Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring (TV Movie 1971) Poster

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7/10
A heartbreaker...
moonspinner5522 January 2001
Sally Field as an older teen named Denise who has run away from her upper-middle class home to be with her hippie boyfriend. This no-holds-barred television movie begins with "Dennie" returning home in the middle of the night: she walks up her block, enters her house while her family is asleep, and climbs into her old childhood bed. Why did she leave in the first place? Her parents and younger sister (drawn as neurotics oblivious to their own family dynamic) are a society-party dream but dysfunctional after the guests have gone home. Despite an odd sequence midway through that has Field running down the street drawing ribbons in the air (she's free!), this is a fairly realistic portrait of life in '70s suburbia. The nature of the relationships is interesting, and the uncompromising ending thoughtful. One of the first films (TV-made or otherwise) to rip the lid off suburban/station-wagon living and its false sense of comfort and security. Field, though overwrought on occasion, is very good, and the well-realized piece has been sharply photographed (by crack cinematographer Russell Metty) and edited. Linda Ronstadt performs two songs on the soundtrack, the title track and "Different Day". *** from ****
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7/10
I enjoyed it...
kgutwein23 January 2006
I remember seeing this movie when I was very young and there were certain scenes that have stayed with me my entire life. For instance the scene when they are eating other people's garbage and the final scene. So my curiosity got the best of me and I rented this movie from Netflix to see it now as an adult with children (and one grandchild). I wanted to see if it would have the same impact and oddly enough it did.

The acting was relatively good in the movie, the writing a bit weak in certain areas but it had a message and that comes through loud and clear. It actually reminded me a bit of an "After School Special" but that was OK.

It didn't glorify either the parent's side or the "hippie" side. It made you see what was wrong from both ends of the spectrum. Sally Field's did not play a "Gidget" type of part in this movie but I thought she was good.

My real shocker was that David Carradine played her boyfriend. I told my husband this and now he wants to see it for just that reason!
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7/10
Sally in transition
jjnxn-110 May 2013
A TV movie with excellent acting and a still timely message. Although the clothes and attitudes are dated the basic dilemma of misunderstanding between the generations is as true today as it was when this is made. Sally is strong in the lead, she was working hard at this time to leave Gidget and the Flying Nun behind which would take a few more years when Sybil moved her to the next level of respect, and captures the difficult transition period between teen rebellion and adult responsibility. Eleanor Parker and Jackie Cooper give good performances even though their characters are drawn in one dimensional tones. Not a great movie but a good one from when network TV tried to tackle controversial topics. Added bonus the soundtrack is by Linda Ronstadt, a rare occurrence.
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I related to this movie!
pdmh4830 June 2006
I was a senior in high school when I saw this and I loved it. I wrote a term paper comparing/contrasting this to "Pilgrim's Progress" (which we had just studied in my English class) and got an "A" from my "hippie" teacher then. I longed to join the "hippie trail" then but didn't because I felt responsible for my younger siblings stuck in an abusive situation with my alcoholic dad. We only had each other. I used to read bus schedules with the dream of leaving.

Everyone is great in this movie. Sally Fields shows growth as an actress from her "Gidget" and "Flying Nun" days. Plus, it really portrays the frustration her parents feel and the difficulties the whole family had in relating to each other.
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6/10
Hippies in Suburbia!!!
tamstrat16 June 2005
I remember watching this made for TV movies back in the early 70's when I was about 11 years old. See, at that time I was too young to be a hippie but was old enough to think hippies were "cool", I liked the hair, clothes, etc. Watching this strange little movie made me rethink that position. Sally Field plays "Dennie", a young woman who has run away from home due to the wildly dysfunctional family she has. Eleanor Parker and Jackie Cooper play her screwed up parents who live in a nice house and drink too much. She has a younger sister who wants to be just like Dennie and to escape the weird family dynamics she too starts doing drugs. The movie is hard to watch at times, there are weird "flashback" scenes of when Dennie and her boyfriend, numbly played by David Carradine,out on the road, doing drugs, making love, protesting the war and eating food left on a table at a drive-in (believe it or not, that scene stuck in my mind for years, yuck-eating some strangers left over garbage!!!!!)The film maker tried too hard to be hip and cool with unusual lighting and a weird scene of Dennie writing "Happy" in the air (that scene is truly surreal and has to be seen to be believed), but the message is overall a good one, that drugs and unhappiness just don't happen to people living in the hood, but also to middle class white people.
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6/10
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home...
planktonrules1 November 2016
"Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring" is a sad little movie and unlike most films offers no particular resolution. When the film begins, a wayward daughter returns home after living the life of a hippie/drifter. Denise (Sally Field) is tired of begging and the bohemian life and just wants to be home. However, once there, the many family problems that pushed her out of the house in the first place all slowly come out...such as the drug abusing younger sister, the parents who hate drugs...but drink heavily and more. Overall, the film appears to be about the American Dream...and how it's all, at least according to the movie, a sack of crap.

The film is decent but does suffer from some overacting here and there as well as an unresolved ending. An interesting curio....but not a whole lot more.
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6/10
The Flying Nun breaks her vows
RondoHatton7 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This was a bit of breakout role for Sally Fields, after her title role in "Gidget" & as Sister Bird-trille in "The Flying Nun". True, she did have a strong role as a young rape victim in Harold Hecht's "The Way West", but except for that role and this, the years from '67 to '77 were pretty bleak ones for Sally Fields. I remember sitting up & watching this at my girlfriend's house, strictly because of Ms Fields. She was always such a doll, & I wanted to see her in something besides the G-rated fluff of "Gidget" & the flopping nun. It actually grabbed us right off, with the synopsis of a middle class girl dropping out, and trying to get back from lotus land(having known a few who did the same, and at least one who has never really recovered from a surprise dose slipped to her at a party). David Carradine as Flack? I didn't remember him in the movie, but his big scene doing a "dine & dash" is memorable "What's a pest control truck doing here? I'll never come here again!". The hippie dippy clothing & the psych-ay-delic flashbacks are pretty funny now, but what I really find interesting is when Ms Fields' character Dennie is warning her little sister(played by who? I used to think it was Sissy Spacek) about staying away from drugs, but instead of warning her to stay away from pot, LSD, or even coke, she warns her to stay away from Meth.....and as I remember, as the film ends, little sister is in full hippie dippy drag, hitching away from home, and the professional longhair Flack picks her up, as the mighty 30 horsepower of his VW van carries them off into the sunset.
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5/10
Almost Cut My Hair in the Summer
wes-connors2 April 2011
After living with hippies in Los Angeles, troubled runaway Sally Field (as Denise "Dennie" Miller) returns home to uptight suburban parents Jackie Cooper and Eleanor Parker (as Ed and Claire). Although the movie's editing and camera-work seem to be simulating drug-induced flashbacks, Ms. Field is apparently very straight (meaning sex and drug free) as the story unfolds. Looking like a poorer post-"Monkees" Peter Tork, truck-jacking David Carradine (as Flack) plays the main boyfriend. We see past glimpses of Field falling into a sex and drugs lifestyle. Then, she discovers the same thing is happening to little sister Lane Bradbury (as Susie)...

In her sandy folk voice, Linda Ronstadt is heard singing non-hits "Different Day" and the title track.

"Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring" catches Field after her "The Flying Nun" (1967-70) series landed in cancellation land; the unusual sitcom and predecessor "Gidget" (1965-66) had made Field a very popular, albeit very wholesome, young television star. She needed a change. With this film, Field began to demonstrate some of the dramatic range everyone noticed by the time "Sybil" (1976) aired. Field shines in an opening "telephone call" monologue, using her voice only. The emotional playing between Field and Mr. Cooper is another highlight. Other than that, this high-rated ABC Tuesday "Movie of the Week" is noisy and ordinary.

***** Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring (2/16/71) Joseph Sargent ~ Sally Field, Jackie Cooper, Eleanor Parker, Lane Bradbury
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8/10
A Movie I Couldn't Forget
kidboots26 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I, too, last saw this movie when it was shown as a TV movie in the early seventies but I have never forgotten it. The scenes around the swimming pool, the hitch-hiking scenes, Susie's confrontations with her parents. Seeing it recently I thought it was an excellent movie about a runaway, who returns home and after a couple of days realises why she left in the first place. 1970 was still awash with the "summer of love", yet the film is never preachy and avoids the "peace, love and happiness, who needs a job, pointing the finger at the establishment" heaviness. In many homes (my included) it was abide by our rules or leave - and many teenagers did.

Sally Fields plays Denise, who has come home disillusioned with the hippie life style adopted by her boyfriend, Flack (David Carradine) - begging for money in the streets, looking in garbage bins for food or eating cast off meals. She arrives home to hugs and kisses but it doesn't take her long to realise her parent's haven't changed and are driving her younger sister to repeat the same mistakes she made. Hollywood veterans Jackie Cooper and Eleanor Parker are great as the parents who are only calm when their children are conforming to their idea of normalcy. Denise is caught in the middle - knowing what life on the streets is like, she wants to conform, to be what her parents expect but she also wants to help Susie (Lane Bradbury). Susie is taking meths and Denise witnesses a huge showdown as the parents search frantically through her room - looking for drugs, but she has them steathily hidden in the medicine cabinet. There is a pointed scene at the doctors when Denise, after grudgingly confiding in the doctor, then realises that he is going to report back to her mother on their chat. I thought it was an excellent bit of acting by Fields as frightened and shaken, she knows things haven't changed.

There is a subplot that involves Flack, and his efforts to find Denise - stealing cars, a fumigation truck and even an ice cream van. At last he finds her and there is almost a mini explosion by the pool - everyone shouting, Flack, who is pleading with her to go with him to Canada, Susie, telling her to follow her heart and go with him, the parents telling everyone to sit down and shut up!! Denise goes inside to think but when she returns Flack has gone. Susie has gone as well, not with Flack but to become another "runaway". The film ends in a very down beat and sombre way. When all the recriminations and the tears have stopped, Denise, now the dutiful daughter, helps her mother with breakfast, pondering on the fact that after almost losing 2 daughters, her parents still do not realise their behaviour is to blame.

Highly Recommended.
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6/10
You Can't Go Home Again
fouregycats18 March 2017
A young woman runs away from home, and she returns to find the same old dysfunctional family and the same old issues that made her leave. She struggles to resume her place in the family, but she isn't the same person she used to be.

Sally Field is now 70 years old, and Lane Bradbury is 78. This movie gives us a nostalgic look back to the time of hippie culture, but it also shows us that what goes on within families is timeless.
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5/10
Sally, a '70s prodigal daughter
Cristi_Ciopron4 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
MAYBE I'LL COME HOME IN THE SPRING, with an early Sally Field performance, is a nice, well—meant, underwritten and quite conventional drama about flower—power teens in the loose style of the early '70s; the subjects are at least appealing—feminine psychology, sisters rivalry, etc., blended in a general murkiness which some might find displeasing. The script is certainly underdeveloped but interesting, the characters are vaguely and too conventionally defined, indicating that the movie hasn't anything to say about its themes. None of the characters is really achieved. Otherwise, Sally as a confused teenager.

For anyone who likes Sally Field, the movie, meant as a psychological exercise, characters—driven (--no story, though the characters are inexistent, too--), has some interest, I have seen it with a bit of pleasure.
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10/10
This was reality in the late sixties/early seventies
ssm3123 January 2010
I don't know whether or not Sally Field is proud of this movie, but she should be. I was 14 or 15 when this movie came out on TV and I was deeply affected by it. I grew-up in the suburbs and life during that chaotic and difficult time in America really was like this for suburban teens and teens in general. I saw many, many kids go through similar experiences. Times were changing so drastically that the disconnect between the parent's experiences, lifestyle and ideals and those of their kids spawned the "generation gap". On a personal note, adding to the sadness of watching these kids' experiences was the fact that my older sister (whose nickname was also Deni) and with whom I was very close, was rebelling in painful ways and I was caught in the middle between her and my parents. And yes, my name was Susie as well. Luckily, I was a good kid and I hated what I was witnessing around me and what I saw at the hospitals and lock-up wards of the time, so I went the straight & narrow. Believe it or not, I think this movie helped me. It has stayed with me for almost 40 yrs, so the effect is obvious. A good movie for siblings of teens with problems and a good movie for parents.
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2/10
The worst "Made for TV movie" I have ever seen
thomas196x200028 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
We were a "ABC Movie of the Week" family. Some of the best stuff on TV. "Duel". "The Immortal". "Longstreet". "Brian's Song". Wild stuff like "A Cold Night's Death", and springboards for TV series. But along the line, there were real clunkers. This was the worst.

Another film where a teen runs away from a nice suburban home, albeit with overbearing parents, but ones that did care about her. It was too "boring". "I want to see the outside world!". Her boyfriend on the outside is a loser played by David Carradine. She has enough of eating hot dogs out of the trash and decides to come home. Her sister wants to copy her moves and try the hippie life herself. In the end, the younger sister runs away, the Sally Field character stays at home. The End.

That's the entire movie, if one could call it that. The entire film is a montage of past and present images, flashbacks, voice overs, shot in the most dreary, grainy style you can imagine. The film image resembles something like a Super 8mm home movie. Interiors are poorly lit, outside scenes are washed out, and the cinematography on the whole is amateurish.

Not much happens in the entire film. Field pulls out an old doll house and stuffed animals and plays with them. There is a ridiculous voice over of Field talking like a much younger girl, and it comes off as a joke. The younger sister is played by Lane Bradbury--you'd recognize her as a pretty girl that made a lot of TV appearance, and has a special talent to wrinkling up her already close to "Resting B!tch Face" into a scowl as she throws a tantrum. The rest of the cast is not bad, but the material they are given is awful.

When the Bradbury character SURPRISE! Runs away at the end, you are hoping maybe she gets run over to at least put some action into this dreary affair. But no, the film tries to "say" something by having the parents go through the exact motions of getting up in the morning as they did at the beginning of the film...by re-using the same footage!!!!
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America's Throwaway Kids
hawktwo17 July 2002
These comments come from the memory of seeing this movie when it was first on television. Although it says the movie was made in 1970, it was more like 72-73 when it was aired.

My experience as a teenager in the United States in the late 60's was similar to this movie although I did not grow up in the suburbs. The Vietnam War protests had split the generations. Our parents, who had survived WW2 were grateful for the suburban homes and cars. We teenagers were not going to fight a useless war. In many homes, this led to a deep rift that lasted for years. It was not unusual for young teens to simply leave home. In many cases, it was at the pushing of the parents. (Now as a parent, I would have died of a broken heart had my teens left). This movie depicts one story of a teenager (Sally Field) who leaves home. She experiences a lot of horrors that cause her to return. But she discovers that although she has changed, the home has not.
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1/10
Absolutely horrible
ksternitzky27 June 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This was one of the worst movies I've ever seen. Since it had Sally Field, I thought it would be good, but this must have been one of her earliest movies. The screenplay writer may have been on drugs. There are so many scattered flashbacks that it's hard to follow what is currently happening vs. what is a flashback. This is very much a "B" movie, and I'm sad to state I wasted 75 minutes of my life watching this no-plot, silly movie. I cringed with shame at the bad acting and the bad writing. A 13 year old could have done better. With the lack of plot it was difficult to watch until the end, but I kept hoping it would get better. At the end Sally had a choice, to stay with her parents or return to the no-job, bum druggy hippie, who stole an ice-cream truck in order to visit her. Real tough choice, huh?? Thank you, Prince Charming! Sally had to THINK ABOUT IT, and then circumstances decided for her. Run along now! Nothing to see here!
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9/10
This movie leaves a lasting impression
SusieSalmonLikeTheFish7 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
When I found this movie on youtube, I wasn't sure what to expect of it but I thought that it would be just another low-budget film glamorizing the hippie counterculture. Actually, Maybe I'll Come Home In the Spring is more so a movie about how a young girl's parents tried their best, but their ignorance drove her away and when she came home, the cycle was repeated all over again. Some scenes in it just stuck with me a long time, especially the one where Dennie seems to be going crazy, swimming repeatedly back and forth in her parents' swimming pool despite all her neighbors and friends yelling at her to stop. There were other scenes which show the reality of the hippie lifestyle. I mean, let's face it, hippies weren't all rainbows and flowers and unicorns and peace, some of them were just hobos, runaways and confused teens, rebels, protesters, outcasts of society who thought being a hippie would help them. But a lot of hippies were homeless, living in outdoor parks and makeshift tents and dumpster diving for food, begging for spare change as a living. Really though, the one who suffers the most in this movie is Dennie's sister, Susie, who wants to be a hippie and dreams of a free spirit lifestyle of drugs and endless fun but doesn't realize that things aren't always what they seem when she meets Dennie's ex-boyfriend.

This is definitely a movie that stays with you once you watch it, and I also recommend watching Go Ask Alice (1973) and Helter Skelter (1976) if you like this movie.
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3/10
The prodigal daughter returns....bringing on an acid trip!
mark.waltz28 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
A great cast suffers here due to a confusing narrative that must be seen to be believed. Sally Field is a seemingly nice young lady who ran off to the sinful city of L. A. and after going through disappointment ends up returning where she faces resentment from her sister and tons of attention to her parents, Eleanor Parker and Jackie Cooper. Flashing back and forth between her wild life in L. A. and her boring life with her parents, this just gets more convoluted as the story unfolds. This is a drama about the fight for independence and the inability of parents to cut the cord.

The T. V. movie was in its infancy when this was made and had to be very careful over what lines it crossed. This is one of the more daring ones, showing drug abuse and free sex, leafing to even more serious themes about teen-aged alcoholism and prostitution, and later even homosexuality and other no-no's that are now old hat in every medium. It is just a shame that this one doesn't flow all that well, turning the parents into caricatures and showing an unfixible end to the generation gap.
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10/10
ahead of its time
BBROTHERSUN17 February 2001
i saw this movie when it first premiered on television in 1970 and every time i see sally field, i remember this movie and her performance and wonder why it's never mentioned in interviews with her. i recently found it on video and it holds up wonderfully after thirty years. i highly recommend it. (i had forgotten, however, that david carradine was in the movie. he is quite good, too.)
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1/10
should be trashed.!!!!
kitkat-4028 November 2006
one of the worst flicks ever made for TV. her acting is atrocious. she is a real creep. watching this mess is like having a tooth pulled without Novocaine. why this ever was put on DVD is beyond me. this horror should have sunk in the swamp waste along with the leeches and snakes. i blew a buck on this mess and trashed it promptly. what a waste of a buck. fields is one person that cannot act. her looks are a retina burning eyesore. why indeed would carradine even think of acting along with her. he was the only redeeming feature in the whole movie. the story line was weak; the plot , silly and the VHS tape it was taken from was a horror in itself. wish i could take all the copies that exit and destroy them. what a blessing for the world!
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Same scenes stuck in my head!
apollozer018 June 2007
Wow, I thought I was the only who one was affected by this movie and had some of its scenes stay in my head for 35 years as well. I am referring to Sally Field eating garbage, cutting her hair, the doll house.. those parts must have disturbed me a child and made me remember this for life. I happened upon this on a 6 disc movie compilation, the only other movie I know on it is John Travolta's Boy in the Plastic Bubble. Just seeing this movie again is so amazing since I have had scenes from this movie in my head since I was a kid. This movie is a product of its times and Sally Field is always a pleasure to watch. It's funny how she made two movies, the other Sybil that seem to have disturbed me so much when I was a child. Glad I read these reviews!
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2/10
Weird
jleeharris-3699111 June 2022
The way this is filmed is very strange. The scenes don't make sense. They just filmed the cast doing everyday things like eating without dialogue and once in a while they have an argument or some angst. It doesn't make sense. I don't recommend.
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10/10
I've never forgotten it either
reba222226 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I must have been 13. What an amazing thing the search engine/internet age is! I just punched in "movie about girl who runs away to live with hippies" and up pops "Maybe I'll come home in the Spring." 40 years have passed! I had forgotten it was Sally Fields and David Carradine, but I LOVED this movie as a child. At 12, I was already fighting with my mother about the length of my skirts, as much a product of the world around me, the 1960's, as I was a product of my family. At 13, the TV in my bedroom was, of course, being watched after lights out and I found this movie. I identified so much with Sally Fields, being shocked & repulsed when she learned to eat out of a trash can, as well as glorifying the free love and sex of the hippie culture. Can't wait to get my hands on this movie again!
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3/10
Huh
BandSAboutMovies23 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Denise Miller (Sally Field) has come home after a year of living with hippies. Her younger sister Susie (Lane Bradbury) is about to do the same thing. As for Denise, her boyfriend Flack (David Carradine) is driving across the country to save her from her family. And her parents Ed (Jackie Cooper) and Claire (Eleanor Parker) wonder where they went wrong.

Directed by Joseph Sargent (The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, Jaws: The Revenge) and written by Bruce Feldman, this reunites Field and Parker, as they played sisters in Home for the Holidays. If you think it's odd that she's her mother in this, well, Bradbury is her younger sister but is really eight years older than her.

This also has a Linda Ronstadt soundtrack, if that makes you want to watch.
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9/10
Breakdown Of The "Nuclear Family"
virek21321 June 2009
The so-called "nuclear family" that America had come to idealize as a result of the post-WW II Baby Boom was eventually exposed as an illusion as a result of the many social upheavals of the 1960s, with many young kids either running away from home to hippie communes or finding solace in the potentially deadly world of drugs because parents either didn't understand, or, even more, didn't want to understand, their offspring. Such was the focus of the above-average 1971 TV movie MAYBE I'LL COME HOME IN THE SPRING, which did a rather good job of showing the downsides of both the counterculture and the typical American "nuclear family." Sally Field, in a role that broke away from her Gidget/Flying Nun persona of the past, stars as a runaway who returns home from a hippie lifestyle after a year in which she has been bruised and scorned by her hippie lover (the late David Carradine). What she finds when she returns home is nothing short of depressing: her parents (Jackie Cooper; Eleanor Parker) still look upon her actions with scorn and disapproval, and yet they too indulge in their own brand of reckless behavior, using over-the-counter pills and alcohol instead of marijuana and methadone. Even more distressing than her parents' behavior is that Field's younger sister (Lane Bradbury) is headed down the same path as she once was, practically being forced down that path by the parents, who act with relentless hypocrisy, unwilling to understand why their offspring have rebelled the way they have.

Though very emblematic of its time, with certain montage sequences and slightly psychedelic flashbacks, making it obviously dated in some ways, MAYBE I'LL COME HOME IN THE SPRING avoids the fate of so many heavy-handed counterculture films by taking an ambivalent approach. The counterculture doesn't exactly get a free pass here, especially given the fact that Carradine's character seems too eerily close to that of Charles Manson, seducing Field and then (tragically) Bradbury in the dark side of hippiedom. Then again, neither does the "nuclear family" structure that Parker and Cooper represent; their ideals are so rigid, and their beliefs and their hypocrisy solidified to such an extent, that they don't see the harm their actions have on their daughters.

Despite a few flaws, MAYBE I'LL COME HOME IN THE SPRING is bolstered by a superb dramatic performance by Field, which presages her later roles in pieces like Sybil, Places In The Heart, and Norma Rae, and two period-era acoustic folk-pop songs sung by Linda Ronstadt. The film also boasts very sympathetic director from Joseph Sargent, whose credits include the underrated 1970 science fiction/suspense drama COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT and the taut (and original) 1974 suspense thriller THE TAKING OF PELHAM ONE TWO THREE. Even though it can't help avoid being dated in certain ways, MAYBE I'LL COME HOME IN THE SPRING still stands as a very critical look at the things that broke so many families apart at the end of the 60s and the start of the 70s.
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No Emmy Awards? What a shame.
shango72002 August 2011
The ABC Movie of the Week was still pretty new in 1970 (I think they started in 1969?) and this was not typical for them as it was not a mystery or supernatural thriller. I too saw this as a child and it left an impression on me as it did for the other posters on here. What none of the other posters mentioned however was that one of the things that gave this movie a special touch of reality was that it was filmed on location is a real suburban home! This made some scenes claustrophobic yet intimate as well. (Many of the TV movies were shot on sterile studio sets). So yeah, I guess the house becomes one of the characters in the movie too. I think with a bigger budget and possibly more "adult" themes or nudity or course language ; this would have made a nice theatrical feature. If you like "Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring" you should check out another movie called "The People Next Door" made the same year. Similar plot yet more gritty and down-beat--it was an "R" rated feature film. As stated above; what a shame that this did not win an Emmy Award that year.
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