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Review Columbia Tri-Star Home Video  / The Princess Bride [1987]
Actors & Directors
  • Cary Elwes
  • Mandy Patinkin
  • Rob Reiner
  • Robin Wright Penn
  • Christopher Guest
  • Chris Sarandon
Release date: 2001-07-23
Run time: 94 min.
Creator: William Goldman
RRP: £19.99
Price: £8.00

Review The Princess Bride [1987] / Columbia Tri-Star Home Video:

Director Rob Reiner's The Princess Bride is a gently amusing, affectionate pastiche of a medieval fairytale adventure, offering a similar blend of warm, literate humour as his Stand By Me (1985) and When Harry Met Sally (1989). Adapted from his own novel, William Goldman's script plays with the conventions of such 1980s fantasies as Ladyhawke and Legend (both 1985), and with the budget never allowing for spectacle, sensibly concentrates on creating a gallery of memorable characters. Robin Wright makes a delightful Princess Buttercup, Cary Elwes is splendid as Westley and "Dread Pirate Roberts", while Mandy Patinkin makes fine Spanish avenger. With winning support from Mel Smith, Peter Cook, Billy Crystal and Carol Kane there is sometimes a Terry Gilliam/Monty Python feel to the proceedings, and the whole film is beautifully shot, with a memorably romantic main theme by Mark Knopfler. Occasionally interrupted by Peter Falk as a grandfather reading the story to his grandson, The Princess Bride is an elegant post-modern family fable about storytelling itself; a theme found in other 1980s films The Neverending Story (1984) and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988). A modest, small-scale work that manages to be both cynically modern and genuinely romantic all at once. As charming as you wish. On the DVD: The 1. 77:1 anamorphic transfer is strong, if not quite as detailed as it might be. Colours lack just a little solidity and some scenes evidence a fair amount of grain. [+]
Released theatrically in Dolby stereo, the Dolby Digital 5. 1 remix spreads the sound effectively across the front speakers but makes very little use of the rear channels indeed. Extras are limited to filmographies of five of the leading actors, and a 4:3 presentation of the theatrical trailer, which gives far too many of the film's surprises away. -Gary S Dalkin.

Review Orbit Media Ltd.  / The Cat And The Canary [1939]
Actors & Directors
  • John Beal
  • Paulette Goddard
  • Bob Hope
  • Douglass Montgomery
  • Elliott Nugent
  • Gale Sondergaard
Release date: 2004-03-01
Run time: 72 min.
Creator: Walter DeLeon
RRP: £15.99
Price: £9.85

Review The Cat And The Canary [1939] / Orbit Media Ltd.:


Review 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment  / Star Wars Trilogy (Episodes IV-VI) [1977]
Actors & Directors
  • Peter Cushing
  • George Lucas
  • Carrie Fisher
  • Irvin Kershner
  • Richard Marquand
  • Alec Guinness
  • Mark Hamill
  • Harrison Ford
Release date: 2004-09-20
Run time: 361 min.
Creator: Leigh Brackett
RRP: £44.99
Price: £29.50

Review Star Wars Trilogy (Episodes IV-VI) [1977] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:

Four-disc set includes: Episode IV, A New Hope (Special Edition)-with commentary by George Lucas, Ben Burtt, Dennis Muren and Carrie Fisher; Easter egg: credit roll (2 min) Episode V, The Empire Strikes Back (Special Edition)-with commentary by George Lucas, Irvin Kershner, Lawrence Kasdan, Ben Burtt, Dennis Muren and Carrie Fisher; Easter egg: credit roll (2 min) Episode VI, Return of the Jedi (Special Edition)-commentary by George Lucas, Lawrence Kasdan, Ben Burtt, Dennis Muren and Carrie Fisher; Easter egg: credit roll (2 min) Bonus disc: all-new bonus features, including the most comprehensive feature-length documentary ever produced on the Star Wars saga, and never-before-seen footage from the making of all three filmsSubitles (all material across all four discs): English, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish Click here to see detailed information on the special features included on the bonus disc. Amazon. co. uk Review George Lucas's original Star Wars trilogy is a clever synthesis of pop-cultural and mythological references, taking classic fairy-tale themes, adding more than a dash of Arthurian legend, and providing cinematic high adventure inspired as much by Kurosawa's Samurai epics as by Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers. As a result, audiences of all ages can find something to identify with in Luke Skywalker's journey from disaffected teenager dreaming of adventure to Jedi Knight and saviour of the galaxy. He not only rescues a Princess, but discovers she's a close relative. And if there's a lesson to be gleaned from the Skywalker clan, it's that no matter how bad things get in the average dysfunctional family, it's never too late for reconciliation. Originally released in 1977, Star Wars, the first film, was made as a standalone. Perhaps that's why Obi-Wan Kenobi seems a tad inconsistent in his attitude towards his old pupil Anakin Skywalker, and perhaps also why Luke is allowed to develop a guilt-free crush on Princess Leia. Lucas's story, told from the point of view of the two bickering droids (a device taken from Kurosawa's Hidden Fortress), also borrows freely from Errol Flynn's Robin Hood, as does John Williams's seminal Korngold-inspired music score. [+]
Thanks in equal part to Leigh Brackett's screenplay and Irvin Kershner's direction The Empire Strikes Back (1980) is the most grown-up instalment in the series. The basic fairy-tale is developed and expanded, with the principal characters experiencing emotional turmoil-blossoming romance, mixed feelings and confused loyalties-amid a very real threat of annihilation as Darth Vader's motivations become chillingly personal. Luke's quasi-Arthurian destiny is complicated still further by the half-truths of his wizardly mentors; and swashbuckler Han Solo finds the past catching up with him, quite literally in the form of bounty hunter Boba Fett. The film is graced by more fabulous landscapes (ice, forest, clouds), more unforgettable new characters (Yoda), more groundbreaking special effects (the asteroid chase), and John Williams's finest score. The difficult third film, 1983's Return of the Jedi, seems schizophrenic in its intentions, hoping to please both the kiddies who bought all the toys and an older audience who appreciated the narrative's epic and mythological strands. The result is a film that splits awkwardly into two. One thread, which might be subtitled "The Redemption of Anakin Skywalker", pursues the story of the Skywalker family to a cathartic conclusion. The other thread, which might be described as "The Care Bears Go to War", attempts to say something profound about primitivism versus technological sophistication, but just gets silly as furry midgets doing Tarzan whoops defeat the Emperor's crack legions. In 1997 Lucas re-released the three original films in digitally remastered "Special Edition" versions, in which many scenes have been restored and enhanced (some would say "unnecessarily tinkered with"). Despite loud and continued criticisms from fans, these Special Editions are now considered definitive, if only by Lucasfilm. -Mark Walker.

Review Warner Home Video  / Batman - The Animated Series - The Legend Begins
Actors & Directors
  • Loren Lester
  • Kevin Conroy
  • Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
  • Bob Hastings
  • Jane Alan
Release date: 2004-07-26
Creator: Robert Kanigher
RRP: £9.99
Price: £2.29

Review Batman - The Animated Series - The Legend Begins / Warner Home Video:


Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Escape From L.A. [1996]
Actors & Directors
  • Georges Corraface
  • Steve Buscemi
  • A.J. Langer
  • Kurt Russell
  • Stacy Keach
  • John Carpenter
Release date: 2001-06-04
Run time: 96 min.
Creator: Nick Castle
RRP: £12.99
Price: £3.34

Review Escape From L.A. [1996] / Paramount Home Entertainment:

Fifteen years after John Carpenter squandered a great idea on a mediocre movie (Escape from New York), he does it again-this time on the Left Coast. Kurt Russell is back as the terminally cynical one-eyed action hero Snake Plissken who, this time, has been coerced into saving the world in Los Angeles. It's 2013 and L. A. is now an island maximum-security prison off the coast of California. Snake has 10 hours to find a doomsday weapon that's fallen into the hands of revolutionaries before he dies of a virus with which he's been injected. But the action is clumsy and unimaginative: lots of shootouts and very little suspense. Even the bad guys aren't particularly inventive; only Pam Grier, as a transsexual gang leader, strikes any sparks. Russell growls his way through the role but can only blame himself: He cowrote the script with Carpenter. -Marshall Fine.

Review Warner Home Video  / Under Siege 2 [1995]
Actors & Directors
  • Steven Seagal
  • Everett McGill
  • Katherine Heigl
  • Geoff Murphy
  • Morris Chestnut
  • Eric Bogosian
Release date: 1999-10-25
Run time: 93 min.
Creator: Richard Hatem
RRP: £12.99
Price: £4.37

Review Under Siege 2 [1995] / Warner Home Video:

The success ofUnder Siege made a sequel mandatory according to Hollywood's rules of maximum revenue, and as sequels go, this one's not half bad. Steven Seagal returns as former Navy SEAL and skilled chef Casey Ryback, who's trying to spend quality time with his niece on a cross-country train trip. But as luck and action-movie formulas would have it, the train has been hijacked by a demented genius (Eric Bogosian) who is using the train as a moving platform to seize computerised control of a top-secret U. S. satellite that is capable of causing earthquakes from space. Seagal has to stop the train or the villain (whichever comes first), and the action is fast and furious on its way to a high-speed climax. He's not as wacky as Tommy Lee Jones in the first Under Siege, but Bogosian has got a delirious quality that serves the comic-book plot, and action fans get more than their fill of dazzling stunts and special effects. -Jeff Shannon.

Review MGM Entertainment  / Shadows And Fog [1992]
Actors & Directors
  • Woody Allen
  • David Ogden Stiers
  • Woody Allen
  • Mia Farrow
  • John Malkovich
  • Madonna
Release date: 2002-04-15
Run time: 82 min.
Creator: Thomas A. Reilly
RRP: £15.99
Price: £3.31

Review Shadows And Fog [1992] / MGM Entertainment:


Review Warner Home Video  / Final Analysis [1992]
Actors & Directors
  • Richard Gere
  • Paul Guilfoyle
  • Kim Basinger
  • Eric Roberts
  • Phil Joanou
  • Uma Thurman
Release date: 1999-11-22
Run time: 119 min.
Creator: Wesley Strick
RRP: £13.99
Price: £1.77

Review Final Analysis [1992] / Warner Home Video:

This film, which again pairs Richard Gere and Kim Basinger (who starred in 1986's No Mercy), offers up elements of classic noir: a hapless man becomes intimately involved with a beautiful blonde who may or may not be who or what she appears to be. Dedicated psychiatrist Isaac Barr (Gere) reluctantly, and then more obsessively, becomes involved with Heather Evans (Basinger), the sister of his patient, Diana Baylor (Uma Thurman). Evans is unhappily married to a gangster (appropriately played by a muscular and menacing Eric Roberts in a trademark role). Gere and Basinger make a credible, if dangerous couple, and Thurman delivers a subtle, understated performance and demonstrates her range and potential. The thriller is appropriately shot in gorgeous San Francisco, where the literal and figurative curving and hilly roads wind throughout. Credit legendary art director Dean Tavoularis for some amazing sets and scenes, notably the elegantly cavernous restaurant where Evans and her husband have a fateful dinner. This film is, in a way, glossy director Phil Joanou's Hitchcockian tribute-as a climactic lighthouse scene best demonstrates. Final Analysis doesn't offer an intimate look at its characters, but a beautifully stylized one, moody and gloomy. The intricate plot experiments with the device of "pathological intoxication," in which the subject completely loses control after drinking alcohol. And this doesn't mean a conventional ugly drunk; it means a frightening psychotic. [+]
Good and evil, hope and despair, beauty and repulsion are often juxtaposed in the film's complex world. -NF Mendoza.

Review Universal Pictures UK  / Foreign Correspondent
Actors & Directors
  • Laraine Day
  • Joel McCrea
  • George Sanders
  • Alfred Hitchcock
  • Herbert Marshall
  • Albert Bassermann
Release date: 2003-04-21
Run time: 115 min.
Creator: Joan Harrison
RRP: £19.99
Price: £4.29

Review Foreign Correspondent / Universal Pictures UK:

The first of Alfred Hitchcock's World War II features, Foreign Correspondent was completed in 1940, as the European war was only beginning to erupt across national borders. Its titular hero, Johnny Jones (Joel McCrea), is an American crime reporter dispatched by his New York publisher to put a fresh spin on the drowsy dispatches emanating from overseas, his nose for a good story (and, of course, some fortuitous timing) promptly leading him to the "crime" of fascism and Nazi Germany's designs on European conquest. In attempting to learn more about a seemingly noble peace effort, Jones (who's been saddled with the dubious nom de plume Hadley Haverstock) walks into the middle of an assassination, uncovers a spy ring, and, not entirely coincidentally, falls in love-a pattern familiar to admirers of Hitchcock's espionage thrillers, of which this is a thoroughly entertaining example. McCrea's hardy Yankee charms are neatly contrasted with the droll English charm of colleague George Sanders; Herbert Marshall provides a plummy variation on the requisite, ambiguous "good-or-is-he-really-bad" guy; Laraine Day affords a lovely heroine; and Robert Benchley (who contributed to the script) pops up, albeit too briefly, for comic relief. As good as the cast is, however, it's Hitchcock's staging of key action sequences that makes Foreign Correspondent a textbook example of the director's visual energy: an assassin's escape through a rain-soaked crowd is registered by rippling umbrellas, a nest of spies is detected by the improbable direction of a windmill's spinning sails and Jones's nocturnal flight across a pitched city rooftop produces its own contextual comment when broken neon tubes convert the Hotel Europe into "Hot Europe". -Sam Sutherland.

Review Vision Video Ltd.  / Session 9 [2001]
Actors & Directors
  • David Caruso
  • Josh Lucas
  • Paul Guilfoyle
  • Stephen Gevedon
  • Brad Anderson
  • Peter Mullan
Release date: 2003-02-17
Run time: 96 min.
Creator: Michael Williams
RRP: £15.99
Price: £4.30

Review Session 9 [2001] / Vision Video Ltd.:

Few things are more sure-fire creepy than huge abandoned buildings, and Session 9 has one of the eeriest buildings you've ever seen. A hazardous-materials-cleanup company has been hired to eliminate asbestos tiles and other toxic material from a gigantic mental hospital that had been shut down in the 1980s. But as one member of the team starts to nose into old files in the office, he uncovers a series of tape recordings of psychiatric sessions-nine of them-related to a notorious sexual abuse case. Soon, toxic materials and dark spirits start to merge. Like The Blair Witch Project (and most horror movies, really), Session 9 is longer on atmosphere and dream logic than story-but the atmosphere is effectively unsettling. A strong cast (including Peter Mullan, David Caruso, and Brendan Sexton III) do an effective job of slowly cracking under stress and evil influences. -Bret Fetzer.

Review FUNimation Entertainment Ltd.  / DragonBall Z: Season Three (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Actors & Directors
  • Sonny Strait
  • Daisuke Nishio
  • Chris R Sabat
  • Linda Young
  • Stephanie Nadonly
  • Sean Schemmel
Release date: 2007-09-18
Run time: 800 min.
Price: £26.31

Review DragonBall Z: Season Three (REGION 1) (NTSC) / FUNimation Entertainment Ltd.:


Review Optimum Home Entertainment  / Chase A Crooked Shadow [1957]
Actors & Directors
  • Richard Todd
  • Faith Brook
  • Herbert Lomas
  • Michael Anderson
  • Anne Baxter
  • Alexander Knox
Release date: 2007-11-05
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £5.02

Review Chase A Crooked Shadow [1957] / Optimum Home Entertainment:


Review MGM Entertainment  / Robocop [1988]
Actors & Directors
  • Kurtwood Smith
  • Ronny Cox
  • Paul Verhoeven
  • Peter Weller
  • Nancy Allen
  • Dan O'Herlihy
Release date: 2003-07-28
Run time: 98 min.
Creator: Michael Miner
RRP: £19.99
Price: £3.78

Review Robocop [1988] / MGM Entertainment:

When it arrived on the big screen in 1987, Paul Verhoeven's RoboCop was like a high-voltage jolt of electricity, blending satire, thrills, and abundant violence with such energized gusto that audiences couldn't help feeling stunned and amazed. The movie was a huge hit, and has since earned enduring cult status as one of the seminal science fiction films of the 1980s. Followed by two sequels, a TV series, and countless novels and comic books, this original RoboCop is still the best by far, largely due to the audacity and unbridled bloodlust of director Verhoeven. However, the reasons many enjoyed the film are also the reasons some will surely wish to avoid it. Critic Pauline Kael called the movie a dubious example of "gallows pulp," and there's no denying that its view of mankind is bleak, depraved, and graphically violent. In the Detroit of the near future, a policeman (Peter Weller) is brutally gunned down by drug-dealing thugs and left for dead, but he survives (half of him, at least) and is integrated with state-of-the-art technology to become a half-robotic cop of the future, designed to revolutionize law enforcement. As RoboCop holds tight to his last remaining shred of humanity, he relentlessly pursues the criminals who "killed" him. All the while, Verhoeven (from a script by Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner) injects this high-intensity tale with wickedly pointed humour and satire aimed at the men and media who cover a city out of control. -Jeff Shannon, amazon. com.

Review Universal Pictures UK  / Law And Order - Series 4 - Complete [1993]
Actors & Directors
  • Steven Hill
  • Michael Moriarty
  • Jerry Orbach
  • S. Epatha Merkerson
  • Christopher Noth
Release date: 2006-07-17
Run time: 1361 min.
RRP: £44.99
Price: £17.97

Review Law And Order - Series 4 - Complete [1993] / Universal Pictures UK:


Review Playback  / Monk - Season 1 - Complete
Actors & Directors
  • Randall Zisk
  • Jason Gray-Stanford
  • Ted Levine
  • Kevin Inch
  • Bitty Schram
  • Rob Thompson
  • Stephen Cragg
  • Dean Parisot
  • Tony Shalhoub
Release date: 2004-12-27
Run time: 568 min.
RRP: £27.99
Price: £11.97

Review Monk - Season 1 - Complete / Playback:

The ranks of fictional genius gumshoes were joined by former San Francisco detective Adrian Monk (Tony Shalhoub) in the summer of 2002, and he is indeed a welcome addition. Cable channel USA Network introduced Monk, a bright comedy-drama series about an obsessive-compulsive sleuth drummed out of police work following the murder of his wife and a subsequent spike in his overwhelming neuroses. Once a rising star in the homicide department, the twitchy savant is still valuable to Captain Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine), who reluctantly calls on Monk to solve difficult, high-profile murders of judges, billionaires, police informants, and famous attorneys. Monk's talent for finding clues and seeing the big picture in criminal investigations makes him a force to reckon with, but his many phobias (germs, heights, asymmetry, and much, much else) aggravate Stottlemeyer and make Monk completely dependent on a long-suffering assistant, Sharona (Bitty Schram), a single mom who functions as Dr. Watson to Monk's Sherlock Holmes. Each of the 12 episodes included in Monk: The Complete First Season is a delightful mix of clever whodunit puzzler, neurotic schtick, and deepening relationships. Among the latter, the bond between Monk and Sharona is most touching, as the platonic friends, sometimes aghast at how involved they are in each other's lives, surprise themselves with the breadth of their trust and commitment. In "Mr. Monk Goes to the Asylum," Monk is forced into a stay at a mental hospital, where a murderer has convinced him he's crazy; it's Sharona who makes her boss realize he's not. In "Mr. [+]
Monk and the Earthquake," it's Monk who rushes to Sharona's aid when he deduces that a lying friend is about to kill her. In almost every episode, Monk is confronted with a phobic limitation he must overcome in order to save the day. The question is whether he will heal enough, one day, to re-join his old squad. For the sake of Monk's winning formula and fans, one has to hope such good news never comes to pass. -Tom Keogh.

Review Entertainment in Video  / Saw 2 [2005]
Actors & Directors
  • Darren Lynn Bousman
  • Tony Nappo
  • Tobin Bell
  • Beverly Mitchell
  • Glenn Plummer
  • Shawnee Smith
Release date: 2007-02-26
Run time: 91 min.
RRP: £19.99
Price: £3.36

Review Saw 2 [2005] "Unrated Director's cut" / Entertainment in Video:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / Jaws 2 [1978]
Actors & Directors
  • Jeannot Szwarc
  • Jeffrey Kramer
  • Roy Scheider
  • Lorraine Gary
  • Joseph Mascolo
  • Murray Hamilton
Release date: 2001-07-30
Run time: 111 min.
Creator: Peter Benchley
RRP: £9.99
Price: £3.98

Review Jaws 2 [1978] / Universal Pictures UK:

Judged entirely on its own merits, Jaws 2 isn't a bad film. It even has some passably scary moments (Brody discovering a charred body in the waves; the swimming boy racing the shark back to his dinghy). But it's absolutely impossible to judge this movie on its own merits. Despite being given a great big Panavision camera to play with director Jeannot Szwarc can't hide his TV-movie origins, nor can the script, both of which spend far too long landlocked with the bickering inhabitants of Amity Island. Where the original film boldly set out to sea with Robert Shaw's Ahab-like Quint, in a misplaced desire to attract a teenage audience this movie dwells at interminable length on the courting rituals of the local youth; where Spielberg's original is a masterpiece of pacing and carefully timed tension-building, Jaws 2 sags terribly whenever the plastic shark swims out of sight. Roy Scheider comes off best, reprising his role as Chief Brody, while Lorraine Gary's role as his wife is expanded (she must be a glutton for punishment: she also starred in Jaws 4: The Revenge). Taken as a sequel Jaws 2 is inferior in every way; taken as an unassuming TV movie it's a respectable, workmanlike effort; but looking forward at what was to follow, it begins to look like a minor masterpiece. -Mark Walker.

Review Sony Pictures Home Entertainment  / Hex - Season 2
Actors & Directors
  • Jemima Rooper
  • Laura Pyper
  • Brian Grant
  • Julian Murphy
  • Anna Wilson-Jones
  • Michel Fassbender
  • Christina Cole
  • Andy Goddard
Release date: 2006-03-06
Run time: 594 min.
RRP: £39.99
Price: £11.97

Review Hex - Season 2 / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / Red Dragon/Hannibal [2001]
Actors & Directors
  • Anthony Hopkins
  • Ralph Fiennes
  • Gary Oldman
  • Brett Ratner
  • Julianne Moore
  • Ridley Scott
  • Mary Louise Parker
Release date: 2006-12-26
Run time: 245 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £6.98

Review Red Dragon/Hannibal [2001] / Universal Pictures UK:

Red Dragon A lot could've gone wrong in Red Dragon, but the movie exceeds expectations. Replacing the acclaimed Manhunter as an "official" entry in the Hannibal Lecter trilogy, this topnotch thriller-the second adaptation of Thomas Harris's first Lecter novel-returns to the fertile soil of The Silence of the Lambs, serving as both prequel and heir to the legacy of Lecter as portrayed, with mischievous menace, by the great Anthony Hopkins. Familiar faces and locations reappear (along with Lambs screenwriter Ted Tally) as Lecter coaches FBI profiler Will Graham (Edward Norton) in tracking the horrific "Tooth Fairy" killer (Ralph Fiennes), whose transformative killing spree is inspired by a William Blake painting. By dutifully serving Harris's potent material, Tally and director Brett Ratner craft a suspenseful film worthy of its predecessors, bringing Hopkins full circle as one of the cinema's all-time greatest villains. With overtones of Psycho and a superb supporting cast, Red Dragon succeeds against considerable odds. -Jeff Shannon Hannibal Yes, he's back, and he's still hungry. Ten years after The Silence of the Lambs, Dr. Hannibal "the Cannibal" Lecter (Anthony Hopkins, reprising his Oscar-winning role) is living the good life in Italy, studying art and sipping espresso. FBI agent Clarice Starling (Julianne Moore, replacing Jodie Foster), on the other hand, hasn't had it so good-an outsider from the start, she's now a quiet, moody loner who doesn't play bureaucratic games and suffers for it. A botched drug raid results in her demotion-and a request from Lecter's only living victim, Mason Verger (Gary Oldman, uncredited), for a little Q and A. [+]
Little does Clarice realize that the hideously deformed Verger-who, upon suggestion from Dr. Lecter, peeled off his own face-is using her as bait to lure Dr. Lecter out of hiding, quite certain he'll capture the good doctor. Taking the basic plot contraptions from Thomas Harris's baroque novel, Hannibal is so stylistically different from its predecessor that it forces you to take it on its own terms. Director Ridley Scott gives the film a sleek, almost European look that lets you know that, unlike the first film (which was about the quintessentially American Clarice), this movie is all Hannibal. Does it work? Yes-but only up to a point. Scott adeptly sets up an atmosphere of foreboding, but it's all buildup for anticlimax, as Verger's plot for abducting Hannibal (and feeding him to man-eating wild boars) doesn't really deliver the requisite visceral thrills, and the much-ballyhooed climatic dinner sequence between Clarice, Dr. Lecter, and a third unlucky guest wobbles between parody and horror. Hopkins and Moore are both first-rate, but the film contrives to keep them as far apart as possible, when what made Silence so amazing was their interaction. When they do connect it's quite thrilling, but it's unfortunately too little too late. -Mark Englehart.

Review Universal Pictures UK  / Rumble Fish [1983]
Actors & Directors
  • Dennis Hopper
  • Diana Scarwid
  • Diane Lane
  • Matt Dillon
  • Francis Ford Coppola
  • Mickey Rourke
Release date: 2003-07-07
Run time: 90 min.
Creator: S.E. Hinton
RRP: £15.99
Price: £4.49

Review Rumble Fish [1983] / Universal Pictures UK:

The second of Francis Ford Coppola's films based on the popular juvenile novels of S. E. Hinton (the first being The Outsiders), Rumble Fish split critics into opposite camps: those who admired the film for its heavily stylised indulgence, and those who hated it for the very same reason. Whatever the response, it's clearly the work of a maverick director who isn't afraid to push the limits of his innovative talent. Filmed almost entirely in black and white with an occasional dash of color for symbolic effect, this tale of alienated youth centers on gang leader Rusty James (Matt Dillon) and his band of punk pals. Rusty's got a girlfriend (Diane Lane), an older brother named Motorcycle Boy (Mickey Rourke), and a drunken father (Dennis Hopper) who've all given up trying to straighten him out. He's best at making trouble, and he pursues that skill with an enthusiastic flair that eventually catches up with him. But it's not the whacked-out story here that matters-it's the uninhibited verve of Coppola's visual approach, which includes everything from time-lapse clouds to the kind of smoky streets and alleyways that could only exist in the movies. The supporting cast includes a host of fresh faces who went on to thriving careers, including Nicolas Cage, Christopher Penn, Vincent Spano, Laurence Fishburne, and musician Tom Waits. -Jeff Shannon.

Browse Crime, Thrillers & Mystery:

Models & Brands:
The Princess Bride [1987], The Cat And The Canary [1939], Star Wars Trilogy (Episodes IV-VI) [1977], Batman - The Animated Series - The Legend Begins, Escape From L.A. [1996], Under Siege 2 [1995], Shadows And Fog [1992], Final Analysis [1992], Foreign Correspondent, Session 9 [2001], DragonBall Z: Season Three (REGION 1) (NTSC), Chase A Crooked Shadow [1957], Robocop [1988], Law And Order - Series 4 - Complete [1993], Monk - Season 1 - Complete, Saw 2 [2005] "Unrated Director's cut", Jaws 2 [1978], Hex - Season 2, Red Dragon/Hannibal [2001], Rumble Fish [1983]

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