I went to the local video shop and said,
“Can I borrow “Batman
Forever?” My friend”
He said, “No, I’m
afraid that’s not possible
I went to the local video shop and said,
“Can I borrow “Batman
Forever?” My friend”
He said, “No, I’m
afraid that’s not possible
How to choose, how to select
A film to fill that
two hour slot
The bumph will big it
up
Over egg the pudding
like as not
So, I look for key
word like
“Thought provoking” or
“moody”
“Poignant, “Critically
acclaimed”
Or “Stunning
cinematography”
And when I’ve
identified them
I know they are the
ones to miss
And I get the one with
the cover picture
Of a girl in a state
of undress
“True
Grit” is a Western drama, screenplay written by Marguerite Roberts from
the novel by Charles Portis and Directed by Henry Hathaway.
The
story of a stubborn 14-year-old farm girl Mattie Ross (Kim Darby) who sets out
to capture hired hand Tom Chaney (Jeff Corey), following the murder of her
father.
After
settling her father’s affairs, she enlists the help of tough, drunken,
hard-nosed U.S. Marshal Reuben J. “Rooster” Cogburn (John Wayne) to track down
her father's murderer in Indian Territory.
Despite
his shortcomings Mattie identifies him as a man with “true grit,” and insists
on accompanying Cogburn and they are joined by an arrogant self-important Texas
Ranger, LaBoeuf (Glen Campbell) who also has a claim on Cheyney for murdering a
Senator.
It
becomes apparent that their fugitive has taken up with a gang of outlaws led by
Lucky Ned Pepper (Robert Duvall) and the unlikely trio find danger and
surprises on the journey, and each has their “grit” truly tested.
Jeremy
Slate, Dennis Hopper, Alfred Ryder, John Fiedler and the wonderful Strother
Martin among others make up a very able supporting cast.
“Blue
Thunder” is an action, crime, drama, written by Dan O'Bannon
and Don Jakoby and Directed by John Badham.
Los
Angeles Police pilot Frank Murphy (Roy Scheider) is chosen by Capt. Jack
Braddock (Warren Oates) as test pilot for an experimental police helicopter,
Blue Thunder, a specially modified, heavily armed helicopter designed to counter
street insurgencies.
Unfortunately,
his trainer for the trials is Col. F.E. Cochrane (Malcolm McDowell) with whom
he has issues dating back to their time in Vietnam which adds to the tension.
But
when Frank and his Observer, Officer Richard Lymangood (Daniel Stern) prepare
to put the aircraft through its paces they discover the sinister implications
of the new aircraft and the top-level conspiracy behind it, and with that
knowledge comes danger.
A
great movie of its time, although the technology dates it, but it is still very
watchable and among a very accomplished cast Candy Clark stands out above the
rest as Frank’s love interest, Kate.
High
school senior Carrie White (Sissy Spacek), is a shy, unworldly, and friendless
teenage girl who has been sheltered from real life by her domineering,
fanatically religious mother (Piper Laurie), while struggling in secret with
the special telekinetic powers she possesses, a secret which she cannot divulge
to her mother as she would consider it to be a gift from the devil.
The
only adult authority figure who tries to help Carrie with her life is her
Physical Education teacher, Miss Collins (Betty Buckley) but she is warned by
the Principle not to get too involved.
After
an incident of bullying by her classmates the culprits are banned from
attending the Senior Prom and blame Carrie so they plan to exact their revenge
on her by humiliating her in front of everyone at the Prom.
So
will they succeed or will she unleash her telekinetic powers on them in a
horrifying display of rage.
Amy
Irving, William Katt, John Travolta, Nancy Allen and P.J. Soles play Carries
classmates, good and bad, in what is possibly the best movie adaptation of a
Stephen King novel.
“The
Dead Zone” is a horror thriller, screenplay by Jeffrey Boam, based on the Novel
by Stephen King and Directed by David Cronenberg.
When
a survivor from a road accident awakes from a coma after five years,
schoolteacher Johnny Smith (Christopher Walken) discovers he has psychic
abilities, when he touches someone, he gets visions of the past, present or the
deadly future.
However
after five years he finds life has moved on without him, his girlfriend Sarah
Bracknell (Brooke Adams) is now married; he no longer has a job and he's
basically crippled due to his muscles having atrophied.
So
he struggles to find his place in the world, but along the way he does use his
abilities to help Sheriff Bannerman (Tom Skerritt) solve a murder case.
He
then helps to save a child's life but when he discovers the chilling fate for
the world, he must save everyone from an evilly corrupt presidential hopeful
Greg Stillson (Martin Sheen) but at what cost.
Character
stalwarts, Herbert Lom, Anthony Zerbe and Colleen Dewhurst provide excellent
support to the stars in the gripping movie.
When
music professor and composer John Russell (George C. Scott) and his family are
enjoying a perfect family vacation, a freak automobile accident claims the
lives of his wife and daughter.
Consumed
by grief, he is urged to rent a huge nineteenth century house, and the house
seems to possess all the room John needs to reflect and hopefully write music.
However
it isn’t long before he realizes he is not alone in the house as he shares it
with the spirit of a murdered child who has homed in on John's grief and
despair and uses him to uncover decades of silence and deceit.
With
the help of Claire Norman (Trish Van Devere), who helped John secure the house,
they set out to find the answers and the powerful and devious man who guards
them.
This
is not a violent or “Kensington Gore” type of horror, it scares with great
story telling, eerie sounds and dark corners and it uses pathos with great
effect.
The
film also benefit from accomplished direction and the acting excellence of its
stars and a great supporting cast including Melvyn Douglas, John Colicos and
Barry Morse.
“The
Shinning” is a horror classic, screenplay by Stanley Kubrick and Diane Johnson,
based on the Novel by Stephen King and Directed by Stanley Kubrick.
Jack
Torrance (Jack Nicholson) is an aspiring author and recovering alcoholic cursed
with a persistent writer's block.
His
solution is to take a job as an off-season caretaker at the secluded Overlook
Hotel in Colorado's snow-capped mountains, and drags his wife, Wendy (Shelley
Duvall), and his gifted son, Danny (Danny Lloyd) with him.
The
Torrance’s arrive as the Hotel begins to shut down for the season, and they are
given the grand tour, during which they meet the Hotel's chef, Hallorann
(Scatman Crothers).
Halloran
chats with Danny about the rare psychic gift they share called “The Shining”,
and warns him about certain rooms he should avoid, as the Hotel has a grizzly
past.
In
the weeks that follow the closure of the Hotel Jack fails to overcome his
writers block and little by little, Jack starts losing his mind.
He
feels trapped in a gargantuan silent prison set in an unforgiving environment
of seemingly endless snowstorms, his days are filled with strange occurrences
and eerie visions and incessant voices in his head demand a sacrifice, leading
to a thrilling and dramatic finale in true Kubrick style.
“The
Fog” is a horror thriller, written by John Carpenter and Debra Hill and
Directed by John Carpenter.
The
story is set against the backdrop of the peaceful community of the coastal town
of Antonio Bay, California who are making preparations to celebrate the towns’
centenary.
However
strange supernatural occurrences blemish the festivities as an unearthly
impenetrable and opaque fog rolls off the ocean to shroud the seaside town and
leads to unaccountable disappearances, so is there something evil lurking in
the fog?
Could
it be linked to events a century earlier when a hideous crime was committed by
the town's elders when they sealed the fate of a ship full of drowned mariners
now lying on the bottom of the sea.
So
has the fog brought the restless dead seeking revenge and demanding justice?
Adrienne
Barbeau, Jamie Lee Curtis, Janet Leigh, John Houseman and Hal Holbrook bring
this ghostly tale to life, while the photography by Dean Cundey makes it all
seem real.
“Halloween”
is a horror thriller, written by John Carpenter and Debra Hill and Directed by
John Carpenter.
The
movie begins on Halloween in 1963, when 6 year-old Michael Myers (Will Sandin) stabs his
15 year old sister Judith (Sandy Johnson) to death.
After
being institutionalized for 15 years, Myers breaks out on the night before
Halloween, and no one seems be too concerned that Myers' is heading back to
Haddonfield, and that he’ll likely be there on October 31st 1978, except his
psychiatrist, Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasence).
But
by the time the authorities of the town realize he’s heading for Haddonfield,
Illinois to kill again, it may be too late for many of its inhabitants.
Jamie
Lee Curtis, Nancy Loomis, P.J. Soles and Charles Cyphers star in what was
undoubtedly the first of the slasher film, which has influenced almost every
slasher film made since.
“Top
Hat” is a Musical Romantic Comedy, Written by Dwight Taylor and Allan Scott
from the book by Dwight Taylor and Directed by Mark Sandrich.
The
story follows American dancer Jerry
Travers (Fred Astaire) is
working for his friend and producer Horace Hardwick (Edward Everett Horton) in
London, and Jerry demonstrates his new dance steps late one night in Horace's
hotel room, much to the annoyance of a girl sleeping in the room below Dale Tremont (Ginger Rogers).
She
goes upstairs to complain and the two are immediately attracted to each other
complications arise however when Dale mistakes Jerry for Horace.
Horrified
that she has become involved with a married man she runs away to Venice on the
invitation of friend Madge (Helen Broderick), Horace’s wife and confesses.
But
Jerry and Horace also head for Venice and when Dale discovers they are there
she agrees to marry Alberto Beddini (Erik Rhodes) but Horace’s manservant Bates
(Eric Blore) saves the day.
“Top Hat” is a happy film that keeps delighting
viewers any time one is lucky enough to fall under its spell.
“The
Gay Divorcee” is a Musical Romantic Comedy, Written by George Marion Jr,
Dorothy Yost and Edward Kaufman from the book by Dwight Taylor, musical
adaptation Kenneth S. Webb and Samuel Hoffenstein and Directed by Mark
Sandrich.
The
story concerns American dancer Guy Holden (Fred Astaire) and Mimi Glossop (Ginger
Rogers), there’s clearly an attraction between them but Mimi keeps running off.
Then
she visits a lawyer in London, Egbert 'Pinky' Fitzgerald (Edward Everett
Horton) and tells him she wants a divorce from her absentee husband.
Meanwhile
Mimi’s Aunt Hortense (Alice Brady) hires a professional Rodolfo Tonetti (Erik
Rhodes) to play the correspondent in an apparent infidelity.
But
what neither of them knows in that Guy and Pinky are friends so they travel
down to Brightbourne together where the dancer meets Mimi again but she thinks
that he is the correspondent.
When
the dust settles and the confusion has been cleared up Mimi’s husband Cyril
(William Austin) turns up but he refuses to grant a divorce, luckily the waiter
(Eric Blore) comes to the rescue.
The
movie is a feast of song and dance and won the first Oscar for Best Song: “The
Continental”, a twenty-two-minute production number.
“The Odessa File” is a historical drama, screenplay by Kenneth Ross and George Markstein based on the Novel by Frederick Forsyth and Directed by Ronald Neame
The story is set in Germany in 1963, at the time of
the Kennedy assassination.
Following the suicide of an elderly Jewish man, freelance journalist Peter Miller (Jon Voight)
takes possession of the man's diary and investigates the alleged sighting of a
former S.S. Captain, who commanded a concentration camp during World War II.
His investigation leads him to Simon Wiesenthal (Shmuel Rodensky) and to a group of Israeli
Secret Service.
Miller
eventually finds himself involved with the powerful organization of former S.S.
members, called “O.D.E.S.S.A.” and he s trained to infiltrate them.
“Earthquake”
is an action thriller disaster movie, screenplay by George Fox and Mario Puzo
and Directed by Mark Robson.
The
story focuses on a varied group of people in Los Angeles, construction Engineer
Stuart Graff (Charlton Heston) who is estranged from his jealously possessive
wife, Remy (Ava Gardner), and is having an affair with the widow of a
co-worker, Denise Marshall (Geneviève Bujold) and Remy pressurises her father,
Sam Royce (Lorne Greene), Stuart's boss, to stop Stuart from seeing Denise.
Also
Rogue policeman, Lew Slade (George Kennedy), is suspended from the L.A.P.D. for
punching another officer and contemplates quitting the force.
Jody
(Marjoe Gortner) is a perverted grocery store manager, who lusts after Rosa
Amici (Victoria Principal), and Rosa’s sister Sal (Gabriel Dell), is the
assistant to Miles Quade (Richard Roundtree), an aspiring daredevil motor
cyclist.
All
the lives of all these people are devastated when a major earthquake rips
through Los Angeles and reduces the city to ruins.
“The Poseidon Adventure” is an action thriller disaster movie, screenplay by Stirling Silliphant and Wendell Mayes from the Novel by Paul Gallico and Directed by Ronald Neame.
The
story takes place aboard the SS Poseidon,
an aged luxury liner on her final voyage from New York City to Athens before
being sent to the scrapyard.
However
the new owners pressurise Captain Harrison (Leslie Nielsen) to push the
Poseidon to her limits to save on the dismantling fees at their destination and
as a result, on New Year's Eve, she is hit by a tidal wave which completely
capsized her, so that all the internal rooms are suddenly upside down with the
Passengers and crew trapped inside.
From
the ensuing chaos a rebellious Priest Reverend Scott (Gene Hackman) takes a
mixed band of survivors on a journey through the bowels of the ship in an
attempt to survive.
The
film won two Academy Awards, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, and a Motion Picture
Sound Editors Award, aided in no small way by a fine Ensemble cast including,
Ernest Borgnine, Jack Albertson, Shelley Winters, Red Buttons, Carol Lynley,
Roddy McDowall, Stella Stevens, Pamela Sue Martin, Arthur O'Connell and Eric
Shea.
“Westworld” is a Sci-Fi Thriller, written and Directed by Michael Crichton.
The
story takes place at Delos, an exclusive vacation resort, an amusement park for
rich, where guests get the choice of Medieval World, Roman World or Westworld,
to live out their fantasies through the use of robots that provide anything
they want.
Two
of the vacationers Peter Martin (Richard Benjamin) and John Blane (James Brolin)
choose a wild west adventure, however, after a couple of days, a computer
breakdown leads to a system wide malfunction, and they find that they are now
being stalked by a rogue robot gunslinger (Yul Brynner).
“Airport” is an action thriller
disaster movie, the first of a series, screenplay by George Seaton from the
Novel by Arthur Hailey and Directed by George Seaton and Henry Hathaway.
The
movie revolves around the airport manager of Lincoln International Airport,
near Chicago, Mel Bakersfeld (Burt Lancaster), who has to contend with a
paralyzing snowstorm, environmental concerns over noise pollution, a blocked
runway, schedule issues, an habitual elderly Trans Global Airlines stowaway,
Ada Quonsett (Helen Hayes), manpower problems, frozen runways, equipment
malfunctions and a suicide bomber, D.O. Guerrero (Van Heflin) plans to blow up
a Boeing 707 airliner in flight.
A
first class movie which was the for runner of the disaster movie genre, helped
in no small measure by a great cast including: Dean Martin, Jean Seberg,
Jacqueline Bisset, George Kennedy, Maureen Stapleton, Barry Nelson, Dana Wynter
and Lloyd Nolan.
“The Towering Inferno” is an action thriller disaster movie, screenplay by Stirling Silliphant, from the Novel by Richard Martin Stern, Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson, and Directed by John Guillermin.
The
focal point of the movie is a colossal skyscraper, designed by Architect Doug
Roberts (Paul Newman), which is nearing completion when he returns from a long
vacation, but ahead of the “grand opening” party he discovers that his wiring
specifications have not been followed and as a result the building has been
experiencing an increasing number of electrical glitches.
He
raises his concerns with his father in law, Jim Duncan (William Holden) and
Project Manager Simmons (Richard Chamberlain) but they are brushed aside.
Suffice
is to say that during the party a fire breaks out and quickly spreads, which threatens to
destroy the tower and everyone in it.
So
Michael O'Halleran (Steve McQueen), who is the chief on duty as a series of
daring rescues punctuate the terror of a building too tall to have a fire
successfully fought from the ground.
It’s
a tense and thrilling tale with an amazing cast assembled by producer Irwin
Allen, who succeed in getting McQueen and Newman to co-star, he also signed
Faye Dunaway to play Newman's love interest and cast Fred Astaire, against type
as a con-man, but even more astonishing than that, he lured reclusive and
legendary film star Jennifer Jones out of retirement for the sympathetic role
of Lisolette Mueller.
He
also secured other notables which included Robert Wagner, Susan Blakely, Susan
Flannery, Sheila Allen, Robert Vaughn, O.J. Simpson and Dabney Coleman.
“Die
Hard 2: Die Harder” is an action thriller, screenplay by Doug Richardson and
Steven E. de Souza from the Novel by Walter Wager, and Directed by Renny
Harlin.
The
sequel to Die Hard follows on from the terrifying events in Los Angeles, NYPD
cop John McClane (Bruce Willis) is about to go through it all again as he goes
on another Christmas vacation to meet his wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia) and he is
in Washington where he is at the airport meeting Holly off the LA flight.
But
while he is waiting, a team of terrorists, led by Col. Stuart (William Sadler),
holds the entire airport hostage, while they plan to rescue a drug Lord,
Esperanza (Franco Nero) from justice.
As
part of that plan they have seized control of all the control systems affecting
all aircraft, with no runway lights available, and no means to contact them,
all aircraft have to remain in the air, with fuel running low, so if McClane is
going to save the day again he will need to be fast.
It’s
another great action thriller with Willis still at the top of his game.
“Die
Hard” is an action thriller, screenplay by Jeb Stuart Steven and E. de Souza,
from the novel by Roderick Thorp, and Directed by John McTiernan.
The
story centres on NYPD cop John McClane (Bruce Willis) who goes on a Christmas
vacation to visit his wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia) in Los Angeles where she
works for the Nakatomi Corporation.
He
is picked up from the airport by limo driver Argyle (De'voreaux White) who
drops him at the Nakatomi Tower where the office Christmas party was taking
place.
While
they are there amidst a tense reunion, a group of bank robbers, led by Hans
Gruber (Alan Rickman), takes control of the building and holds everyone
hostage, with the exception of John, who escapes up the fire escape.
However,
unable to leave the building and with no immediate police response, John is
forced to take matters into his own hands and causes havoc while the bad guys
try to execute their plan to perform a lucrative heist.
It’s
a great action thriller with Willis at the top of his game.