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Friday, January 1, 2010

Some Excellent Suggestions For An Awe-Inspiring Flick To Enjoy Tonight

By Dorothea Gordon

A couple sites will also provide software that will allow you to put the motion picture on a DVD so you can view it from a TV set. It truly is much nicer to view a film all comfy and curled up on the couch than sitting in front of a computer monitor. If that is an imperative issue for you make sure that the website you select provides it. Below are some of the greatest films of all time. Choose a great motion picture to watch tonight.

Soylent Green - Well-intentioned yet cardboard edition of Harry Harrison's chemistry-fiction classic Make Room! Make Room! In the year 2022, Manhattan has gotten to be an overcrowded hellhole. Charlton Heston plays a copy who while examining the homicide of a bigwig, trips onto explosive government secret which you will figure out long before he does. Cast includes Charlton Heston, Edward G. Robinson, Leigh Taylor-Young, Chuck Connors, Mike Henry, and Dick Van Patten. (100 minutes, 1973)

The Defiant - A fascinating account of 2 runaway convicts, one black and one white who are chained together as they escape from prison in the South. Excellent performances by Williams and Chaney as individuals they meet during the voyage. Academy Prize for screenplay by Harold Jacob Smith and Nathan E. Cast includes Tony Curtis, Sidney Poitier, Theodore Bike, Charles McGraw, Carnie Williams, and Lon Chaney, Jr. (97 minutes, 1958)

Basic - While things go awry throughout an armed forces work out, base captain Daly brings in Travolta, the best interrogator he ever had, to question the surviving members of the squad, whose stories do not add up. Actually a whodunit, this film keeps us guessing, as a good conspiracy should. Cast includes John Travolta, Connie Nielsen, Samuel L. Jackson, Giovanni Ribisi, Tim Daly, Roselyn Sanchez, and Harry Connick. (2003 minutes, 1995)

Red Sun - East meets West in this bizarre account of a samurai fighter chasing a priceless Japanese sword stolen from a train crossing the American West. Cast includes Charles Bronson, Ursula Andress, Toshiro Mifune, Alain Delon, and Capucine. (112 minutes, 1972)

Clue - Silly and insipid whodunit based on the trendy board game of the same name with all the identifiable characters Mrs. Peacock, Colonel Mustard, Miss Red, et al. gathered for a murderous day in a Victorian mansion. Everyone tries extremely hard but there is nothing they can do to save this weak film. Cast includes Eileen Brennan, Tim Curry, Madeline Kahn, Christopher Lloyd, Michael McKean, Martin Ponder, and Howard Hesseman. (87 minutes, 1985)

Jerry Maguire - Jerry is an agent for a top Sports Management group. When he is terminated, he expects his client to come along with him as he sets out on his own. All of a sudden Jerry realizes that he has no real friends in this competitive, dog eat dog, business. Down to one client and one assistant, Jerry fights to build himself a business.

The Last Time I Saw Archie - Webb's single try at comedy is less stupid than some of his more solemn films; a shame, since William Bowers' script-based on his own Army experiences had indisputable potential, and Mitchum agreeably underplays as the con guy. By the way, the genuine Archie Chamber sued for invasion of privacy. Cast includes Robert Mitchum, Jack Webb, Martha Hyer, France Nuyen, Louis Nye, Richard Arlen, Don Tangles, Joe Flynn, and Robert Strauss. (98 minutes, 1961)

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