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M*A*S*H
Directed by
Robert Altman
R
1970
1h 56m
Comedy
,
Drama
,
and more
7.3
86%
82%
Add to Watchlist
The staff of a Korean War field hospital uses humor and hijinks to keep their sanity in the face of the horror of war.
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Where to Watch M*A*S*H
Amazon Video
Rent $3.99
Buy $14.99
Apple TV
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Buy $15.99
Fandango At Home
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Buy $14.99
+4 more
Cast of M*A*S*H
Donald Sutherland
Hawkeye Pierce
Elliott Gould
Trapper John McIntyre
Tom Skerritt
Duke Forrest
Sally Kellerman
Maj. Margaret 'Hot Lips' O'Houlihan
Robert Duvall
Maj. Frank Burns
Roger Bowen
Lt. Col. Henry Blake
René Auberjonois
Father John Mulcahy
David Arkin
St. Major Wade Vollmer
Jo Ann Pflug
Lt. 'Dish' Schneider
Gary Burghoff
Cpl. 'Radar' O'Reilly
Fred Williamson
Dr. Oliver 'Spearchucker' Jones
Michael Murphy
'Me Lai' Marston
Indus Arthur
Lt. Leslie
Ken Prymus
PFC. Seidman
Bobby Troup
Sgt. Gorman
Kim Atwood
Ho-Jon
Timothy Brown
Cpl. Judson
John Schuck
Capt. 'Painless' Waldowski
Dawne Damon
Capt. Storch
Carl Gottlieb
'Ugly John'
Tamara Wilcox-Smith
Capt. 'Knocko'
G. Wood
Brig. Gen. Charles Hammond
Bud Cort
Pvt. Warren Boone
Danny Goldman
Capt. Murrhardt
Corey Fischer
Capt. Bandini
Sylvester Stallone
Soldier (uncredited)
Stephen Altman
Duke's 5-Year-Old Son (uncredited)
Jerry Jones
Motor Pool Sergeant (uncredited)
James B. Douglas
Col. Wallace C. Merril (uncredited)
Gerry Okuneff
Football Player (uncredited)
Cathleen Cordell
Capt. Peterson - Nurse Corps (uncredited)
Ben Davidson
Football Player #88 - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Joe Amsler
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Stanford Blum
Football Player (uncredited)
Craig Chudy
Football Player (uncredited)
Jack Concannon
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Michael Consoldane
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Ray Didsbury
Ad Lib Doctor (uncredited)
Tom Falk
Corporal (uncredited)
John Fujioka
Japanese Golf Pro (uncredited)
Lynn Grate
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Joanne Hahn
Ward Nurse (uncredited)
Sumi Haru
Japanese Nurse (uncredited)
Buck Holland
Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)
Susan Ikeda
Japanese Caddie (uncredited)
Dale Ishimoto
Korean Doctor (uncredited)
Joe Kapp
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Weaver Levy
Korean Doctor (uncredited)
Harvey Levine
2nd Lieutenant (uncredited)
Sam A. Mides
Football Player (uncredited)
Monica Peterson
Pretty W.A.C. Receptionist (uncredited)
David Sachs
Surgeon #1 (uncredited)
Ron Stein
Football Player (uncredited)
Fran Tarkenton
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Johnny Unitas
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Greg Walker
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Hiroko Watanabe
Japanese Prostitute (uncredited)
Don Watters
Football Player (uncredited)
Ron Way
Football Player (uncredited)
Ben Davidson
Football Player #88 - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Ted Knight
Offstage Dialog (voice) (uncredited)
John Myers
Football Player - 325th Evac.
Robert Altman
Director
Ring Lardner, Jr.
Writer
Richard Hooker
Writer
Ingo Preminger
Producer
M*A*S*H Ratings & Reviews
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Myles Standish
It is ribald, cruel, sick, sacrilegious, offensive and enormously funny, continuously and wildly hilarious.
Los Angeles Free Press
Michael Ross
A good (but not great) comedy about the calculated idiocies of war precisely because it is a human and ultimately humane movie.
The Hollywood Reporter
John Mahoney
The finest American comedy since Some Like It Hot, the Mr. Roberts of the Korean War, The Graduate of 1970, and the film that has been expected from director Robert Altman for some short time.
TIME Magazine
M.A.S.H., one of America's funniest bloody films, is also one of its bloodiest funny films.
The Nation
Robert Hatch
I looked in vain for pertinence or surprise. Nor was I shocked: without some maturity (if not by the participants, at least by the managers), irreverence is merely brash.
Antagony & Ecstasy
Tim Brayton
That it's is so much of its moment doesn't mean that it's aged poorly... it's brash enough and inventive enough to still feel like a work of radicalism, more than 40 years on,
Chicago Tribune
Gene Siskel
For me, M*A*S*H contains as much depression as humor.
ColeSmithey.com
Cole Smithey
[VIDEO ESSAY] "M*A*S*H" ruthlessly satirizes the hypocritical U.S. military, and de facto the U.S. Government, for its systemic hypocrisies and arbitrary means of doling out Draconian punishments to friends and foe alike.
Common Sense Media
Heather Boerner
Rollicking, biting, satirical classic is so 1970.
CinePassion
Fernando F. Croce
Altman chronicles the sardonic wasteland with a camera that's always in the wrong place at the right time
Slant Magazine
Eric Henderson
A good dint lower than its reputation, more so if you look at it not as one of the seminal 1970s films but instead as the first chapter from the finest filmmaking career spent examining the American mystique.
EmanuelLevy.Com
Emanuel Levy
Impudent and bold, M.A.S.H., Altman's most commercial film, satirizes the glorification of war, military bureaucracy, social hypocrisy, repressed sexuality and other norms than have lost their validity.
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is still watchable for the verve of the ensemble acting and dovetailing direction, but some of the crassness leaves a sour aftertaste.
Variety
Variety Staff
In the end M.A.S.H. succeeds, in spite of its glaring faults.
Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews
Dennis Schwartz
A black comedy that rings hollow today.
Film Freak Central
Walter Chaw
Altman boiled away the muddled meat of literary pretension intended to smokescreen the essence of war: blood on the one side and semen on the other.
Filmcritic.com
Christopher Null
A battle against the idea that 'a war movie' had to be a serious affair.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
One of the reasons M*A*S*H is so funny is that it's so desperate.
New York Times
Roger Greenspun
Although it is impudent, bold, and often very funny, it lacks the sense of order (even in the midst of disorder) that seems the special province of successful comedy.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
Altman's irreverent portrait of a Korean War medical unit.
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