Shampoo is a film that can be fun and inviting even after several viewings,and it's the skillful direction that keeps the film at an easy pace, and flowing. Director Ashby finds the stillness of these rambunctious characters at different moments in time, and projects their hidden integrity with curious nuance and texture. Personally, I love film's where its narrative is set within a reasonably compacted amount of time (i.e. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Halloween) because, A) the plot and people within become immensely compelling, and exciting, and B) the arc and/or climax of the film is usually something of a doozie. Shampoo's players are always up to one thing or another, and it ends up becoming one helluva of a 48 hours for them all. Set on election eve 1968, the film perfectly captures the craziness of those groovy hippie times, filled with hidden (and expressed) sexuality, the power and restraints of one's actions, and finding out what the real world is all about. To George, the world revolves around his many women with their precious hair, and his own personal predicaments. Within almost two days his "perfect world" slowly crumbles away, and he is forcefully exposed to the reality everyone else lives in. In fact, the compacted time set is essential to the entire feel of the film, as all of the characters (not just George) are abruptly and unexpectedly shown what they couldn't see and comprehend from the get-go. We are constantly waiting for the moment where one of these people will see what the others cannot, and as the film continues those cracks in this golden egg of a world begin to show.
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To sum it all up, this is one bottle of shampoo that never looses its luster, texture, or proficiency.
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