Adam at Six A.M. (1970)
Release Date: Sep 22, 1970 Wide
Release Date: Sep 22, 1970 Wide
liked it
Average Rating: 4/5
User Ratings: 57
My Rating
Movie Info
Looking like a high-school junior, Michael Douglas plays a college professor in Adam at 6 AM. Tired of academia, Douglas opts for the supposed tranquility of rural Missouri. After working as farm hand for a few weeks, he realizes that his "normal" neighbors are as screwed up as any of his more sophisticated friends. To punch up the film's leisurely screenplay, a great deal of sex talk is injected, which may have sounded daring in 1970 but which plays like an episode of Married: With Children
Sep 22, 1970 Wide
Cast
-
Michael Douglas
Adam Gaines -
Lee Purcell
Jerri Jo Hopper -
Joe Don Baker
Harvey Gavin -
Marge Redmond
Cleo -
Louise Latham
Mrs. Hopper -
Grayson Hall
Inez Treadley -
Carolyn Conwell
Mavis -
Dana Elcar
Van -
Meg Foster
Joyce -
Richard Derr
Roger Gaines -
Anne Gwynne
Mrs. Gaines -
Charles Aidman
Mr. Hooper -
Timothy Blake
Girl at Party -
Ed Call
Orville -
Ned Wertimer
Dr. Peters -
David Sullivan
Leroy
ADVERTISEMENT
Audience Reviews for Adam at Six A.M.
Discussion Forum
There are no discussion threads for Adam at Six A.M. yet.
What's Hot On RT
Bradley Cooper's Best Movies
Trailer for new Coen Bros movie
Fast & Furious cars gallery
Blockbusters ranked!
Featured on RT
- Total Recall: Bradley Cooper's Best Movies 19
- Parental Guidance: Epic and Beautiful Creatures 2
- Comic Book Movies You Can Watch Online 6
- In Pictures: The Cars of Fast & Furious 0
- Digital Multiplex: Warm Bodies and Aftershock 8
- Discover the Best-Reviewed Films in Summer Movie Scorecard 2013 0
- RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: The Last Stand and Side Effects 17
Top Headlines
-
Vin Diesel Says Fast & Furious 7 Will Take Place in L.A.
0
-
10 Things You (Probably) Don't Know About the Hangover Movies
1
-
Zack Snyder, Christopher Nolan, and David S. Goyer Talk Man of Steel
0
-
New Transporter Trilogy in the Works
0
-
Richard Linklater Plans "Spiritual Sequel" to Dazed and Confused
0
-
King of Kong Filmmaker Seeks Funding for Lost Limb Documentary
0
-
Which Film Franchise Has Been the Best for Female Characters?
6


In 1970, a yet to be famous actor by the name of Michael Douglas was trying to make his name in his father's industry. He'd already done one film that reflected the youth dissatisfaction with contemporary American politics, in Hail Hero! (1969). For his second film, a journeyman TV director by the name of Robert Scheerer signed him up to play the titular Adam, in the film Adam at Six A.M.. Written by Elinor and Stephen Karpf, Adam Gaines is a lecturer in semantics at a Californian university. At the start of the summer break, a relative dies and he travels back to the Missouri town where she lived, and dissatisfied with his Californian life, enlists as a labourer cutting down trees and falls for a local girl.
It is an entirely unconvincing film that everybody involved in seems to think is high art. There is an intellectual debt to European cinema - Blow-Up is mentioned, particularly to draw a contrast between the 'yokels' who think the film a waste of time, and Douglas's Gaines who tells them how wrong they are. His position as a lecturer in semantics leads to an explanation of what that subject is, given to the same ignorant 'yokels' - and here is the big difference between European cinema and a film that wants to be considered in the same breath: a European film would not have semantics explained in dull exposition. In fact, such a film would never have explained the subject, but rather allowed us to see how the film plays out a semantic argument. In this film, what people think they want is not what they want - and director Scheerer plays out the semantic arguments in obvious visual and textual ways, allowing no nuance or subtlety to develop in his picture.
That said there are some things of note here. Occasionally - and it really is only once or twice - Scheerer's direction takes on a greater visual quality that previously shown (there is a well shot, lit, and directed sequence of a character alone in the dark, with only the light of the phone-booth to keep him company, as he drifts further away from people he thought friends and a woman he doesn't know but wants to). The cast really go for it as well - Michael Douglas, looking as young as a student rather than a lecturer, commits himself admirably - star wattage is in evidence, even here. Lee Purcell as the girl, Jerri Jo Hopper, is given a rather thankless duty as a girl who just wants marriage and a home of her own, but manages to do something with it. She is a girl you'd want to marry, until you know she wants to marry and have the same life her folks had too: that is, she's a girl who'd go to those musical-western-Technicolor extravaganzas and be happy - and aren't we past that now? Joe Don Baker manages to do something as well with another underwritten part, of the labourer best friend who wants to go into TV repair but can't ever get the money because he's spending it on booze and gambling.
The end of the film has many of the characters riding off into the sunset, and Adam Gaines settling down to be with the woman he loves. But it's not the end of the story - and here is where the fact that Gaines is a lecturer in semantics becomes important plot-wise, and so unsubtly done - for as he walks around a home filled with memorabilia for his forthcoming wedding, he reads the signs and in them sees his future. One visual clue would have been enough in a European film, but in Scheerer's the whole house is filled with them, it is a grotesque realisation of the nightmare that awaits Gaines if he stays in Missouri, if he stays with Jerry-Jo. For after all, for these young men of America, isn't the future in tackling injustice and asking questions, not settling for what your parents had and being happy? As the ice-cream melts on the two-lane blacktop, the total rejection of past attitudes is forged, and Gaines is off to an uncertain future.
Adam at Six A.M. was never a hit in its own day. It is too unsubtle to ever be a hit, and too weakly directed. Its script is laboured, a bloated exaggeration of European art-house movies of the day. It has some lovely scenery - the film was shot in the backwaters of Missouri - and Michael Douglas would go onto bigger, better things: as producer he would unleash some of those aforementioned great pictures into the world. But this, it's a relic of another age now, full of rusted ideas. It could have been great, it just wasn't.