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June 25, 2010

The Searchers review

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 5:58 am

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The Large screen:

In 1956 the movie western was going through some tough times. 
The genre that had been the staple of Saturday afternoons at the bijou
for decades was on the decline thanks to the penetration of television. 
Westerns were cheap to make; just get some horses, drive an hour or so
out of LA into the desert and start filming.  TV prime time became
filled with western shows, from Gunsmoke to Death Valley Days,
the small screen had a good number of quality western shows to choose from. 
If you could stay home and watch a western on TV for free, why bother going
to the movies and paying?  After all, there wasn’t a huge difference
in quality.

It
was in this atmosphere that director John Ford decided to make yet another
western.  He’d show everyone that westerns could still fill seats
in movie theaters; you just had to give the public a great film and they’d
come.  His 1956 film, The Searchers, was a great film. 
It’s universally acknowledged as being one of the best westerns ever made,
and it is on the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 best American
movies from the first century of the cinema.  It’s a still being taught
in film schools across the country, and Entertainment Weekly readers recently
voted it the 15th best movie ever shot.  Now this classic of cinema
has come to Blu-ray with a wonderful looking print that will make it look
like you’re seeing the movie for the first time.

Ethan Edwards (John Wayne) left to fight for the Confederacy during
the civil war, and three years after that conflict was ended he returns
to his brother’s homestead in Texas.  A gruff, easy to anger man,
it’s obvious that he’s seen a lot, much of it that he’d rather forget. 
When a neighbor’s cattle are stolen, Ethan joins the posse to go after
the rustlers with his brother’s adopted son, Martin Pawley (Jeffrey Hunter),
and has his brother stay with his wife and children.

After riding for 40 miles they find the cattle, slaughtered and left
to rot in the desert.  Comanche Indians took the livestock as a diversion,
a way to lure the men away from their ranches.  The posse turns back
and when they get back to the Edwards farm they discover it burnt to the
ground.  Ethan’s brother, his wife, and their son murdered. 
The two other children, both girls, have been kidnapped at taken by the
Indians.

This
starts a long search.  Ethan vows to find his missing nieces. 
Martin accompanies him on his search, as does Brad Jorgensen (Harry Carey
Jr.), the boyfriend of the oldest Edwards girl.  The track grows cold,
but that doesn’t stop Ethan.  As the weeks turn into months, and the
months turn into years, he keeps searching for his niece.  At first
to rescue her, but eventually to kill her since so much time has passed
she’s taken up the Indian’s ways and no better than an Indian herself.

This is an amazing movie that can be enjoyed on many levels.  On
the surface it is a solid adventure film with gun fights, battle scenes,
and a tough as nails lead.  If you look just a bit deeper however,
this movie struggles with some weighty issues.

The racism of the movie is the first thing that most people notice. 
Ethan Edwards hates Indians.  He even doesn’t like Martin who is 1/8
Native American, barely talking with him at the beginning of the movie
and calling him names for most of the rest.  One of the most powerful
scenes in a film that’s filled with them is when Ethan and the posse discover
a dead Comanche buried under a rock.  Ethan takes out his revolver
and shoots the dead man’s eyes out.  When a preacher asks him why
he did that he replies:  “By what you preach, none. But what that
Comanche believes; ain’t got no eyes, he can’t enter the spirit land. Has
to wander forever between the winds. You get it Reverend.”  As the
movie goes on, his hatred of Indians becomes stronger if anything. 
Even the other white settlers find his attitude unappealing and Ethan is
shunned from society.  The Indians are equally racist.  The antagonist,
Scar, hates Anglos as much as Ethan hates Indians, and they are just as
savage as Ethan is because of their hatred.  This film shows the ugliness
of racism without being preachy.  In the end, Ethan doesn’t have any
epiphany that he was wrong the entire time, but he does pay the price for
his views.

The movie is also about redemption, and the search for forgiveness. 
Ethan isn’t just searching for his niece, he’s looking for revenge and
he hopes that taking his pound of flesh will make him whole again. 
Martin is there almost as his conscience.  Martin is always the one
who questions what Ethan is doing, and wondering if what he’s doing is
right.  What price do they have to pay in order to rescue an innocent
girl?

The
film also deals with honor, morality, love, and friendship.  It is
a very layered film, much more nuanced than one would normally think a
western would be.  That’s the reason that it is such a classic film;
because it transcends the boundaries that usually enclose films of this
genre.  It raises above them and comments on humanity and the human
condition.

The acting was excellent across the board.  In Harry Carey Jr.’s
autobiography, the character actor (who is still alive and kicking by the
way) who appeared in many Ford films (including Three Godfathers and She
Wore a Yellow Ribbon, both with John Wayne) says that Wayne was very different
during this shoot.  He was Ethan Edwards both on and off camera. 
Whatever he did to get into the role, this was Wayne’s best performance. 
He plays the anti-hero masterfully, giving Ethan depth and dimension. 
The scene where Ethan hands Martin his will to read has Wayne acting both
tough and nervous, and yet he’s very believable.  Of course the climax
of the film, which I won’t give away here, is a cinematic classic. 
Wayne’s performance is stunning in its intensity.  The first time
I saw the ending to this movie I wanted to turn away because I didn’t want
to see what I knew was going to happen.  This ending is still just
as powerful today.

John Ford was a good director, but he surpassed himself here. 
The vistas and beautiful scenery would be glorious to watch even if the
film itself was a dud.  As it is, Ford’s eye (no pun intended) makes
this a gorgeous movie which adds to the impact.  He also uses the
language of film to impart more information to the viewers; information
that isn’t nessisarily spoken.  The look on Ward Bond’s face, just
staring blankly ahead, when Ethan says goodbye to Martha, his brother’s
wife, says a lot about the relationship between those two people. 
The way Ford has the ending mirror the beginning also says a lot about
Ethan’s fate without being too direct.

The DVD:


 

Video:

This Technicolor/Vistavision film looks marvelous.  It was restored
just this year and the folks at Warner Brothers did a magnificent job. 
The colors are bright, bold, and accurate.  The flesh tones, an area
where color restorations usually have a hard time, look lifelike and realistic,
while the big open sky is achingly blue.  The blacks are solid and
strong too.  One of the real highlights of this film are the gorgeous
vistas of the old west, and the plateaus and desertscapes look just fantastic. 
There is a lot of dimensionality to the picture, especially the exterior
scenes, and the image pops off the screen nicely.

The detail in this film is wonderful.  You can see the cracks in
John Wayne’s face, especially at the end of the film, and this gives the
movie and even more powerful emotional impact.  The fine lines are
strong and solid even in low light situations.  The picture is sharp
and well defined.  There are no specks or scratches on the print.

Although the label claims that this movie is presented with an aspect
ratio of 1.85:1, the frame is actually 1.75:1 which is how the film was
originally released.

Audio:

The film comes with the original mono soundtrack in English, Spanish,
and French.  There were no multichannel mixes included.  While
some may bemoan the fact that a DD 5.1 track wasn’t included, I enjoyed
listening to the film as it was originally intended to be heard. 
(I’ll admit that some scenes would have worked better with a surround mix
however.  The scene where they are sneaking up on the Comanche camp
for the first time and hear animal calls that may be Indians would have
been very effective with the calls coming from all around to mimic the
characters reactions.)  Being filmed 50 years ago, the audio track
is rather flat.  There isn’t much in the way of bass, and ever the
few instances were highs are recorded they sound clipped.   The
audio has almost no hiss or background noise, and the dialog is reproduced
nicely.  While it doesn’t compare to a recent film’s sound, this audio
fits the film nicely.

Extras:

After screening so many Blu-ray discs with anemic extras, I get a thrill
when I come across a disc like this one that has a good number of bonus
features.  WB wisely waited until 50 GB discs had been perfected in
order to have everything fit.  The disc starts off with a two or three
minute introduction by John Wayne’s son Patrick Wayne.  Patrick had
a small role in the film, and gives a nice intro.

There is an interesting commentary by filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich. 
He does a great job of giving some background on the film and insight into
Ford’s technique.  While I enjoy these scholarly-type commentaries,
I’ll admit it’s a bit on the dry side.  More lively was The Searchers: 
An Appreciation
.  This half hour documentary has filmmakers Curtis
Hanson, John Milius, and Martin Scorsese talking about how much this movie
affected them when they first saw it and how it influenced their style. 
One of the better featurettes I’ve seen this year, it is mandatory viewing.

A Turning of the Earth:  John Ford, John Wayne, and the Searchers
is another half hour documentary.  This time voice-overs are placed
over scenes from the film and behind the scenes footage to tell the story
of the film’s production.  While not as good as the previous featurette,
it is still an entertaining look at the movie.

Also included are four vintage clips that were aired on TV to promote
the film when it was first released theatrically.  Made to air after
WB movies, these feature host Gig Young who interviews Jeffrey Hunter and
Natalie Wood as well as taking a look at the Monument Valley shooting locations
as well as discussing how difficult it was shooting at such a remote location.

The bonus items are rounded up by a couple of trailers.

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Final Thoughts:

This is a powerful strong film that has influenced a generation of directors. 
Not only is it John Ford’s best film, it’s also the movie that proves that
John Wayne was an excellent actor.  This Blu-ray disc looks magnificent
and really brings this classic film to life.  The disc is also filled
with extras that aren’t you’re normal fluff pieces.  A great film,
wonderful transfer and solid extras.  What more could you want in
a disc?  DVD Talk Collector Series.

Note: The images in this review are not from the Blu-ray disc and do
not necessarily represent the image quality on the disc.

 

June 24, 2010

OPENING TODAY Run, Fat Boy, R…

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 10:54 am

OPENING TODAY

Run, Fat Boy, Run (PG-13, 110 min.) See review on Page 12.

Peabody Place 22, Ridgeway Four, Collierville Towne 16, Studio on the Square, Cordova Cinema.

Stop-Loss (R, 113 min.) Director Kimberly Peirce's first film since "Boys Don't Cry" (1999) is the story of a Texas hometown hero of a soldier (Ryan Phillippe) who rebels when ordered back on yet another tour of duty in Iraq.

Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, CinePlanet 16.

Superhero Movie (PG-13, 85 min.) A spoof, in the tradition of "Date Movie," "Epic Movie," "Scary Movie," etc.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

21 (PG-13, 123 min.) See review on Page 13.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Studio on the Square, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

SPECIAL MOVIES

Deep Sea: This IMAX underwater adventure runs through June 28. Narrated by Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet, the movie leads viewers around the globe beneath the ocean's surface. Tickets: $8, $7.25 senior citizens, $6.25 children ages 3-12; children under 3 are free. Call for times.

Crew Training International IMAX Theater at Memphis Pink Palace Museum, 3050 Central. Call 763-IMAX for general information or 320-6362 for reservations.

Helvetica (Not rated, 80 min.) To quote the angry Internet Movie Database post of a student who was forced to watch this movie in journalism class: "I thought my teacher was kidding when he said we were watching a movie about font. But no … it features a bunch of font-crazy nutjobs talking about their favorite subject: Helvetica!" Indeed, this acclaimed 2007 documentary, inspired by the 50th anniversary of the common sans-serif typeface, explores the psychological impact as well as the physical appeal of typographic design; according to the film's press notes, the movie "invites us to take a second look at the thousands of words we see every day." Presented in association with the Memphis chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts, the professional association for design.

7:30 p.m. Thursday, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. Tickets: $7, or $5 for museum members. Visit brooksmuseum.org or call 544-6208.

On Location: Memphis International Film Fest: See stories beginning on Page 4.

Studio on the Square, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. Visit onlocationmemphis.org.

Roving Mars: The in-depth IMAX adventure follows the "careers" of Spirit and Opportunity, NASA's robotic Exploration Rovers, from their development to their manufacture to their six-month, 10,000-mile-per-hour flight through cold space to their landing and deployment on the surface of Mars, where they gathered information to help pave the way for future visits by man. Runs through Nov. 14. Tickets: $8, $7.25 senior citizens, $6.25 children ages 3-12; children under 3 are free. Call for show times.

Crew Training International IMAX Theater at Memphis Pink Palace Museum, 3050 Central. Call 763-IMAX for general information or 320-6362 for reservations.

NOW SHOWING

Alvin and the Chipmunks (PG, 92 min.) This updated revamp of the late Ross Bagdasarian's concept (introduced in a series of novelty hits and a TV cartoon series) about a human being who plays father/manager to a trio of squeaky-voiced singing chipmunks is a sort of anti-Hannah Montana parable in which young performers discover they prefer the comfort and security of home to the high-pressure glitz of rock-and-roll stardom. Jason Lee portrays Bagdasarian's David Seville character; the chipmunks — Alvin, Simon and Theodore — are computer-animated. The movie is likable and cute; plus, it reminds us that "The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late)," which was a No. 1 hit in 1958, really

is

a pretty great pop recording.

Winchester Court 8, Bartlett 10.

The Band's Visit (PG-13, 87 min.) A struggling but dignified Egyptian police force band is stranded for a night in small-town Israel in this charming, deadpan comedy about the necessity and difficulty of human (and thus Middle Eastern, and thus global) connection. Israeli writer-director Eran Kolirin uses the frame like a proscenium arch, usually keeping his camera still so that characters can exit or enter his elegant compositions in amusing ways; the formality and the deliberate pace suggest the influence of Laurel and Hardy and Jacques Tati. The characters sometimes speak Arabic and Hebrew, but mostly they communicate with each other in polite, fractured English, complemented by the even more common language of gestures, glances and sighs.

Ridgeway Four.

The Bank Job (R, 110 min.) A "foolproof" heist goes awry.

Peabody Place 22, Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema.

Bee Movie (PG, 91 min.) Bees with weirdly human faces (hasn't DreamWorks Animation learned anything from Pixar's approach to animals?) are the stars of this digital cartoon co-written and co-produced by Jerry Seinfeld, who gives voice to lead bee Barry B. Benson, an unconventional young insect who fights for the emancipation of commercially employed honey farm bees while also nursing a crush on a human florist (Renée Zellwegger). The Fisher-Price-inspired "set" design offers colorful candy for the eye, but the standup-comic dialogue, the incessant adult-oriented pop culture references (Sting — get it? — and Ray Liotta make cameo appearances as cartoon versions of themselves) and a story that has absolutely no internal logic (even given its intentional silliness) are a real buzzkill. Events veer from the apocalyptic (the near-extinction of America's flowers) to the inexplicable (the finale is a parody of an "Airport" movie), all presented with a glib yada-yada sense of inconsequentiality.

Winchester Court 8.

Caramel (PG, 95 min.) A French-Lebanese production shot in cosmopolitan Beirut, this is a sincere but formulaic sisters-are-doing-it-for- themselves (and doing each other's hair) ensemble drama in the manner of such commercial American films as "Beauty Shop," elevated by the novelty of its Lebanese locations and Arabic cast (headed by director Nadine Labaki, as an almond-eyed "bad girl" who sleeps with a married man). What makes the movie interesting (for American audiences, at least) is its gritty but often beautiful location photography and its cultural specificity of detail, especially in regards to social and sexual mores. For example, one woman undergoes an apparently commonplace surgical procedure to "restore" her virginity, so her husband-to-be won't discover on their wedding night that he wasn't her first lover.

Ridgeway Four.

Cloverfield (PG-13, 85min.) A giant monster attack on Manhattan is depicted entirely through the video camerawork of a goofy young "dude"-turned-impromptu documentarian (T.J. Miller) in this combination of "The Blair Witch Project" and "Godzilla," which earns its hype: The movie is intense and technically convincing, even if the central conceit (the guy keeps shooting, no matter how close he is to being eaten) is ridiculous and the "O.C."-style young heroes are little more than attractive ciphers. Directed by Matt Reeves and produced by J.J. Abrams ("Lost"), the movie suggests the influence of YouTube and (inevitably) 9/11, but it actually belongs to the old-fashioned exploitation tradition of 3-D and post-Hiroshima sci-fi as it uses state-of-the-art effects and ballyhoo to ingeniously update B-movie subject matter for a new audience.

Bartlett 10.

College Road Trip (G, 83 min.) A protective cop father (Martin Lawrence) accompanies his overachieving high school daughter (Raven-Symoné) on a tour of college campuses.

Peabody Place 22, Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema.

Definitely, Maybe (PG-13, 122 min.) A romantic comedy in flashback.

Stage Cinema 12.

Doomsday (R, 109 min.) If Uwe Boll had talent, he might produce something like this well-mounted, ultraviolent, outrageously ridiculous British throwback to the "Escape from New York"/"Road Warrior" rip-offs of the 1980s, with Rhona Mitra in the Milla Jovovich butt-kicking babe role. Set in a near-future postplague UK populated by punk-rock goons and neo-feudal knights, the movie delivers the exploitation goods and then some, but it's so utterly derivative it represents a depressing step backward for writer-director Neil Marshall, whose "The Descent" was one of the more compelling horror movies of the past decade.

Peabody Place 22, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

Drillbit Taylor (PG-13, 102 min.) This is the first movie off the Judd Apatow Productions assembly line that seems like the product of an assembly line. In other words: "Drillbit Taylor" is to Judd Apatow as "Harry and the Hendersons" and "*batteries not included" were to Steven Spielberg. Directed by Adam Sandler collaborator Steven Brill and co-scripted by "Knocked Up" star Seth Rogen, the film casts Owen Wilson as an implausibly lovable homeless Army deserter hired as a bully-blocking bodyguard by three nerdy high-school freshmen (a skinny smart guy, a fat loudmouth and an uber-geek, just like in "Superbad"). The bully's attacks are surprisingly brutal, which primes the audience to cheer when he's out-muscled by an adult rather than outwitted by the kids.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

Enchanted (PG, 107 min.) A naive Disney princess named Giselle (Amy Adams) is ejected from her fairy-tale cartoon world into the flesh-and-blood chaos of Manhattan in this charming, clever and upbeat family film, directed by Kevin Lima and scripted by Bill Kelly. Never insulting as it moves toward its inevitable happily-ever-after ending, the movie maintains a delicate balance between wish-fulfillment fantasy and a recognition that the real world inhabited by its audience is filled with disappointment as well as with joy. With Patrick Dempsey as the divorce lawyer who becomes Giselle's New York Prince Charming; Susan Sarandon as a wicked witch; and Rachel Covey as a 6-year-old stand-in for the young girls in the audience: She sees Giselle as a dream big sister come to life.

Bartlett 10.

The Eye (PG-13, 97 min.) Jessica Alba sees dead people.

Majestic, Raleigh Springs Cinema.

First Sunday (PG-13, 98 min.) Petty crooks Ice Cube and Tracy Morgan gain more than money when they rob their neighborhood church.

Winchester Court 8, Bartlett 10.

Fool's Gold (PG-13, 112 min.) It's hard not to notice that Matthew McConaughey's chest measurement's dwarf those of co-star Kate Hudson in this soggy screwball comedy-adventure for parrotheads, which places so much emphasis on its shirtless leading man it may have been filmed in a new process: Pectoralscope. McConaughey is a devil-may-care Caribbean treasure hunter; Hudson is his disapproving ex-wife; together, they battle a literal gangster rapper named "Bigg Bunny" (Kevin Hart) and a rival booty-hunter (Ray Winstone) on their way to inevitable fortune and reunion.

Peabody Place 22, Stage Cinema 12, DeSoto Cinema 16, CinePlanet 16.

Funny Games (R, 108 min.) German writer-director Michael Haneke's almost shot-for-shot remake of his 1997 Austrian film seems more a calculated attempt to home-invade the English-language marketplace than a necessary revisiting of the provocative original, which provided disturbing (if artfully and economically dramatized) mental and physical torture sequences for arthouse shock fans while also critiquing the "complicity" of an audience that would pay to "enjoy" watching a pair of white-gloved Yuppie psychos terrorize a bourgeois husband, wife and young son. (The married couple is played here by Tim Roth and executive producer Naomi Watts; in a possible concession to American tastes, this casting flips the original concept, in which the husband was attractive while the wife was big-nosed and eccentric-looking.) This remake has generated almost hysterical negative overreaction from critics, which probably pleases Haneke greatly; its primary sin isn't its pretentiousness (Haneke suggests the family's comfortable affluence may justify its fate) but its redundancy: Not only is it a carbon copy, but such recent genre movies as "Hostel" have examined the attraction of screen violence with greater immediacy and subversiveness.

Studio on the Square.

The Golden Compass (PG-13, 113 min.) As unlikely to fill theater seats as it is to empty pews, this $180 million "anti-Narnia" fantasy adventure arrives burdened with the condemnation of the Catholic League and the antipathy of parents who have been told the film is not simple escapism but an atheism indoctrination tool. This scared reaction seems to confirm the message of author Philip Pullman's original trilogy of novels, in which the would-be dictatorship of the Magisterium — a symbol of dogmatic, organized religion — fears "any truth but their own." If many fantasy stories are spiritual in nature, Pullman's are rational: He celebrates "nothing less than free will," as a witch says in the film. However, director Chris Weitz has diluted much of Pullman's message to emphasize special effects and the action aspects of a story about a brave young girl (Dakota Blue Richards) on a magical parallel Earth where every citizen is accompanied by an animal "daemon" and where icy Nicole Kidman is a sinister secret agent. The narrative is a mess, with escapades following one another like chapters in a cliffhanger and unlikely characters — witches, ice bears, Tartars, "gyptians," a cowboy "aeronaut" (Sam Elliott) — appearing almost at random, until we lose our faith in the storytelling. Our skepticism is confirmed by the "To Be Continued" finish: The movie never really ends but simply stops, leaving many mysteries to be resolved in a sequel that may never appear.

Bartlett 10.

Horton Hears a Who! (G, 87 min.) This beautifully animated Blue Sky Studios ("Ice Age") CGI makeover of a 1954 children's book by Dr. Seuss respects, to some extent, the economy of line — in both rhyme and drawing — that was Theodor Geisel's trademark; it can't resist the fourth-wall-breaking pop-culture references that are typical of non-Pixar cartoons (the animal cast gathers for a climactic singalong to REO Speedwagon, egads), but it avoids the bloat and chaos that transformed such recent live-action Seussafilms as "The Grinch" into utter abominations. Jim Carrey provides the voice of the title elephant, who rocks the dogma of the jungle when he discovers that a speck of dust contains an entire civilized world; Carol Burnett is the self-righteous kangaroo (she "pouch-schools" her child) whose reactionary assertions (Horton is a "menace" because he causes people to "question authority") detract from the story's original, kid-friendly message that "a person's a person, no matter how small."

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

I Am Legend (PG-13, 101 min.) Using digital technology, the makers of this Will Smith box-office blockbuster have created compelling images of ruined post-plague Manhattan in the year 2012. But the movie's content lacks the sophistication of its special effects: This third official film adaptation of Richard Matheson's classic 1954 science-fiction novel about a lone human in a world of ghouls is even less faithful to the spirit of the original story than its often reviled predecessors, the low-budget "The Last Man on Earth" (1964) with Vincent Price and "The Omega Man" (1971) with Charlton Heston. In place of Matheson's dark irony, director Francis Lawrence ("Constantine") delivers attacking hordes of hyperactive flesh-eating former humans and — at the last minute — a supposedly reassuring religious parable. In the infantile prioritizing that often occurs when Hollywood wants to be "inspirational," the Smith character's Everyman crisis of faith is supposed to be as important to audiences as his struggle to save humanity from extinction.

Winchester Court 8, Bartlett 10.

In Bruges (R, 107 min.) Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson are London hit men holed up in historic Belgium in this self-conscious tragicomedy from acclaimed Irish playwright and debuting feature film writer-director Martin McDonagh. The lead actors make a great Mutt-and-Jeff team, but McDonagh lets them down: Playwright that he is, he repeatedly uses dialogue to underline and overstate the Farrell character's guilt about a particular killing when all the audience needs to understand the hit man's torment is to see the sad slope of the actor's expressive caterpillar eyebrows. As the "ironic" contrast between Medieval Flemish beauty and modern vulgarity and violence increases, the movie becomes overdetermined in its twist-of-fate plotting and over-reliant on thuggish and "crazy" humor (including tired midget jokes).

Studio on the Square.

Jumper (PG-13, 89 min.) It's easy to see why audiences have embraced this critically lambasted film: Its premise — a young man (Hayden Christensen) has the power to teleport himself anywhere, instantly — is irresistible. Need cash? "Jump" into a bank vault. Need no-obligation sex? Jump to a hottie-heavy pub in London, then jump back to America from the lady's bedroom the next morning. Plot details are inconsistent, but Doug Liman ("The Bourne Identity") directs with energy, and it's nice to see Samuel L. Jackson as a straight-up villain.

Peabody Place 22, Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, DeSoto Cinema 16, Cordova Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

Meet the Browns (PG-13, 100 min.) Tyler Perry's latest stage-play adaptation introduces moviegoers to a character who could rival Madea for popularity: crass but lovable Leroy Brown (David Mann).

Peabody Place 22, Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (PG-13, 92 min.) If a film adaptation of Winnifred Watson's novel had been produced when the book was published in 1938, it might have been a screwball classic. It's easy to imagine hatchet-faced Edna May Oliver as the humorously priggish vicar's daughter-turned-"social secretary," Miss Pettigrew, and Carole Lombard as her sexually generous nightclub-singer employer. Unfortunately, this is 2008, not 1938, so instead of a nimble and contemporary antic farce for the mass audience, we get a lavishly appointed flat-footed period piece aimed at the "art house" crowd. This means director Bharat Nalluri must reward his audience for its supposed discernment by demonstrating his movie's seriousness; to do this, he stops the action dead in its tracks, to address the wastefulness of war, etc. The expert cast deserves better, including Frances McDormand, who clearly relishes portraying the title character's Ugly Duckling transformation from "Oliver Twist's mom" to darling of the smart set, and Amy Adams, charmingly breathless as a ditsy glamour girl.

Ridgeway Four.

National Treasure: Book of Secrets (PG, 130 min.) Nicolas Cage is back to abuse American history the way he abused alcohol in "Leaving Las Vegas." This time, he's looking for missing pages from John Wilkes Booth's diary.

Winchester Court 8, Bartlett 10.

Never Back Down (PG-13, 114 min.) "Fight Club" meets "The Karate Kid" when rebellious teen Sean Faris is trained to be a champ by martial arts master Djimon Hounsou.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

No Country for Old Men (R, 122 min.) The wide open Texas spaces in which this often-violent movie takes place seem to have sprung filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen from their hermetic box of tricks: The brothers rein in the rococo flourishes, obsessive in-jokes and obscure leitmotifs that characterized many of their past cult favorites ("The Big Lebowski," "Barton Fink") to deliver a remarkably faithful adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's 2005 readymade screenplay of a novel, which is not so much a lament for the decay of civilization as an old man's acknowledgment that new times require new blood (often literally, in this case). Brilliantly constructed, the movie intentionally doesn't sustain the pit bull momentum of its stunning opening sequences; instead, the story becomes increasingly diffuse as it winds down to a thoughtful anticlimax rather than to the good-vs.-evil showdown most viewers will expect. Wearing a Question Mark & the Mysterians pageboy haircut and toting a pneumatic slaughterhouse gun, homicidal "ultimate bad-ass" Javier Bardem steals every scene; Josh Brolin is just as good as Bardem's quarry, a hunter with $2 million in drug money that he snatched from a desert crime scene. Tommy Lee Jones is an aging sheriff, the "old man" of the title; he's not onscreen much, but this is really his story.

Studio on the Square.

One Missed Call (PG-13, 87 min.) French director Eric Vallete makes his English-language debut with this occasionally spooky but forgettable remake of a 2003 Japanese horror film, which doesn't benefit from the dull presence of Ed Burns as a police detective who takes pretty student Shannyn Sossamon seriously when she warns him about something even scarier than telemarketers: phone calls from your future self that reveal the time of your death. The intentional comic highlight occurs when an exorcist proclaims: "Begone from this cell phone!" As Lead Belly might sing, to the tune of "One Meat Ball": "You get no thrills/ From 'One Missed Call'…"

Raleigh Springs Cinema.

The Other Boleyn Girl (PG-13, 116 min.) Natalie Portman is Anne Boleyn, Scarlett Johansson is Mary Boleyn and Eric Bana is King Henry VIII in this Tudor tale based on Philippa Gregory's novel.

Studio on the Square, Paradiso.

Penelope (PG, 89 min.) Christina Ricci is a girl with a pig's nose in this fairy tale-like romantic comedy co-starring James McAvoy.

Collierville Towne 16, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

Rambo (R, 93 min.) The fourth in the series, the first in 20 years and the first to be directed by star/writer Sylvester Stallone (in comparison, Stallone directed four of the six "Rocky" movies), this ultraviolent valedictory finds the melancholy sixty-something Vietnam vet living in self-imposed exile as a cobra corraler for a reptile farm in the Asian jungle until he agrees to help exterminate some deadlier snakes in the grass: genocidal Burmese soldiers, who have kidnapped a group of American missionaries. The minimalist plot is an excuse for an orgy of decapitation, dismemberment and disembowelment, but unlike many of today's action films, "Rambo" isn't "hip" — it doesn't play the carnage for laughs. "You didn't kill for your country, you killed for yourself," Rambo tells himself, and the film's attitude toward the violence it sponsors is similarly conflicted. Like America, it's both excited by and ashamed of its bloodlust. In this context, it's sadly appropriate that the Asian characters are ciphers — either vile villains or faceless victims.

Winchester Court 8, Bartlett 10.

Semi-Pro (R, 91 min.) By now, the "Will Ferrell movie" is its own genre, with "Anchorman," "Talladega Nights," "Blades of Glory" and now "Semi-Pro" as bound by an established set of internal rules as the typical horror movie or Western. The movies spoof NASCAR, figure-skating and so on, but they also reveal a sincere fascination for the cultures and skills they mimic. These are wish-fulfillment movies, with Ferrell the overgrown adult child with the power to transform himself into whatever he wants. The formula may be losing its potency, however; "Semi-Pro" is only semi-funny, and its opening weekend box-office performance was disappointing. Directed by Kent Alterman, the 1970s-set film casts Ferrell as one-hit wonder Jackie Moon, owner/player/coach of the fictional Flint (Mich.) Tropics in the old American Basketball Association. The supporting cast (André Benjamin, Will Arnett, Andrew Daly) scores most of the laughs.

Peabody Place 22, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Hollywood 20 Cinema.

Shutter (PG-13, 86 min.) Yet another Japanese horror director (this time, Masayuki Ochiai, of "Parasite Eve") makes the trans-Pacific leap to Hollywood (this time, for a story about ghostly images that appear in photographs of tragic accidents).

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema.

The Spiderwick Chronicles (PG, 96 min.) The discovery of a vanished naturalist's field guide to fairies, goblins and trolls unleashes an attack of magical creatures in this sometimes surprisingly intense film in which young twin brothers (Freddie Highmore), a sword-wielding teen sister (Sarah Lawrence) and a struggling mom (Mary-Louise Parker) cope with more than the typical allotment of first-day-in-a-new-house worries. The monsters seem to be psychological projections as well as special-effects creations, with the scary lead ogre emerging to fill the void left by the absence of the resentful children's neglectful father. Directed by Mark Waters ("Mean Girls"), from a script (co-credited to John Sayles) adapted from the children's book series by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black.

Stage Cinema 12, Hollywood 20 Cinema.

Step Up 2 the Streets (PG-13, 98 min.) A tough inner-city street dancer (Channing Tatum), whose friends include "Mac" and "Skinny," meets a feisty ballerina (Jenna Dewan) in this in-name-only followup to 2006's "Step Up."

Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

10,000 BC (PG-13, 109 min.) Director Roland Emmerich typically produces the most elephantine of sci-fi blockbusters ("Independence Day," the "Godzilla" remake), so it's appropriate the filmmaker has turned his Teutonic ponderousness to literal pachyderms: "10,000 BC" has more woolly mammoths than my attic has squirrels, and they display more personality than most of the actors. The film is entertaining when it focuses on the spectacle of mammoths, sabre-toothed tigers, "terror birds" and CGI B. DeMille prehistoric pyramids, but the human-oriented plotline — something about a legend involving "the child with blue eyes" (Camilla Belle) and "the one who speaks to the spear-tooth" (Steven Strait) — would insult the intelligence of Barney Rubble.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collerville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Southaven Cinema, Summer Quartet Drive-In.

27 Dresses (PG-13, 111 min.) "Knocked Up" co-star Katherine Heigl achieves leading-lady status.

Bartlett 10.

Vantage Point (PG-13, 91 min.) Movies used to boast of being "torn from the headlines"; now, they're torn from an electronics catalog. Who needs James Bond's Q when you've got Best Buy? In this film about a terrorist assassination plot, Palm Pilots, laptops and mini camcorders are fetishized the way weapons were in "Magnum Force." Even the movie's key storytelling/esthetic gimmick is born of recording technology: The film repeatedly "rewinds" (footage runs backward, in fast motion) to a particular point in time so the action can be followed again from the perspective of a different character. A wild climactic car chase breaks this cycle, hurtling the characters and us forward in time so the film finally can end. The cast includes Forest Whitaker as a tourist, William Hurt as the U.S. president and Dennis Quaid as a redemption-craving super-Secret Service agent; the director is Pete Travis.

Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16.

The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep (PG, 105 min.) Director Jay Russell, a University of Memphis film school graduate, follows "My Dog Skip" (2000) with another family movie about a boy and his pet, except this time the pet is a cute hatchling that grows into a huge Loch Ness monster. Adapted from a novel by Dick King-Smith (who also wrote the book that was the basis for the classic pig movie, "Babe"), the movie — beautifully lensed on locations in Scotland and New Zealand — doesn't condescend to kids; its themes and narrative structure (which includes much use of flashback) are fairly sophisticated. Set mainly in a Scottish village during World War II, the movie delivers an anti-violence message along with the idea that even sea monsters were "Born Free." The Nessie was created by the special-effects wizards at Peter Jackson's Weta Workshop, so it's as convincing as anything in "King Kong" or "The Lord of the Rings."

Bartlett 10.

Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (PG-13, 114 min.) Martin Lawrence heads an all-star cast in this tale of a Los Angeles talk-show host who attends a family reunion in the Deep South.

Wolfchase Galleria Cinema 8, Majestic, Hollywood 20 Cinema.

Witless Protection (PG-13, 97 min.) Which comes first, the title or the script? Larry the Cable Guy stars.

Hollywood 20 Cinema.

June 23, 2010

The Green Hornet Trailer Video Released Exciting Comic Book Fans

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 7:59 pm

The Green Hornet Trailer Video Released Exciting Jocular Book Fans

Comic record fans are impressed as The Green Hornet trailer video was released last night to the satisfaction of movie enthusiasts. The Green Hornet trailer video gives a resume preview of the upcoming flicks starring Seth Rogan.

(Media-Newswire.com) – Humorous tome fans are impressed as The Green Hornet trailer video was released last night to the delight of talking picture enthusiasts.  The Sward Hornet trailer video gives a brief preview of the upcoming movie starring Seth Rogan.

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Pineapple Represent actor Seth Rogen takes on this lead actor role playing Britt Reid who is the well-away laddie of media mogul Jack Reid.  The minister is a powerful figure in the city but is murdered spawning his lazy son to group up with a friend to avenge his father's killer.

The movie release date was  shifted to the inception of 2011 which is known on the brink of as a inorganic early owing movies to launch .  The obsolescent stirring a get moving caused fans to wonder with the dignity of the cover based on the present date as blockbusters are usually released in summer months.

Rogen is pre-eminent known for comedy roles such as 'Knocked Up' and 'The 40 Year Superannuated Virgin'.

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Michael Ritchie brings the wo…

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 6:39 am

Michael Ritchie brings the world’s longest-running musical to the big screen with this good-natured American love fable. Bellamy (Joel Grey) and Henry (Barnard Hughes) are next-door neighbors and the fathers of two fair children, Luisa (Jean Louisa Kelly) and Matt (former New Kids On The Clog vocalist Joe McIntyre). The fathers argue constantly, insisting that their children foil away from one another. A substitute alternatively, the kids grow closer. When a circus rolls into town, and the fathers soften up and enlist the aid of El Gallo (Jonathon Morris) to employees celebrate circle of the two lovebirds, things don’t go as planned. Matt and Luisa begin to pump their relationship, and crave for the mysteries that life has to bid outside their town’s limits. Sooner, El Gallo deceives Luisa into realizing what she has at home, and she and Matt are reunited, deciding once and for all who–and what–it is that they want from life. Ritchie lovingly transfers the stage story into the expanse of the American West, providing a realistic backdrop with a view the supremely fantastical story. Featuring the unforgettable hit songs ‘Try to Recollect,’ ‘Plant a Radish,’ ‘Soon It’s Gonna Run,’ ‘They Were You,’ and many others.

June 22, 2010

Julius Caesar (1953)

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 6:39 am
“A terrific Hollywood version
of a Shakespeare play.”

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

A terrific Hollywood version of a Shakespeare play. It’s loaded with
a star-filled cast that has Marlon Brando playing Marc Anthony, James Mason
plays the moral Brutus, Louis Calhern brilliantly plays a delicately superstitious
but arrogant Julius Caesar and John Gielgud distinguishes himself as the
crafty Cassius (this was his Hollywood debut). Marlon Brando is in his
fourth film and proves to the doubters that he can act without slurring
his words, if that’s what the part calls for. Joseph L. Mankiewicz is dutiful
to the poet’s words and films in a straightforward manner; he also aims
to get the bard’s rhythms correct rather than shooting for excitement.
The still camera offers no trick shots, as it allows all attention on the
performances. To save MGM some dough, since Shakespearean films rarely
do well in the box-office, Mankiewicz recycles the Roman sets from Quo
Vadis. This two million dollar vehicle, a low-budget for an epic, did surprisingly
well in the box-office and received lots of praise among the critics. In
this abbreviated version of Julius Caesar, the emphasis is on the political
intrigues involving the noble senators.

The film opens in 44 BC as Julius Caesar returns to Rome from his
victory over Pompey and to the accolades of the masses who view him as
immortal and want to crown him as an emperor, which he refuses. Upset over
Caesar’s powerful position are a number of senators led by Cassius and
a more introspective Brutus, who is one of Caesar’s favorite politicians
and is second in command. They meet in Brutus’s house and conspire to assassinate
Caesar and free Rome from his tyranny, fearing his need for absolute power
will stymie their freedoms. The first sign of trouble that comes to Caesar’s
attention is when a blind soothsayer warns him “to beware the Ides of March.”
The next sign of danger comes from his faithful wife Calpurnia’s (Greer
Garson) dream of his bloody demise. She warns him not to go to the Senate
that day, but a senator sent to retrieve him reinterprets the dream and
eases Caesar’s mind. Caesar is so filled with pride, that he is only too
anxious to receive the praises and honors from his followers in the Senate.

After the conspirators repeatedly stab Caesar to death in front of
the statue to Pompey in the Senate, Marc Antony pretends to side with Brutus
and arranges with him that each speak to the crowd at the funeral. In front
of the steps to the Senate, Brutus easily sways the crowd to his side by
relating his reasons for the assassination were over how ambitious a man
Caesar has become and how his actions are based on patriotism because he
loved Rome more than he did his beloved Caesar. Marc Antony, Caesar’s right-hand
man and closest friend, mocks Brutus’s reasons as self-serving. He wins
the crowd over by showing them how much Caesar loved them. When the crowd
turns on the conspirators, Marc Antony and the young adopted son of Caesar,
Octavius, divide their power and Antony’s powerful army successfully hunts
down the conspirators.

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The film was shot in B&W photography. This superb version could
have been even greater if it utilized a more aggressive cinematic approach
to certain scenes. This is especially true in the concluding battle scene
at the Battle of Philippi, which appears leaden.

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The Man From Snowy River (1982)

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 6:04 am

Same name, but this movie based on an epic poem by one AB ‘Banjo’ Paterson, take a puerile mountain boy’s efforts to insipid a stallion, is not the work of the Mad Max director. This other Miller dolls up a routine passage-to-manhood saga with widescreen mountain locations and a camera that only moves to show off the overpriced production values. The presence of Kirk Douglas in two roles (his scallywag performance and his gritted one) attempts to apportion the film the gloss of an American Western, fooling no one.

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Garfield uden Garfield Han er…

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 3:34 am

Garfield uden Garfield
Han er lodden, og han er doven. Han elsker lasagne, hader mandage og har intet mod mus.

Fint budskab

I anden del af filmen, hvor man forsøger at gøre Garfield til en helt, bliver filmen sheer tålelig, fordi man glemmer alt om den Garfield, man har kendt og holdt af så længe. Man er i et helt andet univers. Filmen sender også et etisk budskab, som serveres elegant og tilpas tydeligt. Kritikken af medierne og ?jeg vil være berømt?-mentaliteten giver filmen tyngde, samtidig med at dyrenes revolution mod TV-værten vækker minder om den i George Orwells fabel

Crude Farm

(1945). I modsætning til den politiserende

Stuart Little 2

(2002), hvor helten i sit modelfly flyvende ended Manhattans skyline forsvarede familien og friheden mod den onde, sorte fakkel, forbliver
Garfield
befriende upolitisk.


Primære målgruppe

Men det er stadigvæk ikke nok til at anbefale den til de voksne biografgængere. Selv de mindreårige i salen grinede sjældent under the aegis pressevisningen, og det er et dårligt tegn for en film, der tydeligvis har dem som den primære målgruppe. Måske vil husdyrelskerne kunne lide den. For søde og lodne er de. Dyrene i filmen, altså…
Olio Bibi
28-9-2008 16:07
Tommy Kenter. Hvor tragisk. Eddermandme elendigt valg af stemme. Det er jo slet ikke Garfield. Bøssepikkede lortespasser der har valgt ham.
Casper
27-2-2008 10:47
jeq syndes filmen er mega grinern og man kan flække af grin på vært et tidspunkt (Et stort stort 5 tal)
Micwiz
6-3-2005 00:18
Nu er det ikke for at være negativ, men jeg syntes overhovedt ikke den lever op til tegneserierne, som er den eneste tegneserie jeg nogensinde har læst fuldt ud, jeg plejer at have nemt med at grine, men jeg syntes ikke denne steam varsjov på noget tidspunkt, det bedste i filmen Jennifer.
Jeanette
3-3-2005 21:19
Jeg så filmen sammen med to veninder og vi storgrinede, jeg kan klart anbefale den til andre med sans for god humor
Stoffer
17-9-2004 15:19
Personligt må jeg nok sige at Steen & Stoffer er meget mere gennemført end Garfield. Jeg hader katte! (selvom jeg er en tøj-tiger)

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Portraits Chinois review

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 12:39 am

A flat-warming party on the Communistic Bank brings together motif assistant Bonham Carter, her partner, screenwriter Ecoffey, cocky movie pilot Attal, his womanising processor Manojlovic, shy couture assistant Bohringer, and parallel with more neurotic Zylberstein, who winds up dewy-eyed in the loo. The wraith of the last two reminds us of writer/director Dugowson’s upsetting inauguration Mina Tannenbaum, but her approach here takes in a wider ensemble, eases up on the melodrama, and develops its insights cumulatively. We consult with how these friends and co-workers negotiate their relationships via a swath of inï¬?delities, creative rivalries and clandestinely romances, each remaining true single to him or herself. While the tone’s predominantly light, some of the actors pick their chances better than others. Unfortunately, Bonham Carter’s primary dispatch (in creditable French) is too industrious and bitty, in the dispose of filleting the nervous marrow from the film. Even so, Dugowson’s deft attentiveness to her characters’ inner lives shows the constitutional knack of a ï¬?lm-maker who will doubtless pick up to get better and change one’s mind.

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June 21, 2010

Tommy, John, Michael, and Sha…

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 9:39 am

Tommy, John, Michael, and Shakes are four litter teenage punks growing up in the streets of Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen in the mid-1960s. When these four friends pull a prank that that goes awry, they find themselves serving at all times at the Wilkinson Instruct in the direction of Boys, where they are time after time and sadistically violated and tortured by four guards–the most menacing being Noles, portrayed by Kevin Bacon. Fifteen years later, the foursome is nevertheless dealing with the touching repercussions of their abuse. Tommy (Billy Crudup) and John (Ron Eldard) have evolve into common criminals, and when they hickeys Noles in a local watering pierce they can’t pass up the jeopardize for repayment. It’s up to Shakes (Jason Patric), a low-use newspaper wage-earner, and Michael (Brad Pitt), a counselor-at-law with the district attorney’s office, to safeguard their friends while keeping the details of their tortured childhoods secret. Dustin Hoffman appears as Danny Snyder, and Robert De Niro stars as Father Bobby, the county neighborhood priest who is as comfortable on the streets or in a bar as he is behind the pulpit. Based on the allegedly candidly fish story by Lorenzo Carcaterra, the film is directed by Barry Levinson (DINER, RAIN MAN).

Outlaw Blues (1977)

Filed under: Uncategorized — moviestargate @ 8:49 am

‘You’ll not under any condition catch me alive – except on KVET,’ boasts country-singing ex-con Peter Fonda in a tone both romantic and expedient, which sums up the genial anecdote that is Outlaw Blues. His song is ripped bad after a correctional institution stop by the local Johnny Cash, so the paroled Fonda goes after him, shoots him in the leg, and hides finished in Susan Saint James‘ shed. She sees the necessary chance, negotiates a recording come down with, and makes Fonda a celebrity by smuggling him into evidence stores and radio stations and then calling the cops. Heffron and author BWL Norton might have taken the story to its plausible conclusion (posthumous superstardom) as contrasted with of spending so much mores on track sequences. But as it is there are multitudinous captivating ironies, not least that an fair label tune, poorly sung by Fonda, can be made so effective by careful use.

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