More (1969 film)

[1][2] Starring Mimsy Farmer and Klaus Grünberg,[3] the film deals with heroin addiction as drug fascination[4] on the island of Ibiza, Spain.

[5][6] Made in the political fallout of the 1960s counterculture,[7] it features drug use,[8] "free love",[9] and other references to contemporary European youth culture.

[5] It features a soundtrack written and performed by the English rock band Pink Floyd, released as an album the same year.

Though Charlie warns him that she is a drug user and dangerous, he goes to her hotel room, where she introduces him to marijuana and they make love.

Stefan persuades her to join him in an isolated villa and she secretly brings both money and a huge quantity of heroin she has stolen from Wolf.

Wolf demands return of the rest of the heroin and money and, as payment for what they have used, Stefan has to work in his bar while Estelle has to share his bed.

The soundtrack to the film was composed and performed by English rock band Pink Floyd, and consists of instrumental compositions and more conventional songs, such as "The Nile Song", which (somewhat out of character for Pink Floyd) borders on Stooges-like heavy rock, and a ballad featuring bongos called "Cymbaline", written by Roger Waters and performed by David Gilmour.

In the film, as the couple mixes up a hallucinogenic concoction in the kitchen, the ingredients "benzedrine" and "banana peel" are deleted from the audio track.

[citation needed] With regard to the film's overall design, Roger Ebert stated, "More is a weird, freaky movie about two hedonistic kids who destroy themselves with drugs.

The house from the film, used in the production. Located in Ibiza, Spain.