Hi, Mom!
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Brian De Palma
Robert De Niro
Charles Durnham
Allen Garfield
Abraham Goren
Lara Parker
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Employed by pornographic filmmaker Joe Banner, Vietnam veteran Jon Rubin rents a room in New York's Lower East Side and trains his lens on the bedroom windows of a high rise. Among his subjects are a playboy, revolutionary Gerrit Wood, a middle class couple with two children, and a trio of single girls, including Judy Bishop, whom Rubin decides to seduce. Setting his site on her bedroom window, he proceeds to her apartment, where they begin to have sex. During their lovemaking, however, the camera tilts and fails to catch the precious moment, thereby ending Rubin's career as a photographer. Auditioning for the revue Be Black, Baby! the veteran wins the role of a white policeman. During the performance's filming by National Intellectual Television Journal, the actors appear in whiteface and blacken the countenances of their Caucasian audience. The cast then subjects the spectators to physical and verbal abuse. As the liberal audience expresses its approval to newsmen, the blacks, led by Wood, raid the high rise. They are repulsed by the bourgeois husband, who sprays them with machine gun fire. After marrying Judy, Rubin finds a job as an insurance salesman. Disgusted by a diet of TV dinners and tiring of his pregnant wife's demand for a yellow dishwasher, Rubin goes to the basement laundry and deposits dynamite in the washer. Interviewed by a news commentator before the devastated building, the veteran decries violence.
Director
Brian De Palma
Cast
Robert De Niro
Charles Durnham
Allen Garfield
Abraham Goren
Lara Parker
Jennifer Salt
Gerritt Graham
Nelson Peltz
Hector Valentin Lino Jr.
Carole Leverett
Ruth Bocour
Bart De Palma
Arthur Bierman
Buddy Butler
David Connell
Milton Earl Forrest
Carolyn Craven
Joyce Griffin
Kirk Kerksey
Ruth Alda
Carol Vogel
Beth Bowden
Joe Stillman
Joe Fields
Gene Elman
Paul Milvy
Peter Maloney
William Daley
Floyd L. Peterson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Original title: Son of Greetings. "N.I.T. Journal" sequence filmed in 16mm.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Spring April 1970
Released in United States Spring April 1970