Joe (1970)

Year: 1970
Country: USA
Genre: Drama, Thriller, Erotic
Quality: DVDRip
Language: English
Subtitles: English

Director: John G. Avildsen
Studio: Cannon Group, The D.C. Company

Starring: Susan Sarandon, Patrick McDermott, Tim Lewis, Estelle Omens, Bob O’Connell, Marlene Warfield, Dennis Patrick, Audrey Caire, Mary Case, Jenny Paine, Peter Boyle, Reid Cruickshanks, Rudy Churney, K Callan, Robert Emerick
Description: Bill, a wealthy businessman, confronts his junkie daughter’s drug-dealing boyfriend; in the ensuing argument, Bill kills him. Panic-stricken, he wanders the streets and eventually stops at a bar. There he runs into a drunken factory worker named Joe, who hates hippies, blacks, and anyone who is “different”, and would like to kill one himself. The two start talking, and Bill reveals his secret to Joe. Complications ensue



File Size: ~2100MB
Resolution: 1280×720
Duration: 107 min
Format: mp4

Download Link(s):
Joe.mp4 – 2.1 GB
Subtitles:
Joe.rar – 116.4 KB

One Responseto “Joe (1970)”

  1. walt says:

    User Review at imdb.com

    That’s the way it was
    8 September 2012 | by berry-michael61
    This was the first movie I viewed, just by chance, after my discharge from active duty in the Army in 1970. Forty-two years later, remembering nothing of the plot, only that I left the theater very emotional (rare for me), I found a DVD copy at a local library.

    I now realize why I have since not been able to regard Peter Boyle as anything but a frightening character, even in his comic role on the TV series “Everybody Loves Raymond.” To be fair, his 1976 role in “Taxi Driver” didn’t help, but his face, as seen in “Joe”, is still the stuff of nightmares for me.

    That said, I learned that it was the now long-forgotten hostility between sectors of our society, so brutally represented in the film, created by the debacle in Vietnam that affected me so deeply in 1970. Today, even to one who was there, the experience of living in an America so torn, so close to open rebellion, is hard to conceive – even harder to explain. But fresh off the plane, still somewhat glum from the cold stares at the airport caused by my uniform, this film hit me like a hammer. And guessing from the huge profit it made, it did the same to many.

    It shocked me that I hadn’t remembered Susan Sarandon was in this film – she has been one of my favorites – and, as a bonus, the then 24 year-old Ms. Sarandon appears nude. How could I have possibly forgotten that?

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