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  1. Breathing Together: Revolution of the Electric Family is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Morley Markson and released in 1971. The film is a profile of many of the politically and culturally radical figures who established and defined counterculture in the 1960s.

  2. 15 de abr. de 1971 · Breathing Together: Revolution of the Electric Family: Directed by Morley Markson. With Don Cox, Buckminster Fuller, Allen Ginsberg, Fred Hampton.

  3. 31 de dic. de 2014 · Growing Up In America: Breathing Together, Revolution of the Electric Family, 1986. A documentary about the spirit of the Sixties and its leaders. Interviews with Allen Ginsberg, Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoffman, Fred Hampton, Deborah Johnson, John Sinclair, and Timothy Leary.

  4. The filmmaker indicates his belief that powerful forces in the U.S. government worked together to suppress American radicals. This view, widely disbelieved at the time, has since been confirmed. The title of this Canadian documentary may have some relation to Canadian Marshall McLuhan's theories.

  5. In his ambitious Breathing Together, Markson links together American countercultural heroes, visionaries, artists, and revolutionaries in a collagist synthesis, revealing the soul and essence of a new culture in confrontation with the old.

  6. 1971 Directed by Morley Markson. The title of this Canadian documentary may have some relation to Canadian Marshall McLuhan’s theories. It combines interview with famous U.S. militants of the ’60s, such as Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman, with reenactments of their Chicago trials (i.e., the “Chicago Eight,” etc.).

  7. Breathing Together: Revolution of the Electric Family is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Morley Markson and released in 1971. The film is a profile of many of the politically and culturally radical figures who established and defined counterculture in the 1960s.