The <head> HTML element contains machine-readable information (metadata) about the document, like its title,
scripts, and style sheets. Note: <head> primarily holds information for machine processing, not human-readability. For human-visible information, like top-level headings and listed authors, see the
<header> element. This element includes the global attributes. The URIs of one or more metadata profiles, separated by
white space. <!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en-US">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width" />
<title>Document title</title>
</head>
</html>
HTML5-compliant browsers automatically create a <head> element if its tags are omitted in the markup. This auto-creation is not guaranteed in ancient browsers. BCD tables only load in the browserAttributes
Example
Notes
Specifications
Specification HTML Standard
# the-head-element
Browser compatibility
See also
Return the first n rows. This function returns the first n rows for the object based on position. It is useful for quickly testing if your object has the right type of data in it. For negative values of n, this function returns all rows except the last |n| rows, equivalent to df[:n]. If n is larger than the number of rows, this function returns all rows. Number of rows to select. The first n rows of the caller object. Examples >>> df = pd.DataFrame({'animal': ['alligator', 'bee', 'falcon', 'lion',
... 'monkey', 'parrot', 'shark', 'whale', 'zebra']})
>>> df
animal
0 alligator
1 bee
2 falcon
3 lion
4 monkey
5 parrot
6 shark
7 whale
8 zebra
Viewing the first 5 lines >>> df.head()
animal
0 alligator
1 bee
2 falcon
3 lion
4 monkey
Viewing the first n lines (three in this case)
>>> df.head(3) animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon
For negative values of n
>>> df.head(-3) animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon 3 lion 4 monkey 5 parrot
- 19681968
- GG
- 1h 26m
The Monkees are tossed about in a psychedelic, surrealist, plotless, circular bit of fun fluff.The Monkees are tossed about in a psychedelic, surrealist, plotless, circular bit of fun fluff.The Monkees are tossed about in a psychedelic, surrealist, plotless, circular bit of fun fluff.
See production, box office & company info
- 140User reviews
- 50Critic reviews
See more at IMDbPro
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Review
Much more entertaining than I remembered.
I grew up watching the Monkees, and the first time I watched this movie as a kid, I thought it was the coolest thing I'd ever seen. Then I watched it again a few years later and dismissed it as pretentious crap. I decided to watch it again right after Peter Tork died, and to my surprise, I enjoyed it a lot more than I thought I would.
If you haven't seen it, you should definitely watch it. Not to say it's good - because it most certainly isn't, but it should definitely be seen, if only as a fascinating window into the time.
It has some great cameos, including Frank Zappa with a talking cow, Annette Funicello, a gigantic Victor Mature, and this time I even caught a very brief glimpse of the writer of the movie, Jack Nicholson (yes, THE Jack Nicholson).
It also has some genuinely good music.
There's a certain irony to this movie. On the one hand, it was the Monkees' attempt to break away from their teenybopper image and "legitimize" themselves, but on the other, it's hard to think of a more extreme example of Hollywood's move at the time to make a buck by bringing counter culture mainstream - albeit a badly failed attempt in this case. People who were trying to "stick it to The Man" discovered that for the right price, The Man was more than happy to stick it to Himself, or at least pretend to.
That said, the movie had more of a "wink" than I remembered, so I don't think it took itself all that seriously. For example, when Frank Zappa refers to Davie Jones' dance number as "pretty white", Jones responds "I'm a pretty white guy.". At another point, Peter Tork can be clearly heard whistling Strawberry Fields, as if to say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
One thing I'd completely forgotten was how much Vietnam footage there is in the movie, interspersed with shots of the band performing. That was a pretty standard sort of "statement" at the time, but I was surprised how graphic some of the footage was, given the film's G rating. It even included that infamous clip of the soldier getting shot in the head.
- ejonconrad
- Mar 4, 2019
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By what name was Head (1968) officially released in India in English?
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