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Women of ’69, Unboxed 2017 123movies

Women of ’69, Unboxed 2017 123movies

Jan. 15, 201757 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Women of ’69, Unboxed 2014 123movies, Full Movie Online – Intimate, personalized portrait of women of the 1960s through the eyes of one colorful class that graduated in 1969 – same year as Hillary Clinton – and recently turned 65, starting to explore the New Old Age. At a time when these Boomers’ parents were asking less of themselves, many of these distinguished citizens are asking more, feeling a Third Wind. Where will it take them? Some are determined to keep making waves. The trigger for these revelations/reminiscences is the class’s yearbook. Each photo was a collaboration with a sexy Turkish artist, is full of the 60s spirit of risk, rebelliousness, creativity. Indeed, this yearbook wasn’t a book at all. The portraits came to each alumna loose leaf, in a box. Hence our metaphoric title: Unboxed!.
Plot: Intimate, personalized portrait of women of the 1960s through the eyes of one colorful class that graduated in 1969 – same year as Hillary Clinton – and recently turned 65, starting to explore the New Old Age. At a time when these Boomers’ parents were asking less of themselves, many of these distinguished citizens are asking more, feeling a Third Wind. Where will it take them? Some are determined to keep making waves. The trigger for these revelations/reminiscences is the class’s yearbook. Each photo was a collaboration with a sexy Turkish artist, is full of the 60s spirit of risk, rebelliousness, creativity. Indeed, this yearbook wasn’t a book at all. The portraits came to each alumna loose leaf, in a box. Hence our metaphoric title: Unboxed! Written by Anonymous
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Reviews:

Interesting perspective of the impact of the ’60s from alumni of Skidmore class of ’69
I found this interesting as I graduated from UCLA in 1968. I also visited family in NYC in ’65 and ’67 and spent a couple of weeks in Boston in ’69.

At the time I felt the East Coast was a couple of years behind the West Coast in terms of the social revolution. It was an interesting time because our high school years were pretty firmly rooted in the 1950’s and our college years were firmly rooted in the cultural revolution of the new music, clothes, attitudes, politics and morals.

By 1970 the dream of the cultural and political revolution as depicted in Easy Rider was pretty much over, what remained was sex, drugs and rock and roll, and needing to find a job.

Being in a public college, the University of California, I don’t think the majority of students there were thinking about their place in the world as these ladies were. We were thinking of surviving, getting out of school and getting on with life (with the draft hanging over your head if you were a male).

This documentary made me remember that I had very little success in forming relationships with college girls. I mostly dated girls who went to work after high school, secretaries, clerks, etc. In 1973 I married a girl who worked as a secretary, and have been married to her for 43 years now. To me the college girls seemed somewhat neurotic and confused. Working girls were down to earth, easy to talk to, liked to dress up, look pretty, and go out and have a good time. They didn’t have anything to prove.

This movie seemed to reinforce that impression as many of the participants seemed dissatisfied with their lives. They achieved success in the world of work, but many seemed to feel they paid a price in terms of family and relationships.

Review By: bobspez
if you’re interested in women’s lives now, don’t miss Unboxed: it’s not just about them—it’s about all of us.
The documentary Unboxed offers us a clear-eyed view of women from the Skidmore College graduating class of 1969—a colorful and chaotic year remembered for the tumult of the anti-war and women’s movements. Through candid interviews deftly woven together, we are presented with the women’s hopes and dreams for their future…and sustained glimpses of where they are now, in the fullness of their lives.

By turns touching, humorous, and poignant, the film skillfully explores both the women’s past and their present, providing fascinating insights Into the beginning of the Woman’s Movement and the ways it affected women’s lives back then—as well as its persistent influence into their futures.

The camera lingers on the expressive, idiosyncratic photographs, which were boxed in the highly unusual senior yearbook,giving the film its name. Rather than traditional portraits dressed in sweater sets and pearls, these seniors broke the mold. Each woman chose a location and costume she felt expressed her— and their choices ranged from being naked in a barrel, to being swaddled like a nun, to being garbed in black leather astride a motorcycle. Reflecting the ethos of the time, these photos captured the break-out personality of each young woman–and instead of being bound into a book were presented in a large box.

Unboxed explores in great detail, through the words of these women over forty years later, how their lives proceeded once they were literally unboxed. Peter Barton, the documentary artist who shot and directed the film, plays these photos generously against the present- day faces and words of each woman as he allows us to listen to them explore the meanings of their lives today.

Whether you’re male or female or in between; whether you lived those chaotic years or not; if you’re interested in women’s lives now, don’t miss Unboxed: it’s not just about them—it’s about all of us.

Review By: ellen-schecter

Other Information:

Original Title Women of ’69, Unboxed
Release Date 2017-01-15
Release Year 2014

Original Language en
Runtime N/A
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Documentary, Biography, Family
Director Peter Barton
Writer Peter Barton
Actors N/A
Country United States
Awards 3 wins & 2 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Original title Women of '69, Unboxed

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