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Actors & Directors
  • Betty Thomas
  • Ed Begley Jr.
  • Kathy Bates
  • John Michael Higgins
  • Daniel Roebuck
  • Bob Balaban
Run time: 95 min.
Creator: George Armitage

Review The Late Shift:

Loyalties ran deep. People were polarized. And, for a while, folks followed it in the news with bated breath. No, it wasn't an election year; it was the battle for late-night television, bitterly fought by Jay Leno and David Letterman. Even before Johnny Carson retired, Letterman and Leno were jockeying for The Tonight Show. Letterman had a proven record, but at a later time slot, with an edgier crowd. Leno had the guest-host position and the support of the network. HBO dramatizes the struggle for the 11 p. m.  slot in The Late Shift, a made-for-cable movie that reveals the seedier side of talk television. [+]
Kathy Bates gives a hysterical-both in the funny and the manic sense-performance as Leno's manager. John Michael Higgens is a convincing Letterman and Daniel Roebuck (with mounds of latex on his chin) gets the Leno voice right. And while the studio execs and agents (played humorously by Bob Balaban, Ed Begley Jr. , Treat Williams, among others) appear as sharks, both Leno and Letterman come off sympathetically. Even though the outcome is well known, The Late Shift is an entertaining look at the craziness that is late-night TV. -Jenny Brown.

Review   / Macbeth
Actors & Directors
  • Jon Finch
  • Martin Shaw
  • Francesca Annis
  • John Stride
  • Terence Bayler
  • Roman Polanski

Review Macbeth:

Roman Polanski's adaptation of the Shakespearean tragedy remains one of the most infamous for a number of reasons: the copious amounts of bloody gore, its expert use of location settings (filmed in North Wales), and Lady Macbeth's nude sleepwalking scene. Despite its notoriety, though, this does remain one of the more compelling film adaptations of the Scottish tragedy, if one of the more pessimistic takes on the story of Macbeth and his overreaching ambition. If you think the play is normally a bit of a downer, you haven't seen Polanski's bleak version of it, made in reaction to the murder of his wife, Sharon Tate, by the Manson "family. " Jon Finch (Hitchcock's Frenzy) is an forceful Macbeth, bringing out the Scot's warrior instincts, and Francesca Annis is a memorable Lady Macbeth, but the main thrust of the film belongs to Polanski's and noted British playwright and critic Kenneth Tynan's take on the play: extremely violent, nihilistic, and visceral; this is down-in-the-dirt, no-holds-barred Shakespeare, not fussy costume drama. Pay close attention to the end, a silent coda that puts a chilling twist on all the action that has come beforehand and foreshadows more tragedy to come. -Mark Englehart.

Review   / Dirty Dancing
Actors & Directors
  • Emile Ardolino
  • Jerry Orbach
  • Patrick Swayze
  • Cynthia Rhodes
  • Jennifer Grey
  • Jack Weston
Run time: 100 min.
Creator: Steven Reuther

Review Dirty Dancing:

As with Grease (1978) and Footloose (1984) before it, Dirty Dancing was a cultural phenomenon that now plays more like camp. That very campiness, though, is part of its biggest charm. And if the dancing in the movie doesn't seem particularly "dirty" by today's standards-or 1987's-it does take place in an era (the early '60s) when it would have. Frances "Baby" Houseman (Jennifer Grey, daughter of ageless hoofer Joel Grey) has been vacationing in the Catskills with her family for many years. Uneventfully. One summer, she falls under the sway (as it were) of dance instructor Johnny Castle (Patrick Swayze). Baby is a pampered pup, but Johnny is a man of the world. Baby's father, Jake (Law and Order's Jerry Orbach), can't see the basic decency in greaser Johnny that she can. It should come as no surprise to find that Baby, who can be as immature as her name, learns more about love and life-and dancing-from free-spirited Johnny than traditionalist Jake. Dirty Dancing spawned two successful soundtracks, a short-lived TV series, and a stage musical. [+]
It may be predictable, but Grey and Swayze have chemistry, charisma, and all the right moves. It's a sometimes silly movie with occasionally mind-boggling dialogue-"No one puts Baby in a corner!"-that nonetheless carries an underlying message about tolerance and is filled with the kind of exuberant spirit that's hard for even the most cynical to resist. Not that they'd ever admit it. -Kathleen C. Fennessy.

Actors & Directors
  • Frank Oz
  • Dave Goelz
  • Jim Henson
  • James Frawley
  • Jerry Nelson
  • Richard Hunt
Run time: 95 min.
Creator: Jerry Juhl

Review The Muppet Movie:

This simply irresistible first feature from the Muppets has Kermit the frog going from the swamps to Hollywood to be a star. As he travels and picks up his usual friends (Miss Piggy, Fozzie the Bear), Doc Hopper (Charles Durning) is in pursuit, looking for Kermit to be the spokesman for his frog-leg cuisine. A loose rendition of The Wizard of Oz, the film incorporates the same cagey humor as their breakout syndicated TV series The Muppet Show. This is one of the few times that a human cast (notably Steve Martin, Orson Welles, and Carol Kane) are integrated seamlessly with nonhumans. Worth noting is Paul Williams's score, which includes the Oscar-nominated "The Rainbow Connection. " Williams's music, much like Howard Ashman's work on The Little Mermaid and other Disney films, provides more than atmosphere; there's a degree of magic here. Williams did not work on the future Muppet films until A Muppet Christmas Carol. His contributions made these films the best of the Muppet series. -Doug Thomas Jim Henson vaulted Kermit, the famous floppy-armed frog, and his Muppet pals to the big screen with this charming 1979 musical adventure. Like the TV show that inspired it, Henson and director James Frawley playfully acknowledge movie clichés and conventions and allow the characters to address the camera in asides, like a Hope and Crosby road film for the 1980s. [+]
The ambitious singing frog decides to leave his swamp and conquer Hollywood, gathering a group of friends along the way (Fozzie Bear, Miss Piggy, Gonzo, and more) and bumping into oodles of guest stars making tongue-in-cheek cameos (my favorite is the tip-of-the-hat appearance by Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy). Meanwhile, despicable fast-food king Charles Durning pursues Kermit, hoping to make him the spokesfrog for his Frogs-Legs restaurant franchise. Austin Pendleton costars as Durning's sad sack henchman while guest stars include James Coburn, Dom DeLuise, Madeleine Kahn, Steve Martin, Milton Berle, Bob Hope, Carol Kane, Cloris Leachman, Mel Brooks, Richard Pryor, Telly Savalas, Elliot Gould, Orson Welles, and Big Bird. Paul Williams penned the bouncy, song-filled score. You'll believe a frog can sing! -Sean Axmaker.

Review   / RoboCop: Prime Directives
Actors & Directors
  • Maurice Dean Wint
  • Page Fletcher
  • Leslie Hope
  • Geraint Wyn Davies
  • Julian Grant (II)
  • Maria del Mar

Review RoboCop: Prime Directives:


Review   / Lodoss to senki
Actors & Directors
  • Takeshi Aono
  • Meg Frances
  • J.W. Gunther
  • Bob Barry
  • Akio Sakai
  • Simone Grant
Run time: 355 min.
Creator: Ryo Mizuno

Review Lodoss to senki:

Since the first chapters debuted as a direct-to-video release in 1990, this sprawling sword-and-sorcery epic has delighted fantasy fans with its ancient prophecies, lost kingdoms, enchanted swords, dragons, and wizards. The tangled story line borrows heavily from The Lord of the Rings, the Star Wars films, and numerous other fantasy works. Six mismatched characters find themselves thrown together to protect the land of Lodoss from imminent destruction: Parn is the impetuous young warrior with heroic potential who typifies the genre; in place of the usual spunky girl, there's Deedlit, an elf with magical powers. They're joined by Etoh, a young priest and healer; Ghim, a dwarf-warrior with a heavy heart; Slayn, a wizard in training; and the rascally thief Woodchuck. Their allies include the dashing lord of a desert realm, a mercenary and her Berserker companion, and a benevolent, Arthurian king. They're pitted against an array of villains that includes human warriors, an evil sorcerer, dragons, kobolds, zombies, and Karla, the mysterious "Gray Witch" [sic]. An elegant art nouveau sensibility runs through the designs of Lodoss War, especially the extravagant armor of the warriors. But the film lacks a coherent plot, probably the result of producing so much animation in a short time with multiple directors. Characters are forever dropping in and out of the story: the initial villain, the evil emperor Beld, is replaced by his henchman, Ashram, who is superseded by the dark sorcerer, Wagnard. The last three episodes build to a titanic climax that leaves a lot of plot points unresolved. [+]
Hard-core fantasy fans will love Lodoss War; but other viewers are likely to tire of its drawn-out and needlessly complicated story. Unrated; suitable for ages 12 and up; considerable violence and an extremely complicated plot. -Charles Solomon.

Review   / Three Colors: Red
Actors & Directors
  • Jean-Pierre Lorit
  • Jean-Louis Trintignant
  • Irène Jacob
  • Frédérique Feder
  • Samuel Le Bihan
  • Krzysztof Kieslowski
Run time: 99 min.
Creator: Krzysztof Piesiewicz

Review Three Colors: Red:

The final section of the late Krzysztof Kieslowski's acclaimed Three Colors trilogy (preceded by Blue and White) is the least likely of the three to stand alone, and indeed benefits from a little familiarity with the first two parts. Nevertheless, it's a strong, unique piece that reflects upon the ubiquity of images in the modern world and the parallel subjugation of meaningful communication. Irene Jacob plays a fashion model whose lovely face is hugely enlarged on a red banner no one in Geneva can possibly miss seeing. Striking up a relationship with an embittered former judge (Jean-Louis Trintignant), who secretly scans his neighbors' conversations through electronic surveillance, Jacob's character becomes an aural witness to the secret lives of those we think we know. Kieslowski cleverly wraps up the trilogy with a device that brings together the principals of all three films. -Tom Keogh.

Actors & Directors
  • Daphne Ashbrook
  • Charlie Schlatter
  • John Nicolella
  • Adam Ant
  • Michael Paré
  • Dennis Hopper

Review Sunset Heat:


Review   / The Horror of Blackwood Castle
Actors & Directors
  • Ilse Pagé
  • Siegfried Schürenberg
  • Karin Baal
  • Agnes Windeck
  • Heinz Drache
  • Alfred Vohrer
Run time: 92 min.
Creator: Herbert Reinecker

Review The Horror of Blackwood Castle:


Review   / Johnny Guitar
Actors & Directors
  • Joan Crawford
  • Sterling Hayden
  • Ward Bond
  • Nicholas Ray
  • Scott Brady
  • Mercedes McCambridge
Run time: 110 min.
Creator: Roy Chanslor

Review Johnny Guitar:

"I've never seen a woman who was more like a man," a character observes of Vienna (Joan Crawford), who has just opened a saloon that hasn't exactly endeared itself to the local townspeople. Emma (Mercedes McCambridge), the local sexually repressed, lynch-happy harpy, is particularly displeased. Vienna is wooed both by the Dancin' Kid (Scott Brady) and by Johnny Guitar (Sterling Hayden), a peripatetic tough guy-turned-troubadour with whom she has a past. When the Kid's gang (which includes Ernest Borgnine) decides to knock over the bank before heading to California, Emma wants just about everyone in sight on the business end of a rope. Nicolas Ray's 1954 epic was considered one of the downright strangest Westerns of all time-the women were far tougher than the men (Johnny watches on laconically during the bank robbery, not bothering with heroics), and some saw in the film a bizarre allegory for the McCarthy Red scare. A half-century later, it's still a curious, intriguing piece of moral ambiguity from a time when such a thing ostensibly didn't exist. Hayden is an enigmatic presence, and Crawford's commanding star turn is what you'd expect. -David Kronke.

Review   / Geronimo: An American Legend
Actors & Directors
  • Matt Damon
  • Wes Studi
  • Gene Hackman
  • Robert Duvall
  • Jason Patric
  • Walter Hill

Review Geronimo: An American Legend:

Walter Hill's revisionist take on the American cavalry's campaign to capture renegade Chiricahua Apache warrior Geronimo (Wes Studi) is, like Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven, a dark tale that both celebrates and critiques myths of the American West. Despite its title, Geronimo is really about the American cavalry officers who undertake the responsibility of recapturing the warrior, in particular the young narrator Lt. Charles Gatewood (Jason Patric), a Civil War hero who respects the great Geronimo and brokers a treaty with the Chiricahua, only to see it collapse when the army kills the tribal medicine man. Gene Hackman plays Gen. George Crook, the proud but sympathetic officer charged with bringing in the renegades who take to hills after the killing. Robert Duvall, the tough, racist army scout and Indian fighter Charlie Sieber, practically steals the picture with his cagey, underplayed performance. More complex and complicated than most Westerns, this is a Walter Hill film through and through: lean, ironic, beautiful to look at (it was shot on location against the astounding landscape of southeastern Utah), and driven by a wonderful Ry Cooder score. Don't confuse this with the 1993 TNT cable film by the same name; it confounded many viewers at the time of its release and may have been at least partially responsible for its box-office disappointment. -Sean Axmaker.

Review   / Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
Actors & Directors
  • James Cromwell
  • Kelly Asbury
  • Jeff LeBeau
  • Lorna Cook
  • Daniel Studi
  • Chopper Bernet
  • Matt Damon
Run time: 83 min.
Creator: John Fusco

Review Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron:

Horse lovers young and old will celebrate this utterly enjoyable and marvelous-looking animated film. The titular stallion runs free in the Cimarron (New Mexico) wilderness until a series of men try to master the proud horse, leading to adventures through a U. S. Cavalry fort, Native American settlements, and a railroad camp. Despite a heavy dose of political correctness and realism (the animals don't talk; we only hear Spirit's internal monologue, voiced by Matt Damon), directors Kelly Asbury and Lorna Cook give their hero many only-in-a-movie moments, including an action sequence rivaling any of Rambo's escapes. The stirring mix of 2-D and 3-D animation is absolutely stunning and aptly fueled by composer Hans Zimmer's synthesized score. The film earns one demerit for '80s rocker Bryan Adams's abundant songs-a different singer could have brought more to the film. Rated G but there is some rough treatment of horses shown, so nix the sensitive preschoolers. -Doug Thomas.

Review   / Fight! Iczer-1
Actors & Directors
  • Beau Billingslea
  • Yuriko Yamamoto
  • Maureen O'Connell (III)
  • Jennifer Watson (IV)
  • Mika Doi
  • Toshihiro Hirano

Review Fight! Iczer-1:


Review   / A.P.E.X.
Actors & Directors
  • Mitchell Cox
  • Phillip J. Roth
  • Marcus Aurelius
  • Adam Lawson
  • Richard Keats
  • Lisa Ann Russell
Run time: 98 min.
Creator: Ron Schmidt

Review A.P.E.X.:


Review   / Star Trek: Voyager
Actors & Directors
  • Robert Beltran
  • Ethan Phillips
  • Roxann Dawson
  • Kate Mulgrew
  • Robert Duncan McNeill
Creator: Rick Berman

Review Star Trek: Voyager:


Review   / Damned River
Actors & Directors
  • Bradford Bancroft
  • Michael Schroeder
  • Marc Poppel
  • John Terlesky
  • Stephen Shellen
  • Lisa Aliff
Run time: 95 min.
Creator: John Crowther

Review Damned River:


Review   / L' Uomo delle stelle
Actors & Directors
  • Clelia Rondinella
  • Leopoldo Trieste
  • Giuseppe Tornatore
  • Franco Scaldati
  • Tiziana Lodato
  • Sergio Castellitto
Run time: 113 min.
Creator: Fabio Rinaudo

Review L' Uomo delle stelle:


Review   / The White Rose
Actors & Directors
  • Lena Stolze
  • Werner Stocker
  • Wulf Kessler
  • Michael Verhoeven
  • Oliver Siebert
  • Ulrich Tukur
Release date: 1999-08-01
Run time: 123 min.
List Price: $72.00
Price: $72.00

Review The White Rose:

The beautiful Lena Stolze stars in this acclaimed feature based on the true story of five German students and their professor who formed a secret society dedicated to protesting the Nazi regime. Known collectively as the "White Rose", the Munich-based group distributed anti-Hitler literature in a resistance effort which cost them their lives. Initially, the German government refused to allow the film to be shown abroad due to an epilogue which pointedly observed that the legal judgment condemning the White Rose society had never been rescinded. Ultimately, the political controversy surrounding Verhoeven's film directly caused the German government to officially invalidate the Nazi "People's Court" system that sentenced the group to death.

Actors & Directors
  • Danny Fendley
  • Brigitte Nielsen
  • Dana Plato
  • Melissa Moore
  • Lynn Lowry
  • Donald Farmer
Run time: 86 min.
Creator: Marcina Oliveira

Review Compelling Evidence:


Review   / Tarzan and the Lost City
Actors & Directors
  • Jane March
  • Rapulana Seiphemo
  • Steven Waddington
  • Casper Van Dien
  • Carl Schenkel
  • Winston Ntshona
Run time: 83 min.
Creator: J. Anderson Black

Review Tarzan and the Lost City:

At least someone, somewhere, involved in this disposable Ape Man entry bothered to read the famous Edgar Rice Burroughs books on which the character is based. What was done with that information, unfortunately, amounts to nothing. Tarzan (vacantly handsome Casper Van Dien) and Jane (nondescript Jane March) head back to the jungle homeland and encounter pillaging baddies led by Steven Waddington (used better as a more complex nasty in The Last of the Mohicans). Director Carl Schenkel's film gives Tarzan back his long-absent status as an articulate gentleman, and it contains elements of Burroughs's feverish imagination, but it dully ticks off the "adventures" without any thrilling sense of fun. Schenkel is so inattentive to detail that he would have us believe no one raises an eyebrow at the sight of a man morphing into a humongous cobra (not that the Xena-level effects help). It's blandly amusing watching Van Dien plug away ineptly at both his heroics and English accent, though this is ultimately an empty diversion for completists only. -Steve Wiecking.

Browse By Original Language:

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The Late Shift, Macbeth, Dirty Dancing, The Muppet Movie, RoboCop: Prime Directives, Lodoss to senki, Three Colors: Red, Sunset Heat, The Horror of Blackwood Castle, Johnny Guitar, Geronimo: An American Legend, Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, Fight! Iczer-1, A.P.E.X., Star Trek: Voyager, Damned River, L' Uomo delle stelle, The White Rose, Compelling Evidence, Tarzan and the Lost City

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