Assuming that Eugene is asking about the black Stratocaster seen from 0:56 in the video, the pickup complement at that stage was as Stuart describes it with a couple of (small) exceptions.
The neck pickup was a
Gibson humbucker (one made in 1972 when Gibson were temporarily embossing their brand name on the pickup cover in order to distinguish them from copies).
The bridge pickup was a
Fender Wide Range Humbucker (designed by Seth Lover - the man who designed the humbucking pickup for Gibson in the first place). The Fender WRHB was used on the Telecaster Custom and Deluxe and would later be used on the Starcaster. Fender are currently making a reissue, but knowledgeable people tell me that it sounds more like a generic humbucker than the original Fender item did.
Pictures:
Gibson 1972 "embossed" pickups:
http://www.bestguitars.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/guitar-1759681305139229070.jpgFender WRHB (a reissue, identical on outside):
http://www.macdaddymusicstore.com/catalog/fender-72telehb.jpgThe middle pickup at that time was the
ordinary Fender Stratocaster pickup. The DiMarzio range was not yet in production (!), but Hank certainly used a DiMarzio Fat Strat pickup later on (1977 onward) when he had returned that guitar to its all-single-coil state.
HTH,
JNPS: Whilst it was outfitted with that combination of pickups, Hank's Strat bore the Gibson brand name on the neck pickup and the Fender logo on the bridge pickup.
PPS: The Gibson pickup was originally fitted in the bridge position (c. 1973) and was a bridge-position model, which is why the polepieces are - unusually - at the bridge end of the pickup when fitted in the neck position, presumably in order to keep the embossed logo the "right" way up. This was a problem with the embossed pickups if swapped from one position to another.