Actors & Directors
- Julian Glover
- Michael Caine
- Joanna Cassidy
- Pierce Brosnan
- John Mackenzie
- Ned Beatty
Review The Fourth Protocol:Frederick Forsyth wrote the novel and screenplay for this story about a plot to stage an enormous nuclear accident in England, a catastrophe so large that its source can never be identified but will lead to assumptions that America is behind it. Michael Caine plays an aging intelligence agent who picks up clues that the ingredients for such an apocalypse are being smuggled piece-by-piece into the U. K. -but he cannot seem to get his superiors to care. Caine is outstanding in a role that seems tailor-made for him, and Pierce Brosnan is very good as the Russian agent working undercover in England to effect the planned tragedy. The film perfectly captures a spreading suspicion and resentment toward superpower adventurism, even though such sentiments are, in fact, being exploited by the bad guys. Caine, as always, suggests a man walking a narrow line through a gauntlet of moral compromises. -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- Mary McDonnell
- Rodney A. Grant
- Graham Greene
- Kevin Costner
- Floyd 'Red Crow' Westerman
- Kevin Costner
Run time: 180 min. Creator: Michael Blake
Review Dances with Wolves:Kevin Costner's 1990 epic won a bundle of Oscars for a moving, engrossing story of a white soldier (Costner) who singlehandedly mans a post in the 1870 Dakotas, and becomes a part of the Lakota Sioux community who live nearby. The film may not be a masterpiece, but it is far more than the sum of good intentions. The characters are strong, the development of relationships is both ambitious and careful, the love story between Costner and Mary McDonnell's character is captivating. Only the third-act portrait of white intruders as morons feels overbearing, but even that leads to a terribly moving conclusion. Costner's direction is assured, the balance of action and intimacy is perfect-what more could anyone want outside of an unqualified masterpiece? -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- Cynthia Khan
- Robin Shou
- Rosamund Kwan
- David Wu (II)
- Woo-ping Yuen
- Donnie Yen
Price: $31.40
Review Xi hei qian:
Actors & Directors
- Jordan Chan
- Yip-Shun Choi
- Chris Hunt
- Kai Tung Ho
- Alex Fong
- Teddy Chan
Run time: 90 min. Creator: Zhi Feng Feng
Review San tau dip ying:
Actors & Directors
- Robert Mitchum
- Henry Fonda
- Andrew Marton
- Darryl F. Zanuck
- John Wayne
- Robert Ryan
- Bernhard Wicki
- Ken Annakin
- Richard Burton
Run time: 178 min. Creator: James Jones
Review The Longest Day:After seeing Saving Private Ryan, this epic tale about the Normandy invasion will look sanitized. But in its re-creation of events leading to the epochal battle, the film is captivating and grand, and the parade of famous actors who cross the screen naturally give the already charged action even more of a boost. Three directors worked on it: Ken Annakin (Battle of the Bulge), Andrew Marton (Crack in the World), and Bernhard Wicki (this film being his only credit). -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- John Kani
- Val Kilmer
- Tom Wilkinson
- Stephen Hopkins
- Michael Douglas
- Bernard Hill
Run time: 109 min. Creator: William Goldman
Review The Ghost and the Darkness:Val Kilmer stars as Lt. Col. John Patterson, a 19th-century Irish engineer drafted by Britain's railroad bosses to build a trestle bridge over an African river, thus expanding the empire a tiny bit more. In Tsavo, Patterson is instantly hailed for killing a man-eating lion that had been making life hell for native workers. But morale sinks when a pair of unstoppable big cats devour more men and destroy the project. Along comes an Ahab-like, expatriate American hunter (Michael Douglas) to help Patterson face the almost preternatural powers of the two killers. The script by William Goldman (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid) is based on fact, though the film owes more to Spielberg (specifically to Jaws) than history. There are also suggestive echoes of Kipling and Conrad in the material and characters, and there are hints of emotional complexity and psychological nuance that make one wish this could have been a great film instead of a merely fun one. -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- Robert Ryan
- Henry Fonda
- Ken Annakin
- Bernhard Wicki
- Andrew Marton
- Robert Mitchum
- John Wayne
- Darryl F. Zanuck
- Richard Burton
Run time: 178 min. Creator: James Jones
Review The Longest Day:After seeing Saving Private Ryan, this epic tale about the Normandy invasion will look sanitized. But in its re-creation of events leading to the epochal battle, the film is captivating and grand, and the parade of famous actors who cross the screen naturally give the already charged action even more of a boost. Three directors worked on it: Ken Annakin (Battle of the Bulge), Andrew Marton (Crack in the World), and Bernhard Wicki (this film being his only credit). -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- William Rodriguez
- Meg Foster
- Estee Chandler
- John Boorman
- Yara Vaneau
- Powers Boothe
Release date: 1994-06-22 Price: $14.95
Review Emerald Forest / Sony Pictures:John Boorman's 1985 South American epic never quite gets all of its gears working simultaneously, but it remains an often startling work with an extraordinary performance by the director's own son, Charley Boorman. Powers Boothe plays an American engineer working on a dam project in Brazil. When his young son is seemingly absorbed one day into the dense perils and beauty of the Amazon rain forest, Boothe's character goes on a protracted, 10-year search for him. In the interim, Boorman puts his full storytelling powers to work by characteristically exploring the arcane rhythms and dangers of an indigenous world hidden from ordinary view. Specifically, Boorman leads us into the life of a forest tribe who have assimilated the missing child and who will ultimately send him back with the opposite of his father's pro-development sensibility. The movie is gorgeous to behold, and it's great fun watching Boorman find ever-novel ways of making the same film again and again. But the environmental message and the emotion of the core relationship get in each other's way a bit, preventing the film from uniting on every front. Still, this is a must for Boorman fans. -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- Jun Gallardo
- Vic Silayan
- Christopher Mitchum
- Ken Metcalfe
- Romy Rivera
Run time: 91 min. Creator: Bobby A. Suarez
Review Commander Firefox:
Actors & Directors
- Robert Guillaume
- James Earl Jones
- Marla Gibbs
- Eddie Griffin
- Robert Townsend
- Robert Townsend
Run time: 100 min. Creator: Loretha C. Jones
Review The Meteor Man:Robert Townsend has managed to build an entire career on the basis of one funny movie (The Hollywood Shuffle)-even though he hasn't had one that was anywhere near as funny since. Case in point: This would-be comedy about an unwilling black superhero. Townsend plays a schoolteacher in a bad Washington, D. C. , neighborhood that is controlled by a vicious drug gang (recognizable by their blonde-dyed hair). Then he is hit by a meteor and suddenly finds that he has super strength and can fly (and can read the minds of dogs). But Townsend's writing is surprisingly weak and, despite a cast that includes a mugging Bill Cosby, Eddie Griffin, Robert Guillaume, and sadly miscast James Earl Jones, this movie is never able to get off the ground. -Marshall Fine.
Actors & Directors
- Paul Winfield
- Jsu Garcia
- Michael Dudikoff
- Amanda Wyss
- Rick Jacobson
- Richard Norton
Run time: 90 min. Creator: Tripp Reed
Review Strategic Command:
Actors & Directors
- Ulli Lommel
- Britt Ekland
- John Phillip Law
- Robert Sacchi
- Chance Michael Corbitt
- Roy Summerset
Run time: 85 min. Creator: Cookie Lommel
Review Cold Heat:
Actors & Directors
- Henry Cele
- Karen Allen
- Grace Jones
- David Hasselhoff
- James Fox
- Joshua Sinclair
Run time: 179 min. Creator: Marie Louise Sinclair
Review Shaka Zulu: The Citadel:
Actors & Directors
- Jaime Pressly
- Albert Pyun
- Steven Seagal
- Tom Sizemore
- Dennis Hopper
- Nas
Review Ticker:
Actors & Directors
- Kôichi Yamadera
- Mamoru Oshii
- Atsuko Tanaka
- Tamio Ôki
- Akio Ôtsuka
- Iemasa Kayumi
Run time: 82 min. Creator: Masamune Shirow
Review Kôkaku kidôtai / Palm Pictures:The skillful blending of drawn animation and computer-generated imagery excited anime fans when this science fiction mystery was released in 1995: many enthusiasts believe Ghost suggests what the future of anime will be, at least in the short term. The film is set in the not-too-distant future, when an unnamed government uses lifelike cyborgs or "enhanced" humans for undercover work. One of the key cyborgs is The Major, Motoko Kusanagi, who resembles a cross between The Terminator and a Playboy centerfold. She finds herself caught up in a tangled web of espionage and counterespionage as she searches for the mysterious superhacker known as "The Puppet Master. " Mamoru Oshii directs with a staccato rhythm, alternating sequences of rapid-fire action (car chases, gun battles, explosions) with static dialogue scenes that allow the characters to sort out the vaguely mystical and rather convoluted plot. Kusanagi's final quote from I Corinthians suggests that electronic evolution may compliment and eventually supplant organic evolution. The minor nudity, profanity, and considerable violence would earn Ghost in the Shell at least a PG rating. -Charles Solomon.
Review Knockin' on Heaven's Door:
Actors & Directors
- Frank Finlay
- Michael York
- Raquel Welch
- Oliver Reed
- Richard Lester
- Richard Chamberlain
Review The Four Musketeers: Milady's Revenge:Richard Lester's 1975 sequel to his romping Three Musketeers-released the year before-reunites his swashbuckling cast for a decidedly less happy and more somber experience. This time, D'Artagnan (Michael York) and his Musketeer mentors (Richard Chamberlain, Oliver Reed, Frank Finlay) have a tougher fight against their old enemies, and the adventure is not without its casualties. But the film is highly entertaining, filled with that same loony air that makes most films by Lester (How I Won the War, A Hard Day's Night, Help!) so much fun. The actors are with him every step of the way: Reed, Chamberlain, Finlay, and York are a heroic version of the Marx brothers, Raquel Welch was never better, and Charlton Heston clearly enjoys playing the evil Cardinal Richelieu. -Tom Keogh.
Actors & Directors
- Reni Santoni
- Eric Gurry
- Sean Penn
- Esai Morales
- Jim Moody
- Rick Rosenthal
Run time: 104 min. Creator: Richard Di Lello
Review Bad Boys:Prior to starring in the hard-edged 1983 drama Bad Boys, Sean Penn had proven his early promise in the TV movie The Killing of Randy Webster, played a memorable supporting role in Taps (with fellow newcomer Tom Cruise), and created the definitive California surfer dude as the perpetually stoned Jeff Spicoli in Fast Times at Ridgemont High. But it was Bad Boys that cemented Penn's reputation as a rare talent-an actor whose skill transcended his youth, revealing a depth and maturity that the majority of his acting peers could only aspire to. That gravity and emotional dimension is evident throughout Penn's performance here as Mick O'Brien, a chronic offender whose path to a Chicago juvenile corrections facility seems utterly preordained. The institution is hardly conducive to reformation-it's a jail for problem kids, and a cauldron for all the societal ills that sent kids there in the first place. Mick's there because he was involved in a shootout during a botched robbery of drugs from rival street gangster Paco Moreno (Esai Morales), whose little brother was killed when Mick accidentally ran him over with his getaway car. Overcrowding results in Mick and Paco's being sent to the same facility (one of the film's few stretches of credibility), and this leads to a rather predictable showdown that will take the juvie prison's violence to its inevitable extreme. It's a shame this conclusion ultimately doesn't live up to the film's superior first hour, but Bad Boys remains a remarkably authentic, even touching portrait of troubled youth whose torment is conveyed through thoughtful and richly emotional development of characters. Director Rick Rosenthal (who had previously helmed Halloween II) maintains a vivid sense of setting within the correctional facility's cold walls, and through the performances of Penn and a superb supporting cast (including Ally Sheedy in her film debut as Mick's girlfriend), Bad Boys emerges as one of the best films of its kind, forcing the viewer to ask difficult questions about at-risk youth and the proper way to improve or at least preserve their endangered lives. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Shane De Louvre
- Nigel Davenport
- Jack Couffer
- Susan Hampshire
- Peter Lukoye
- Geoffrey Keen
Run time: 90 min. Creator: Millard Kaufman
Review Living Free:The 1972 sequel to 1966's classic Born Free doesn't quite measure up to its predecessor, but in an era when most "family entertainment" tends toward the insipid at best, Living Free is still a worthwhile venture. Susan Hampshire and Nigel Davenport take over the roles of Joy and George Adamson, the British couple who, while stationed in Kenya, adopted three orphaned lion cubs. Living Free finds the dying Elsa, their favorite of the original three and now a mother herself, returning to the Adamsons, who must figure out what to do with Elsa's three cubs, who develop an unfortunate appetite for domestic livestock. The film is on the slow side, but once again it's the animals who steal the show; the footage of the young lions interacting with other beasts, from wild giraffes and rhinos to a pet dog, is remarkable. Though light on bonus features, the DVD will surely find its adherents. -Sam Graham.
Actors & Directors
- John C. McGinley
- Steven Seagal
- Steven Seagal
- Michael Caine
- Joan Chen
- R. Lee Ermey
Run time: 102 min. Creator: Robin U. Russin
Review On Deadly Ground:
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Models & Brands: The Fourth Protocol, Dances with Wolves, Xi hei qian, San tau dip ying, The Longest Day, The Ghost and the Darkness, The Longest Day, Emerald Forest, Commander Firefox, The Meteor Man, Strategic Command, Cold Heat, Shaka Zulu: The Citadel, Ticker, Kôkaku kidôtai, Knockin' on Heaven's Door, The Four Musketeers: Milady's Revenge, Bad Boys, Living Free, On Deadly GroundTop headlines: Phone workers peek at Obama's cell records: Verizon employees snuck a peek at President-elect Barack Obama's old cell phone records and will be reprimanded accordingly, the company said late Thursday. ›04:36 Pirates free two ships after ransoms paid: Somali pirates released two hijacked ships after ransoms were paid, U.S. military officials said Thursday. ›17:50 20 Nov, Thu Fed extends meeting in December to two days: The Federal Reserve announced Thursday that it will hold a hold a two-day meeting in December to weigh its next move on interest rates and to make a fresh assessment of the U.S. economy. ›20:07 20 Nov, Thu Witherspoon not so sure about marriage: Reese Witherspoon may be happily involved with Jake Gyllenhaal, the "Four Christmases" star isnt so sure how she feels about marriage. ›20:55 20 Nov, Thu Have a question for a cougar?: Whether you're explaining why you're the best person for a job, pushing across a 10-K finish line, or climbing toward your between-the-sheets peak, success can often come down to what you've been eating. Women's Health magazine reveals which foods will up your chances of getting the results you're gunning for. ›22:16 18 Nov, Tue Neocons Converge Around Giuliani Campaign: ›21:52 6 Oct, Sat Q&A: Shawn Hornbecks Parents: The parents of kidnap victim Shawn Hornbeck speak out on the sentencing of their sons tormentor and the status of the boys recovery. ›20:50 12 Oct, Fri After 30 years, his second National Book Award: Judges for the National Book Award honored a comeback, giving the fiction award to Peter Matthiessen's "Shadow Country," a thorough revision of a trilogy of novels from the 1990s. The 81-year-old author last won a National Book Award nearly 30 years ago. ›12:10 20 Nov, Thu Gellman: A Letter to a Bigot: What I want to say to a person of prejudice. ›22:12 12 Oct, Fri Stores may see bleak Black Friday sales: After pushing steep discounts throughout November that are usually reserved for the day after Thanksgiving, retailers are offering even bigger cuts and promotions for Black Friday. ›23:08 20 Nov, Thu Madonna, Ritchie to begin divorce: A court schedule says Madonna and Guy Ritchie will be granted the first stage of their divorce in London Friday. ›18:43 20 Nov, Thu Paulson says stricter regulation not the answer: Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson says the financial crisis now plaguing the world economy is an event that happens "once or twice" in 100 years. ›22:57 20 Nov, Thu Can the Youth Vote Save Obama?: With the Hillary juggernaut growing in strength every day, Barack Obama is hoping Iowas youth can help keep him in the game. ›14:47 8 Oct, Mon Video: Alarms go off on Wall St.: Nov. 20: There was more wreckage on Wall Street Thursday as stocks took another nosedive and jobless claims reached a 16-year high. CNBC's Trish Regan reports.(Nightly News) ›23:41 20 Nov, Thu Violence against Amsterdam gays a problem: Amsterdam faces an ingrained problem of violence against gay men, despite its reputation as a haven of tolerance, according to a study released Thursday. ›23:43 20 Nov, Thu 'War and Peace': New Versions Worth the Read: 'War and Peace' has been the Everest of literature for more than 150 years. Two new English versions remind us why Tolstoy's tome is still worth the climb. ›22:06 6 Oct, Sat Will oil tycoon's wife save wild horses?: The wife of Texas oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens wants to create a refuge for wild horses, after the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced it was considering euthanizing some of the animals. ›22:42 18 Nov, Tue 'Wheel' and 'Jeopardy!' are bigger than TV: Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune have been TVs reigning syndicated shows for a quarter-century. And as they carry on in TV tandem, each show has struck out for other media platforms. ›17:46 18 Nov, Tue Women: For best workout, add weights: Cardio may help you shed pounds, but weight training will help you get a tight, trim look. Dust off those dumbbells and try these exercises to go from shapeless to sexy. ›16:51 19 Nov, Wed Rosie ODonnell laughs off Walters comments: I do not know what Star Jones and Debbie Matenopoulos did, but oooooh, lady she is pissed off! ODonnell said on a clip on her Web site. ›03:44 Clift: Why Is Howard Dean So Quiet?: Howard Dean has stayed oddly quiet lately while intraparty squabbling over the Democrats primary calendar escalates. What gives? ›22:25 12 Oct, Fri Affleck tours refugee camps in war-torn Congo: Ben Affleck is talking to children and aid officials in refugee camps in war-torn eastern Congo in an effort to raise awareness of the conflict that has displaced at least 250,000 people. ›19:36 20 Nov, Thu In Congo, refugees struggle to survive: His home was looted by wild government soldiers still pillaging this empty hilltop town. His fields are at the mercy of armed militias. And somewhere in the countryside, a rebel army is digging in. ›20:20 20 Nov, Thu European history, culture and art goes digital: Attention all culture-craving couch potatoes: Cultural riches from over 2,000 years of European civilization are going digital. ›17:50 20 Nov, Thu |