Ray/DVD combo release.

Anderson then wanted to make a feature length movie based on the principles of Italian neo-realism cinema substituting small town Americans for post-WW II Italians. The people would be the citizens of Shawnee, Ohio (renamed Canaan for the film), a once thriving mining town that had fallen on hard times following the closing of the mines. The focus would be on one fictional Appalachian family with their dashed hopes that had either seen better days or held out the prospect of a life that was going nowhere.

The focus is on two half-siblings, Jessie and Carl, who have a one night tryst that results in Jessie becoming pregnant and Carl running away before coming back to face up to his responsibilities. As it turns out, things are not what they seem and the pair leave together with the hope of a brighter future. However the real stars of SPRING NIGHT SUMMER NIGHT are not the young people nor their parents (played by professional actors) but the local townsfolk and the surrounding locations that were used in the movie.

Shot over a period of 2 years, SPRING NIGHT SUMMER NIGHT was entered into a couple of arthouse festivals as a work of independent cinema. Sadly it was not well received in Europe and then was bumped at the last minute from the 6th New York Film Festival which would have given it credible exposure. In a desperate attempt to recover costs and pay his non-professional crew, Anderson sold the movie to exploitation king Joseph Brenner who re-edited the film then released it to drive-ins as MISS JESSICA IS PREGNANT. After the initial run, it disappeared until 2008 when it was discovered in a basement at the University of Iowa.

The restoration of the original footage was a labor of love that took 7 years. Fortunately director Anderson was still alive and got to see the restoration in 2015. In an interview at that time, he talked about the making of the movie and its convoluted history. That interview along with several other bonus features are included in this Blu-Ray/DVD release. They include short films on the restoration, scenes and outtakes from the original movie and MISS JESSICA IS PREGNANT, as well as the aforementioned "Bluegrass Trilogy". The movie and all the other materials look great and have clean, crisp sound. All in all this is a fascinating look at an important and almost forgotten look at American independent cinema from the 1960s. Once again Flicker Alley has come through by providing film students and lovers of cinema with a remarkable release...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.

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