Psych-Out is a feature film about hippies, psychedelic music, and recreational drugs, produced and released by American International Pictures. Originally scripted as The Love Children, the title when tested caused people to think it was about bastards, so Samuel Z. Arkoff came up with the ultimate title based on a recent successful reissue of Psycho. Director Richard Rush's cut came in at 101 minutes and was edited to 82 minutes by the producers. This version is the one released on DVD. For some reason, when HBO Video released the film on VHS, they used the 101-minute director's cut,... probably unknowingly, as they did not mention it on the packaging. The majority of the songs in the movie and on the original soundtrack album were performed by the Storybook. This credit is never mentioned on movie posters and articles. They were a local band from the San Fernando Valley. Jenny is a deaf runaway who arrives in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district, searching for her brother Steve. She encounters the aptly named Stoney and his hippie band "Mumblin' Jim" in a coffee shop.
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| Release date: | 1968 |
| Directed by: | Richard Rush, Roger Corman |
| Runtime: | 101 Minutes |
| Producer: | Dick Clark |
| Music by: | Ronald Stein |
| Cinematography: | László Kovács |
| Genre: | Adventure |