High Time | |
---|---|
Directed by | Blake Edwards |
Screenplay by | |
Story by | Garson Kanin |
Produced by | Charles Brackett |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ellsworth Fredericks |
Edited by | Robert L. Simpson |
Music by | Henry Mancini |
Production company | Bing Crosby Productions |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,815,000[1] |
Box office | $2.5 million (US/ Canada)[2][3] |
High Time is a 1960 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards and starring Bing Crosby, Fabian, Tuesday Weld, and Nicole Maurey. The film is told from the perspective of a middle-aged man who enters the world of a new generation of postwar youth.
In the years since its release, High Time has come to be viewed as a comedic study of the slowly emerging generation gap between the music and mores of an older generation and postwar youth, as well as an inadvertent time capsule of American adolescents and lifestyles in 1960.[4]