Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)

 


Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice is a 1969 American comedy-drama film directed by Paul Mazursky, written by Mazursky and Larry Tucker, who also produced the film, and starring Natalie Wood, Robert Culp, Elliott Gould, and Dyan Cannon. The original music score was composed by Quincy Jones. The cinematography for the film was by Charles Lang. The film received four Academy Award nominations, including ones for Gould and Cannon. Patricia Welles wrote the paperback novelization from Mazursky and Tucker's screenplay.

Plot

After a weekend of emotional honesty at an Esalen-style retreat, Los Angeles sophisticates Bob and Carol Sanders return home determined to embrace complete openness. They share their enthusiasm and excitement over their new-found philosophy with their more conservative friends Ted and Alice Henderson, who remain doubtful. Soon after, filmmaker Bob has an affair with a young production assistant on a film shoot in San Francisco. When he returns home, he admits his liaison to Carol, describing the event as a purely physical act, not an emotional one. To Bob's surprise, Carol is completely accepting of his extramarital behavior. Later, Carol gleefully reveals the affair to Ted and Alice as they are leaving a dinner party. Disturbed by Bob's infidelity and Carol's candor, Alice becomes physically ill on the drive home. She and Ted have a difficult time coping with the news in bed that night. However, as time passes, they grow to accept that Bob and Carol really are fine with the affair. Later, Ted admits to Bob that he was tempted to have an affair once, but did not go through with it; Bob tells Ted he should, rationalizing: "You've got the guilt anyway. Don't waste it."

During another visit to San Francisco, Bob decides to skip a second encounter with the young woman, instead returning home a day early. When he arrives, he discovers Carol having an affair with her tennis instructor. Although initially outraged, Bob quickly realizes that the encounter was purely physical, like his own affair. He settles down and even chats and drinks with the man.

When the two couples travel together to Las Vegas, Bob and Carol reveal Carol's affair to Ted and Alice. Ted then admits to an affair on a recent business trip to Miami. An outraged Alice demands that this new ethos be taken to its obvious conclusion: a mate-sharing foursome. Ted is reluctant, explaining that he loves Carol "like a sister", but eventually acknowledges that he finds her attractive. After discussing it, all four remove their clothes and climb into bed together. Swapping partners, Bob and Alice kiss fervently, as do Ted and Carol, but after a few moments all four simply stop.

The scene cuts to the couples walking to the elevator, riding it down, and walking out of the casino hand-in-hand with their original partners. A crowd of men and women of various cultures and races congregate in the casino parking lot, wherein the four main characters exchange long stares with each other and with strangers, reminiscent of the non-verbal communication shown in the early scene at the retreat. Producer-Writer Larry Tucker appears in the final crowd scene, facing Dyan Cannon, then looks directly in the lens.

Cast

Advertising tram for the film Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice in Amsterdam, Netherlands (March 26, 1970).

Production

Director Paul Mazursky was inspired by an article he read in Time magazine about Fritz Perls, a "gestalt therapist" that was described as being in a hot tub with naked people at a place called the Esalen Institute (located in the Slates Hot Springs in Big Sur, California), a place formed in 1962 dealing with New Age therapy. Mazursky went there with his wife as the only two people in the group who knew each other. This, alongside further collaboration in Palm Springs with writing partner Larry Tucker, resulted in a final script. Mazursky, having been denied the chance to direct I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, a script he wrote with Tucker, insisted on directing. Producer Mike Frankovich expressed interest. Mazursky insisted on directing, citing his direction of a short called Last Year at Malibu and his study of acting alongside observing camerawork from the aforementioned Toklas film and studying editing at the University of Southern California at night as credentials. Frankovich accepted him as director, while Tucker would produce and Frankovich served as executive producer.[4] For the psychotherapist scene, Mazursky cast his own therapist Donald F. Muhich that he had been seeing to act opposite Dyan Cannon. Muhich would appear in three further films with Mazursky as director.

The original ending in the first draft involved the four characters crying in each other's arms after an aborted orgy, complete with pulling themselves together on their way to a Tony Bennett show. Instead, Mazursky went with an ending that sees the characters walk with each other back outside while "What the World Needs Now Is Love" plays in the background, which he called his "Fellini ending", as it resembled the ending to (1963). Addressing complaints of the ending being a cop-out in 1970, he stated that "The easiest thing in the world would have been to show those four making it together in that bed. But it became obvious to us that these four people in these circumstances couldn't possibly have done it.”[5]

Musical score and soundtrack

Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
Soundtrack album by
Released1969
Recorded1969
GenreFilm score
Length31:41
LabelBell
Bell 1200
ProducerQuincy Jones
Quincy Jones chronology
Walking in Space
(1969)
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
(1969)
Cactus Flower
(1969)

The film score was composed, arranged and conducted by Quincy Jones and featured Jackie DeShannon performing Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "What the World Needs Now Is Love" and Sarah Vaughan performing "I know that my Redeemer liveth" from Part III of Handel's Messiah. The soundtrack album was released on the Bell label in 1969.[6][7] The Vinyl Factory said "in 1969 (a busy year for the man), Jones produced this sparkling score, with its lavish string arrangements and jazzy interludes. ... What sounds like a lot of work went into an unconventional soundtrack for an unconventional movie about sexual experimentation".[8]

Track listing

All compositions by Quincy Jones, except where noted

  1. "Main Title From Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (Handel's Hallelujah Chorus)" (George Frideric Handel adapted by Quincy Jones) − 2:24
  2. "Sun Dance (Handel's Messiah Pt. 3)" (Handel adapted by Jones) − 3:46
  3. "Giggle Grass" − 2:30
  4. "Sweet Wheat" − 3:31
  5. "What The World Needs Now (Instrumental)" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) − 3:07
  6. "What The World Needs Now" (Bacharach, David) − 3:48
  7. "Celebration of Life (Instrumental) (Handel's Hallelujah Chorus)" (Handel adapted by Jones) − 2:54
  8. "Sun Dance (Instrumental) (Handel's Messiah Pt. 3)" (Handel adapted by Jones) − 3:31
  9. "Dynamite" − 2:34
  10. "Flop Sweat" − 3:27

Personnel

Release

The film was the first American film to open the New York Film Festival, opening on September 16, 1969. It opened October 8, 1969 at Cinema I in New York City before the Columbus Day holiday weekend.[1][9]

Reaction

Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice became the signature film of Paul Mazursky and was a critical and commercial success. Mazursky himself called it the film of which he is proudest. It was the sixth highest-grossing film of 1969. It grossed $50,000 in its first week, setting a house record.[9] After this film's release, it led to other movies dealing with wife swapping, infidelity, and other types of experimentation with interpersonal relationships inside American society. Mazursky would write and shoot a few more stories set in California, including Alex in Wonderland and Down and Out in Beverly Hills.

Vincent Canby of The New York Times panned the film as "unpleasant because it acts superior to the people in it, which is no mean feat because Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice are conceived as cheerful but humorless boobs, no more equipped to deal with their sexual liberation than Lucy and Desi and Ozzie and Harriet."[10] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, however, gave the film four stars out of four and wrote, "The genius of 'Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice' is that it understands the peculiar nature of the moral crisis for Americans in this age group, and understands that the way to consider it is in a comedy."[11] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called it "a scintillating social comedy and a movie which could turn out to have more to say about you than any flick you'll see this year."[12] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three-and-a-half-stars out of four and called it "the best comedy of the year," with acting that was "eminently tender and believable."[13] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post declared it "the sharpest American comedy in several years ... It may be the same old marital war, but the battle lines and the weapons are modern, and this makes all the difference in the world between a comedy that feels 'new' and one that feels second-hand."[14] Writing in The New Yorker the film critic Pauline Kael praised both the film and director Mazursky, calling it "a slick, whorey movie, and the liveliest American comedy so far this year. Mazursky, directing his first picture, has developed a style from satiric improvisational revue theatre—he and Tucker [co-writer] were part of the Second City troupe—and from TV situation comedy, and, with skill and wit, has made this mixture work—though it looks conventional, it isn't."[15] John Simon, noted for his vituperative and acidic reviewing style, called Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice 'deplorable'.[16]

The film holds a score of 82% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 61 reviews with the consensus: "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice isn't as subversive as it thinks it is -- but it is smart & sophisticated & funny & well-acted."[17]

Accolades

Award[18] Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards[19] Best Supporting Actor Elliott Gould Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Dyan Cannon Nominated
Best Story and Screenplay – Based on Material Not Previously Published or Produced Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker Nominated
Best Cinematography Charles Lang Nominated
British Academy Film Awards[20] Best Actor in a Leading Role Elliott Gould (also for M*A*S*H) Nominated
Best Screenplay Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker Nominated
Golden Globe Awards[21] Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Dyan Cannon Nominated
Most Promising Newcomer – Female Nominated
Laurel Awards Top Male New Face Elliott Gould 6th Place
Top Music Man Quincy Jones 4th Place
National Society of Film Critics Awards[22] Best Supporting Actress Dyan Cannon 3rd Place
Best Screenplay Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker Won
New York Film Critics Circle Awards[23] Best Supporting Actor Elliott Gould Runner-up
Best Supporting Actress Dyan Cannon Won
Best Screenplay Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker Won
Writers Guild of America Awards[24] Best Comedy Written Directly for the Screen Won

Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979)

 


Beyond the Poseidon Adventure is a 1979 American disaster film and a sequel to The Poseidon Adventure (1972) directed by Irwin Allen and starring Michael Caine and Sally Field.[3][4] It was a critical and commercial failure. Its box office receipts were only 20% of its estimated $10 million budget.

Plot

The capsized luxury liner S.S. Poseidon[a] is still afloat after six survivors have been rescued by the French Coast Guard. Mike Turner, captain of the tugboat Jenny, spots the rescue helicopter and finds the shipwreck. Accompanied by second mate Wilbur and passenger Celeste Whitman, Turner heads out to claim salvage rights, as the Jenny lost its cargo in the same tsunami that capsized the Poseidon.

They are soon followed by Dr. Stefan Svevo and his crew, who claim to be Greek Orthodox medics who received the ship's SOS. They board the vessel through the bottom hull opening by the French rescue team and come across the fires still raging in the engine room and the body of Linda Rogo. Eventually, there is an explosion deep inside Poseidon. The group soon encounters more survivors, the ship's nurse, Gina Rowe and two passengers, Suzanne Constantine and war veteran Frank Mazzetti, who is searching for his missing daughter Theresa. Theresa is found, as are elevator operator Larry Simpson and Tex, a supposed billionaire who clings to a valuable bottle of wine. They also find the blind Harold Meredith and his wife Hannah, who were waiting to be rescued.

Water continues to submerge decks, and more explosions occur. Turner's group find the purser's office, where Svevo decides that he and his men will search for other survivors, parting ways with the rest. Another explosion causes the safe in the purser's office to fall and open, revealing gold coins, diamonds and cash. Turner and Wilbur gather the coins.

Unknown to Turner and the survivors, Suzanne is actually working with Svevo. She takes a list containing information about a cargo of crates from the office. Going off on her own, she gives Svevo the document but decides to rejoin Turner's group. Svevo orders Doyle, one of his men, to kill Suzanne. After being shot, a dying Suzanne strikes Doyle with an axe, killing him. While making their way up through the decks, Turner and the others find Suzanne's corpse and realize that a murderer is on board.

Hannah dislocates her shoulder while helping Harold. Svevo and his men are found gathering a cargo of plutonium. Svevo reveals that his real intention for boarding the Poseidon was to retrieve his lost shipment of plutonium, adding that he cannot let Turner and his group go now. However, before anyone is killed, another explosion occurs, allowing Turner's group to escape.

Turner, Frank, and Larry find guns. In the ensuing shoot-out, Frank and another of Svevo's men are killed. Water floods the room as Turner's group proceeds up to the next deck. An injured Hannah, unable to climb a ladder, falls into the rising water and drowns. While trying to rescue her, Turner loses all of his salvaged gold. Svevo and his one remaining gunman head back up to the ship's stern, where the rest of Svevo's team attempt to use a crane to raise the plutonium up to the hull, which is slowly sinking.

In another section of the ship, Turner and the survivors exit the ship through an underwater side door. However, due to shortage of scuba tanks, Wilbur sacrifices himself by swimming underwater and disappearing. Turner and Celeste swim to the tugboat and move it closer to the Poseidon as the remaining survivors swim towards it. Svevo's men see them and open fire. Tex, who in reality was not a wealthy passenger but a sommelier from the Poseidon's crew, holds onto his bottle as he is gunned down and perishes. The rest of Turner's group reaches the tugboat and sails away. Water continues to flood the Poseidon, causing the boilers to finally explode, which detonates the plutonium cargo, blowing the ship in half and sinking it, killing Svevo and his men.

En route, Turner accepts that his tugboat will be taken from him when they get to port, but Celeste reveals a diamond she salvaged from the Poseidon. The two kiss, and the tugboat sails away into the sunset, bringing the total survivors of the disaster to ten.

Characters

Production

In 1973, soon after the first film came out, producer Irwin Allen proposed a sequel that would have had the survivors testifying in a hearing on the disaster in Austria, the country of the Poseidon's parent company. While on a train to the hearing, a miles-long mountain tunnel would collapse, leaving the survivors of the train trapped inside, struggling to make their way out. The film was planned to be released at Christmas 1974 from 20th Century Fox. Most of the main cast was initially intended to reprise their roles from the first film.[1] This premise was eventually used in the Rob Cohen film Daylight (1996) with Sylvester Stallone.[5]

Originally planned with the first film's distributor 20th Century Fox, the film ended up moving to Warner Bros. Pictures after they signed a three-picture deal with Allen in 1975.[1]

Relationship of Gallico's novels to the films

Paul Gallico's novel The Poseidon Adventure had ended with the ship's sinking. The original film changed much of the novel's plot and ended with the ship still afloat. After the huge success of the film, Gallico was asked to write a novel that would be a sequel not to his first novel, but to the film. It would feature a new group of people entering the still capsized ship and could be made into a second film. In response, Gallico started writing Beyond the Poseidon Adventure, but he died on July 15, 1976, before completing the book.[1] The book was published on January 1, 1978. Once again, the film that followed ended up bearing little resemblance to his book. Instead of sinking, the ship explodes, along with Svevo and his men.

Filming

Filming started in September 1978 at The Burbank Studios, with location shooting off the California coast and Catalina Island. For the year prior, the ship interior set was designed and built, based on the RMS Queen Mary.[1]

Reception

Beyond the Poseidon Adventure was universally panned by critics. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 0% based on reviews from 10 critics, with an average rating of 3.50/10.[6] On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 22 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[7]

Roger Ebert gave the film one star out of four.[3] Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that Irwin Allen "is so obviously ill-equipped to stage action scenes in cramped quarters that his audience winds up wishing as fervently as his characters for a chance to see the light of day".[8] Variety wrote that the film "comes off as a virtual remake of the 1972 original, without that film's mounting suspense and excitement".[9] Gene Siskel gave the film one star out of four and slammed it as "virtually the same story as the original disaster film", with "shoddily painted sets; tiny studio-created fires all of the same size; and dialog that could be written by a 1st-grader".[10] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called the film "an instance of too little too late. The sequel is painstakingly crafted and pleasant to watch but seems routine and even tedious at times, mainly because there has been so much razzle-dazzle on the screen since the S.S. Poseidon capsized—including, of course, Allen's own Towering Inferno".[11] Clyde Jeavons of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote that the film "is not so much a sequel as a remake, and a fairly dismal, cut-price one at that, its shoddiness being risibly exemplified from the start by the almost Python-esque studio-tank storm which assails Michael Caine's see-sawing salvage tug".[12]

Home media

A region one DVD version was released on August 22, 2006. A digital version is available for rental and purchase on the PlayStation Network for the PlayStation 3, and it is also up for purchase and rental on the iTunes Store. Warner Home Video re-released the DVD via their Warner Archive Collection on June 23, 2014. On September 12, 2023, Shout! Factory re-released Beyond the Poseidon Adventure on Blu-ray, as part of the Irwin Allen: Master of Disaster Collection which additionally included the original extended cut which aired on television.

All My Movies (Brief) (Updated 03/25/26)