Zachariah (1971) Poster

(1971)

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7/10
Better than you might expect.
Ghenghy14 December 2002
Still dont remember why I bought this DVD, or why it sat for 3 years before watching it. Anyway, this movie is a real hoot. From Don Johnson's premiere as an 18 yr old Prom Queen lookalike with a sidearm to Country Joe's surreal insertion into an old west shoot-em-up saloon. The whole thing is just twisted as hell, and fun.

A recommended rental with a 6 pack. 7 tokes.
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5/10
Was it my imagination, or did anyone else notice this?
kabej516 June 2005
I saw this movie when it first came out, and I must say that it never tried to appeal to everybody's taste, perhaps not even mine.

However, one thing that has stuck with me for more than a third of a century is that someone in the group of about a dozen people that I was with suggested that this was in large part a remake of Siddhartha, just transposed into an off-beat western. Ultimately, the whole group concurred in this assessment, including myself (I had just finished reading the work by Hess -- the year being 1971). I got the feeling it was an effort to concoct a cult classic that just didn't hit the mark. Still, the cast is very representative of a group that would make such an effort, while not taking itself too seriously. Not great art, but a great page from the scrapbook of a counterculture.
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7/10
electric
mckidd653428 December 2006
I saw this movie when it first came out and occasionally think about it. It was called the 'first electric western', if I remember right. It was fun and funny and I'd like to see it again. I remember little after over thirty years, but I believe it was low budget with mostly outdoor scenes, desert at that. The 'outlaw' gang, 'The Crackers', had their own theme song, which they sang. I think Zacharia and his friend were marijuana farmers in the desert. I believe it was even called a 'cult' film, or something similar. It's hard to remember, after so many years, but I recommend this movie and I'm looking forward to seeing it again myself.
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Silly but fun Rock'n'Roll western.
Infofreak9 July 2001
Oh, how I love late 60s/early 70s Hollywood! When the studios figured to capture the turned on youth market, but had NO CLUE what was really going on! Great era when almost anything could be passed off as psychedelic, and weirdos like the Firesign Theatre could co-write a movie and GET IT MADE. Grooovy!

'Zachariah' is a unique, rock'n'roll western, which is so lame brained and misguided it turns out to be one of the most entertaining movies of the period. Just check out the cast! Pretty boy Don Johnson, TVs John Rubenstein, Country Joe and The Fish, and DICK VAN PATTEN! Add to that a Who-inspired James Gang (with a young, clean shaven Joe Walsh) and Coltrane's legendary drummer Elvin Jones, and you've got a truly, er, UNIQUE proposition!

Make a great double-bill with 'Tommy'!
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7/10
How the West Rocked
EmperorNortonII9 February 2005
"Zachariah" seems to be some sort of experiment, crossing the classic Western with the rock musical. Today it just seems absurd. (Electric guitars in the Old West? Who knew?) Today's audiences will recognize Don Johnson co-starring as Matthew, and Dick Van Patten's cameo as the Dude. Another noticeable performance is by Country Joe McDonald and the Fish, as an outlaw rock band, the Crackers. In its day "Zachariah" may have been popular with hippies and rock fans, and perhaps a few Western fans. Today, it seems like the thing for people who just want a good laugh. There is some good music, though, from White Lightnin' and the James Gang (not Jesse and Frank!). It's worth a look and a listen, even if you find you'd have to see "Zachariah" to believe such a movie was made!
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5/10
Not exactly a masterpiece
kurtralske5 June 2020
There's a certain type of late 60s film that tries to communicate some kind of heavy psychedelic truth (El Topo, The Trip, 2001, World on a Wire).

And then there's the kind of late 60s film that's about irreverent psychedelic whimsy, nonsensically waving its freak flag high (Skidoo!, Head, Putney Swope, Brewster McCloud).

"Zachariah" aims to be both, and unfortunately fails at both. The whimsical parts seem to be based on the idea that combining rock music and the Old West is a hysterically funny idea. It isn't. The heavy parts reach for hippie cosmic-consciousness wisdom but come off very cliche.

A compelling narrative might make up for these two failures, but the acting and plot doesn't engage, either. (There is an implied homoerotic romance, but that's not developed enough to become interesting.) So the viewer is left holding the bag -- a horse feed-bag of dumb jokes, fake tripiness, and bad writing.

Oh I forgot -- the single redeeming element is Elvin Jones. Elvin freakin Jones, the greatest jazz drummer ever! And he's great! He should have been in more movies.
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6/10
Not as bad as you think.
g_rant136 June 2001
Surprisingly I found myself enjoying this movie in a twisted way. The characters are so funny that you realize this movie doesn't take it self seriously. Don Johnson is great in his role as "the bad guy." Although one really annoying part of the plot got me. The main catalyst for the rift between them is the scene when they realize that there can be only one of them in the group. Well why???? They never say and it really doesn't make any sense. But what can you say about a rock n' roll western?
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3/10
Embarrassing '60's leftover is best forgotten.
Hermit C-223 April 1999
The ads referred to this as "an electric Western." You'd have to be pretty stoned, then or now, to get much enjoyment out of this confused mishmash. I can't believe the members of the Firesign Theatre had anything to do with writing this comedy or whatever it is. The only reason for watching would be to see Elvin Jones (and how did HE get mixed up in this?) He does a typically awesome drum solo, the movie's only highlight, unless you like the James Gang (Joe Walsh), featured in the opening.
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9/10
Rock and Roll Hesse
batzi8m18 November 1999
Siddhartha done as a Rock and Roll Comedy Western by two of the members of the Firesign Theatre - What's there not to love.

Even if you don't recognize the themes of self discovery based on Herman Hesse's classic story of the Buddha's early journey, this is still a fun movie featuring the classic American western outlaw story done as a send-up.

It's like a light hearted version of El Topo only it made me laugh where the other made me squirm - in a good way. This is not to say that the story is the same as either. It merely shares the same themes.

Particularly amusing are the scenes with Country Joe and the Fish as the bungling highwaymen. Louisiana Man Doug Kershaw as the lone fiddler in black and the James Gang's opening scene are breathtaking and funny at the same time. It reminds me of Hesse's line in Steppenwolf when Mozart laughs at the hero in his dream because he can't hear the music through the static on the radio. This music celebrates the joy of life that epitomized the counterculture rebellion against the darkness of the times.

Max Frisch, the Swiss author, defended an attack on the silence of the Swiss writers during the horrors of Nazi Germany by saying he wanted to set up against that all the other things that still can be called life. This movie was part of that movement -- forget superficial commercial ventures like Hair or JC Superstar or the Tommy movie -- this was the musical of the rock and roll generation as much as Rocky Horror was the musical of the Glam Rock generation. Only back then young people were just grateful to be alive and have any dreams at all. It's no wonder that the votes on this one has old farts like me rating it much higher than anyone else. I guess you had to be there back when these musicians couldn't even get radio airplay. I haven't seen this in nearly twenty years when it last played at one of the revival houses but it's one of the few movies whose scenes I can replay in my mind an laugh out loud. This is how we celebrated all those other things that we still called life.

Although I would no longer condone such practices, this film appears to have been made to also be enjoyable under the influence of the popular psychoactive alkaloids of the era.
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6/10
A really wild western
BandSAboutMovies30 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"The first electric Western" is the kind of movie that could have only have come out in 1971.

How else do you explain a musical Western that is based on Hermann Hesse's novels Siddhartha and Narcissus and Goldmund that stars - and has music by - the James Gang (featuring Joe Walsh, playing Job Cain's Band), White Lightnin' (a Cream soundalike band that Old Man's Band), New York Rock 'n Roll Ensemble (a classical baroque rock group that includes Michael Kamen (who did incidental music for Lifeforce but is probably better known for all those Bryan Adams songs that your mom loved), Marty Fulterman (AKA Mark Snow, who composed the X-Files theme) and Dorian Rudnytsky, plus two rock musicians Brian Corrigan and Clif Nivison, as Belle Starr's band) and Country Joe and the Fish as the Crackers?

This is a movie with no less than five writers**:

Joe Massot: This filmmaker is best known for George Harrison's Wonderwall, as well as starting Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains the Same before being sacked and subbed by Peter Clifton*. Massot was inspired to make this movie when he followed the Beatles to study with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. When he got there, only George*** and John were there, locked in a meditation duel.

Phil Austin, Peter Bergman, David Ossman and Philip Proctor: Better known as The Firesign Theater, who was called "the Beatles of comedy" by no less a source than the U. S. Library of Congress, this surreal comedy group existed to remind us that "Everything You Know Is Wrong." Again, only in the 70s and not today, but they became famous through radio and comedy albums.

After finding a mail-order gun in the desert, Zachariah (John Rubinstein) and his best friend Matthew (Don Johnson) leave behind their small town and decide to become gunfighters. They start to follow the Crackers and Zachariah shows that he's an able gunfighter, but when challenged by the deadly gunfighter drummer Job Cain**** (Elvin James, who played drums for John Coltrane, Charles Mingus and Miles Davis), Zachariah decides to leave behind this life, worried that at some point he and Matthew will end up killing one another.

Zachariah's vision quest takes him to the Old Man who lives alone in the desert and refuses the violence of the west. He tells him of the town of El Camino, a place where pleasure - and Dick Van Patten - is readily available, including the carnal delights of Belle Starr (Pat Quinn, who played Alice in Alice's Restaurant). But hedonism isn't what our protagonist is into either. So he wanders back to the Old Man who teaches him the mantra "Hurry up and die."

On the other hand, Matthew has moved up in the world of crime and has plans of taking over from Cain. He travels to El Camino where he meets Zachariah, who takes up his gun again and angers the Old Man so much that he claims that he will never speak with him again.

The conclusion takes both men into town where the death of Cain - and possibly both of our heroes - hangs over the proceedings. Can Zachariah's love for his friend save both of them?

Director George Englund was married to Cloris Leachman for nearly twenty-five years and also made The Ugly American and produced the post-apocalyptic film The World, the Flesh and the Devil.

I have no idea why people aren't losing their minds over this movie every single day. It's a head film about cowboys who carry guitars along with their guns and where a man - a black man in 1971! - can shoot another man dead before playing a two-minute drum solo. Just imagine if the role went to the musician it was originally intended for, legendary maniac Ginger Baker.

*Strangely enough, Clifton had one of the missing NASA films of Neil Armstrong taking mankind's first steps on the moon. Wait, what? Yes, believe it or not, Clifton has forgotten that he had the film, keeping it for twenty years in a safe as part of his personal film collection. He had originally ordered the film for just $180 from the Smithsonian and had forgotten to return it. The rest of the original NASA tapes have been lost somewhere in the U. S. and the hope is that Clifton's part of the overall library will lead researchers to the rest.

**AFI reports that the Firesigns publicly rejected the film because their original script had been changed so much. Massot, who was to be the director, resigned over artistic differences.

***According to Levon Helm, Harrison discussed making Zachariah as an Apple Films project starring Bob Dylan and The Band. At one point, Cream's drummer Ginger Baker and The Band were also to be the main actors in this movie.

****The sound was so poorly recorded here that New Orleans session drummer Earl Palmer had to play an ADR and hit every single bear. You can hear Palmer play on everything from Little Richard's "Long Tall Sally" and Richie Valens' "La Bamba" to "You Send Me" by Sam Cooke, Jan and Dean's "Dead Man's Curve," "River Deep - Mountain High" with Ike and Tina Turner and Tom Waits' "Whistlin' Past the Graveyard." He was also the session drummer for plenty of TV theme songs like The Flintstones, Green Acres, The Brady Bunch, Midnight Special and Mission: Impossible. At 72 years of age Palmer played with Cracker in the video for "I Hate My Generation." When lead singer David Lowery asked Palmer if he would be able to play along with the songs, he looked at the one-time Camper Beethoven singer and bassist before simply saying, "I invented this sh**."
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1/10
waste of time
adnan_soysal28 January 2022
What is the theme of this movie?

Nothing.

There is no story, and plot is a mess.

Why on earth people make such movies?

Though cast is good.

They really act good; but in a nonsense setting.

Is this movie about how hippy and rock'n roll generation were like cowboys in the wild west.

Were their souls same?

Anyway, waste of time.
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10/10
I Love This Movie the Same As 40 Years Later
dr_john_pollard10 July 2011
Make that 50 years later. The full movie is on youtube now, which is great, it used to be just scenes. There was so much comedy in the music of all places, and it holds up even more from my review ten years ago. Still unique among movies. A recent BBC review attempted to paint this movie with a gay brush; sorry, it's just not there. It's a film about friendship and the challenges when ego gets in the way.

If you have a chance, watch this movie on DVD with an open mind. Know that it is unique in all filmdom, a musical, and every music scene is memorable, especially if you like drums. I saw it in 1972 in a double feature midnight show when everyone else was there for Billy Jack. There's so many ways to praise this movie, especially the cinematography, clever set-design. I always thought Rubenstein was going to be a big star, who knew it would be Sonny Crocket.

Here is something a friend recently emailed, for the true connoisseur.

"I engineered the sound track for the James Gang and some others. Went down to effin calinete, south of El Centro.... for the shoot. People were fainting from the heat and we lived on a very watered diet... soups, salads, soups, fruits, and water. Wow... very hot and liquid. If you watch the film, notice the refractions off the acrylic guitars and the liquid backdrop landscape of the heat, coming up from the ground.

We had problems with way off background... a truck in the distance that they did not want in the frames... The mountains seemed to be within walking distance but they were miles away. Many people got very sick from the heat.

Good film... I was only there for a small portion of the shoot... George Englund (married at that time to Cloris Leachman) having an affair with a woman named Sydney. Marlon Brando was living at George's house because he was involved with someone (?)...

Sad to see the poverty there and within the hotel compound, $$$$...."
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7/10
A true original.
Hey_Sweden27 September 2021
Billed as "the electric Western", this curiosity goes a fairly long way on its anachronisms, giving us engaging performances as well a wonderfully offbeat nature. John Rubinstein ("The Boys from Brazil") and Don Johnson ('Miami Vice') play good buddies in the Old West looking to make their name as gunfighters - although, during his odyssey, Zachariah (Rubinstein) will have his doubts as to what he really wants to do with his life.

Part musical, this ingratiating little movie features a raft of supporting performances by noted rock and country musicians - The James Gang, Country Joe and the Fish, White Lightnin', The New York Rock Ensemble. If one is looking for a movie that's off the beaten path, and can accept seeing such things as electric guitars in a period piece, then you should have a reasonable time with this one.

The whole cast is fun to watch. Rubinstein and Johnson have good chemistry, and there are delightful, key contributions by such people as Patricia Quinn ("Alice's Restaurant") as Belle Starr, William Challee ("Five Easy Pieces") as the genial elderly loner, and noted drummer Elvin Jones, who has a fine screen presence as a gunfighter named Job Cain. Dick Van Patten ('Eight is Enough') appears as an Old West pitchman named The Dude. Rubinstein and Johnson are believable and appealing as the central characters, both in search of their destinies.

Co-written by members of Firesign Theatre, this isn't just fun and games. It has a poignancy to it as well, especially as things come to a head and the friendship between our protagonists is put to a test.

Good entertainment for a well-paced 93 minutes, this was directed by George Englund, whose other credits include "The Ugly American" and "Signpost to Murder".

Seven out of 10.
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A Western Head film.
eshearin12 July 2002
Remember Easy Rider? Remember Beyond the Valley of the Dolls? Remember Fistful of Dollars? Now, put all those movies in a blender, hit frappe, and you'll get Zachariah. Once you get past the fact that they're playing electric guitars in 1880's, it's an enjoyable film.
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6/10
Rock and Roll Outlaws..... Literally
tbaltmail5 April 2018
Coming of age story set in a surreal version of the "old west" where the bands play thru Marshall stacks and the gunslingers play virtuoso drum solos... A young Don Johnson (of Miami Vice fame) seems slightly out of place here, and the film descends into gloopy melodrama in it's latter stages - but the involvement of the Firesign Theater crew at least ensures a fair helping of the bizarre. Well worth a watch for anyone with an affection for Seventies rock and the attendant culture - some great moments, including the opening scene.....
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10/10
This "far out" western is a comical, musical, must see film.
jmoore-627 December 2000
When I first saw this film in 1971 I was blown away by the cast, the dialogue (which is almost embarrasing, but fun to listen to now), and the music. Don Johnson and John Rubenstein did an incredible job as wannabe gunslingers and comic moments from the likes of Country Joe were classic. Musically, performances by The James Gang, Elvin Bishop, The New York Rock n Roll Ensemble, etc..., rounded off this film nicely. The plot was predictable, as most are, but the ride was a memorable one. I throw this in the VHS player every once in a while and I'm never sorry I did...
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8/10
Not all trips are good trips, BUT...
RodMorgan25 September 2002
Firesign Theatre has distanced themselves from the film, having spoken of a script they wrote for a comic western "that was never made." But this is a quirky little coming-of-age tale some years BEFORE "Blazing Saddles" that has a lot of fun trying to cram rock and roll, dope and westerns into the same screen. Uneven, certainly, but with a number of rewards. Sort of like a Firesign Theatre album.
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8/10
Off The Wall, For Sure.
stringer2611 June 2010
I saw this movie in it's first run with a date. She was totally confused, I was excited to see anything with the music I knew, and two Firesign Theater members involved. I was most impressed with Doug Kershaw's music. The James Gang also had one song that rocks more than just about anything else they ever did. I recently found it on Itunes, but was never able to find the music Kershaw played in the film. I wish the soundtrack were available, I'd buy it in a minute. I did buy the LP right after I saw the film and still play it. The rock version of the William Tell Overture is also a riot. Once you hear it, you'll never listen to the classical version the same. The DVD was released a few years ago, and I have it. It's a strange film, but there's certainly nothing remotely like it. A classic.
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10/10
Grooooovy
codmon5 February 1999
This is easily Don Johnson's best work ever. This is a hilarious western musical with a mind blowing rock and roll soundtrack. The drum solo by Elvin Jones will kill you. IF you can find it you MUST rent it.
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8/10
One of my all-time favorites
sgar32323 February 2002
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this film on its first run back in '71 or '72. Saw it on a date with a nurse from the hospital where I worked in Plantation, Florida. Had known very little about it beforehand. Was blown away. Spent the rest of the date (at restaurant) explaining Hesse's Siddhartha and all the points of congruency. Also recognized names of Firesign Theater. Was convinced they'd retold Siddhartha, which is Hesse's retelling of the Buddha story of spiritual enlightenment, mixing American West gunfighter myth and rock and roll--two key archetypes/myths of our generation: ingenious premise, well-executed. My conviction was confirmed absolutely when I saw it again later and recognized Zach's response to Belle as verbatim Siddhartha's response to the courtesan in Hesse--trying to avoid spoiler here.

Of course the movie is somewhat dated now, 30 years later. But it was clever and even profound in its day and still worth seeing. I'd recommend reading the book first in order to fully appreciate what they were doing.

One other comment: I see a parallel between Zachariah's pairing of Old West gunfighters and rock and roll and the Eagles' Desperado song story--especially apparent in the song "Certain Kind of Fool:"

"I saw it in a window, the mark of a new kind of man; I kinda liked the feeling, so shiny and smooth in my hand; I took it to the country and practiced for days without rest; And then one day I felt it: I knew I could stand with the best."

Is "it" a six-gun or a six-string? Yes. Whenever I heard this song I pictured Zachariah out in the desert practicing his shooting.

See the film if you can. Enjoy the music. Follow the story. It's worth it.
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In Defense of the Firesign Theatre
JasonLeeSmith8 June 2006
I've never seen this movie, but I had to jump in to the defense of the Firesign Theatre, and the popular misconception that they wrote this movie. In reading interviews with various members of the comedy team, the Firesign Theatre wrote *the first draft* of this movie which was meant to be a comedic adaptation of Sidhartha, set in the old west. Then what seems to have happened was that the studio executives assigned another writer to do a re-write (and probably tinkered a bit with the script themselves) and the final product bore only a passing similarity to the original script.

I do not think that the Firesign Theatre are in any way proud of this movie and don't mention it on their web-site.
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10/10
This movie takes you on a trippy Western 60's vibe!!
dogismygod22 January 2005
If you like esoteric and dream-like 60's movies, this is an awesome flick! The James Gang rides again in this one and there is a surreal, 60's flavored feeling that features some sweet folks from that era, musician having fun acting!!!. Think of Easy rider turned into a Spagehetti Western that was made in the USA for trippers and folks that love a flower power trip back to the old west, with a Grateful Dead feel, they do not appear, but their spirit is there and you will love this soul searching -find- yourself film that hearkens to a more innocent time when imagination and music was all that was necessary.. find it and rent it! Take a trip down on Haight St. in a Western dream!GROOOOOVY! Peace!
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What's Up With Your Gaydar?
bneyman26 January 2004
I've read the comments of the other viewers posted here, and I agree that the film is fun (if a bit silly) and the music is great. The Siddartha angle is interesting, and I think the script by Firesign Theater is very entertaining. But I ask you: Am I the only viewer to notice the sexual tension between Rubenstein and Johnson, and to pick up on the gay sub-text? Yes, Zachariah tries to renounce violence, but could it be he's really just denying his attachment to Matthew?
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10/10
Zachariah
superpopis18 August 2021
I saw this movie in the early 70's when it first came out and never forgot it. The scene with the James Gang introduced me to their music. I couldn't remember the name and just run across it and going to watch it on u tube again.
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8/10
Better than I expected - also great music!
ejonconrad7 May 2021
I'm a fan of weird movies, but I'd never heard of this until it popup in a Firesign Theatre fan group.

As far as I know, this the only example of a hippiesploitation surreal Western musical - well, sort of musical. The characters don't sing, but they throw in real groups from the time, including Country Joe and the Fish and the James Gang. Of course, they're simply thrown into the Old West playing their electric instruments without comment.

The two main characters are the eponymous Zachariah, played by John Rubinstein (you might not recognize the name, but you've seen him in a million things), and Matthew, played by a very young Don Johnson in his only second movie role.

They are close friends (and as close to being gay as you could get away with at that time) who set off to become gunslingers. They both get very good, but then follow separate paths, with Zachariah going on a Siddhartha-like quest to find himself.

I suspect the copious weed smoking in the movie was real, as several characters appear to be VERY high much of the time, but I have to admit I genuinely enjoyed this movie, both the story and the music.

I mean, how often do you get a drum solo in a Western?
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