DVD Review: Le Jupon Rouge: Alida Valli, Marie-Christine Barrault, Guillemette Groban, Genevieve Lefebvre: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 7 July, 11:57 AM
DVD  |

DVD Review: Le Jupon Rouge: Alida Valli, Marie-Christine Barrault, Guillemette Groban, Genevieve Lefebvre: Movies & TVDVD Review:  Le Jupon Rouge: Alida Valli, Marie Christine Barrault, Guillemette Groban, Genevieve Lefebvre: Movies & TV 20097721564495377801

Product Description
LE JUPON ROUGE, a classic lesbian drama from France, finds three women of differing ages dealing with the shifting of affections and romance, jealousies and commitments. The eldest, Bacha (legendary Italian actress, Alida Valli), is an Amnesty International human rights activist and concentration camp survivor. Her younger fashion designer friend, Manuela, is her primary emotional support. When Manuela meets the beautiful Claude, the two begin a relationship that ignites Bacha`s intense jealousy. Manuela is torn between her love for Bacha and her desire for Claude.

Not Exactly a Movie,

By Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
  

  

“Le Jupon Rouge”

Not Exactly a Movie

Amos Lassen

“Le Jupon Rouge” stars three excellent actresses but it is something less than a movie. To me it seemed to be more of a radio play. Do not misunderstand me though–it is not a bad movie but it could have been so much better. I think the storyline which is very sketchy is the reason for this. The characters also could have been developed better.
The story rests on a Holocaust survivor played by Alida Valli. She is a political writer and an activist. Her secretary is Marie-Christine Barrault and she is an aide and a friend. Most of the action is spoken out and played off screen. The characters talk about what happened, what was happened and what just happened rather than showing it. This is a pity because we had a chance to see some real emotion and some fine drama. The film has excellent settings but we needed to see what we were hearing about. The Holocaust is a hard subject to deal with but it is a part of our collective history and it certainly was responsible for many changes.
Again, this is not a bad movie–it is disappointing because it could have been an excellent film.
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DVD Review: Women In Prison Triple Feature: The Hot Box/Escape From Hell/Women In Cell Block 7: Ajita Wilson, Carmen Argenziano, Anita Strindberg, Various: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 4 July, 10:34 AM
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DVD Review: Women In Prison Triple Feature: The Hot Box/Escape From Hell/Women In Cell Block 7: Ajita Wilson, Carmen Argenziano, Anita Strindberg, Various: Movies & TVDVD Review:  Women In Prison Triple Feature: The Hot Box/Escape From Hell/Women In Cell Block 7: Ajita Wilson, Carmen Argenziano, Anita Strindberg, Various: Movies & TV 2009742213660977801

Product Description
Half-dressed vixens in steaming jungles, sadistic jailors, and hot n heavy girl-on-girl action… What s more fun than women-in-prison movies: kind of like The Playboy Channel meets Silence of the Lambs. Check out this triple treat of nasty, naughty, Golden Age WIPs, stuffed to the gills with sadistic tortures and heaving, sweaty dream girls.

The Hot Box

Four hot American nurses are kidnapped by guerrillas and forced to join the cause.
As the junta strikes back, the ladies are caught in a deadly crossfire. A classic American WIP produced by Jonathan Demme (Caged Heat) and drive-in legend Roger Corman
and starring the seductive Laurie Rose. The revolution never looked so sexy!

Women in Cell Block 7

A Mafioso s daughter goes undercover in a women s prison to clear her father s name. Stripped of all human dignity, the inmates submit to terrible tortures and sell their souls for a few hours of lesbian lust. A legendary Italian WIP featuring the super-sexy Anita Strindberg (The Eroticist) and the lovely Jenny Tamburi (Frankenstein: Italian Style).

Escape from Hell

The explosive tale of nubile women forced to work as slave labor in the jungles of Brazil. Beaten and tortured by their heartless captors, they endure every humiliation imaginable. Only the snake-infested jungle offers a glimmer of hope for survival. A super hardedge WIP by the legendary Edward Müller and starring transsexual bombshell Ajita Wilson.

Three WIP Classics in one package!,

By Indie Movie Maniac (New Jersey) -

Length:: 1:27 Mins
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DVD Review: Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li (Three-Disc Special Edition) [Blu-ray]: Kristin Kreuk, Michael Clarke Duncan, Chris Klein, Neal McDonough, Robin Shou, Moon Bloodgood, Andrzej Bartkowiak: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 2 July, 11:07 PM
DVD  |

DVD Review: Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li (Three-Disc Special Edition) [Blu-ray]: Kristin Kreuk, Michael Clarke Duncan, Chris Klein, Neal McDonough, Robin Shou, Moon Bloodgood, Andrzej Bartkowiak: Movies & TVDVD Review:  Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun Li (Three Disc Special Edition) [Blu ray]: Kristin Kreuk, Michael Clarke Duncan, Chris Klein, Neal McDonough, Robin Shou, Moon Bloodgood, Andrzej Bartkowiak: Movies & TV 20097310232962577801

Amazon.com
The origin story of the characters from Capcom’s popular Street Fighter video game is detailed in The Legend of Chun-Li, a live-action martial arts thriller from Doom helmer Andrzej Bartkowiak. Smallville’s Kristin Kreuk gives a spirited turn in the title role, a concert pianist turned global crime fighter who cracks her share of heads while in pursuit of the mobsters who have kidnapped her father. Neal McDonough and Michael Clarke Duncan glower effectively as Bison, the nefarious mastermind behind the abduction, and his henchman, Balrog, respectively. The film’s offbeat cast, which includes Chris Klein and Moon Bloodgood as detectives, Black Eyed Peas singer Taboo as the claw-wielding Vega, and Hong Kong stars Pei-pei Cheng, Josie Ho and Edmund Chen in supporting roles, is the most inspired element of the film, which relies too often on well-worn action and kung fu movie clichés to fill out moments between fight sequences; the film’s target audience–fans of the game–may find this less engaging than younger, less discerning moviegoers with a yen for any flavor of punch-up. –Paul Gaita

Some good, a lot of bad. Chris Klein is terrible,

By Patrick (Wisconsin, USA) -
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
  

I wish people wouldn’t write this movie off completely because it is worth watching…at least once. What you heard about Chris Klein is true. He gives the worst performance of the decade. And I’m not kidding. One reviewer said he couldn’t even walk convincingly and they weren’t exaggerating. It wasn’t that the script was bad. The guy was hamming it up even when he wasn’t speaking at all. There wasn’t a second in this film where he showed any acting skills.

Take Chris Klein out of the film, and Moon Bloodgood for that matter, and the movie is actually pretty good. Kristin Kreuk does a great job as Chun Li. Her action scenes look good and her acting skills are pretty good as well. This could have been a great movie for her and launched her movie career if only everybody else around her wasn’t doing such a poor job.

There’s one scene (and character) that should have been taken out of the movie completely. It’s where Chun Li goes to a nightclub to hunt down one of Bison’s goons who just turns out to be a lesbian. In order for Chun Li to get the lesbian alone, she seduces her on the dance floor. The scene is painful to watch and adds nothing to the story.

There is some poor acting by pretty much all the other actors in this movie but Klein is BY FAR the worse. The action is, at times, very good. The storyline could have been better. The only thing to watch for is Kristin Kreuk. If there was an option on the DVD to take out Chris Klein’s scenes, the movie would be far more enjoyable.

Could anything less happen in this movie???,

By Aaron Kemp “Aaron” (Chula Vista, CA United States) -

  

This review is from: Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li [Theatrical Release] (Theatrical Release)

Alright, so let me offer a disclaimer. I didn’t go into “SF:TLOCL” with high hopes. The reviews had already come in as horribly bad (5% on RottenTomatoes and dropping). So, I wanted to be entertained, much like I was when I went to see “In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Seige Tale” or “Babylon A.D.”

My main complaint with this movie is that nothing really happened in it. I was extremely bored for an hour and a half. The director took one of the stories from the original “Street Fighter” movie (Chun-Li wants to get revenge for what M. Bison did to her family) tried to make a serious movie, only based on that one story. There just isn’t a lot there. So, to pass the time, we see Chun-Li mourning her mom’s death, a woman who had a total of two lines in the whole movie! Also, we have Chun-Li crying as she leaves her house to go to Bangkok, saying goodbye to each of her house servants, who are also people that we care nothing about. Then we see Chun-Li living in Bangkok, walking around, looking around, sleeping. I mean, what the hell? You might think I’m exaggerating, but trust me…nothing happens. The fights are short, poorly choreographed, and few and far between. The movies should have been called “Street Cryer” or “Street Walker” or “Chun-Li tries being Homeless.” The fighting takes a back seat to the artificial drama that the film is trying to create. There’s also a supernatural aspect to the film which is poorly developed and felt like it was tacked on. I will say this, though, that Kristin Kreuk does the best acting job by far in the movie, which is a much better performance than the movie deserved.

Some final comments should be made about Chris “American Pie” Klein’s performance as Charlie Nash. In a word, it’s legendary. I mean, his delivery goes beyond over-acting. He must have thought that he was in the previous Street Fighter movie with how campy his performance was. And as my friend noted, why do they have an American portraying an Interpol agent, and one that seems to take on a southern accent at times! I yearned for more scenes with Mr. Klein, if only to break up the boredom. If you like watching awesomely bad acting, then you owe it to yourself to see his portrayal.

Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li,

By Jackie E. Ward “liono86″ (MS.) -

  

I would have given this movie five stars, but both Chris Klein and Taboo took away two. Chris Klein because his acting was as most people on here are saying. It was horrendous to see him play one of my favorite characters from the Alpha 3 game. And Taboo because they did very little with Vega. He’s only shown twice and his fight scene with Chun-Li is under a minute and he gets owned big time. I mean, yeah you want to see Chun-Li come out victorious, but, you also want to see Vega making it hard for her to. I thought other than that, the acting was decent. Kristin made a good Chun-Li and Michael Clark Duncan was an excellent Balrog. He shined in all of his scenes. Now to Neal McDonough as Bison. He doesn’t look or dress like Bison, but, then again, this is a prequel, so, we get a little bit of a different version. He’s also Irish. Which, this would be a problem for me had they not explained his origins. Once they did, it made more sense. And the fights, though short, were well crafted, especially the one with Chun-Li fighting the goons in the alleyway and the fight between her and Bison. Also, Robin Shou as Gen was decent. He wasn’t as old as in the games, but, he was still pretty cool and helped to create a great scene involving teaching Chun-Li a special technique. The story with this has pretty much been told before in films but done better. Still, not bad enough to take a star off. All in all, this film was decent and I will be picking it up on Blu Ray. It’s like I tell people, don’t watch this expecting a Street Fighter movie, watch this expecting a Chun-Li movie.
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DVD Review: The Devil’s Tomb: Cuba Gooding Jr., Jason Connery: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 31 May, 08:00 PM
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DVD Review: The Devil’s Tomb: Cuba Gooding Jr., Jason Connery: Movies & TVDVD Review:  The Devils Tomb: Cuba Gooding Jr., Jason Connery: Movies & TV 2009531109587877801

Product Description
Academy Award® winner Cuba Gooding Jr. (Best Supporting Actor, Jerry Maguire, 1996) battles for mankind’s survival in this action-packed, apocalyptic horror thriller. When the scientist (Ron Perlman) leading a top-secret Middle Eastern archeological site goes missing, an elite military unit is sent on a search and rescue mission. Descending deep below civilization, Captain Mack (Gooding Jr.) and his team soon find themselves face-to-face with an ancient evil. An evil that may not be of this world. Co-starring Ron Perlman (Hellboy), Taryn Manning (Hustle & Flow), Ray Winstone (Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull) and punk rock legend Henry Rollins (Heat).

Oh this is bad…,

By Keil Steven Greg -

  

I thought there might be a chance this movie would be amusing, if not slightly reasonable given the cast.

I was wrong.

There might be some spoilers here, and for this movie I use the word lightly, but be warned.

The basic plot:

1) Crack team of commando type soldiers get assigned a special mission. Cuba us their leader.
2) An anthropologist, who works for the CIA, is the special 1-time leader. Their mission is to extract her father, who is another scientist type.
3) The go into a bunker, which used to be a tomb (1,000 feet deep). In the process, we learn that “sand can blast your skin off, so stay tight”. Because if you are close to one another, obviously sand *can’t* blast your skin off… for some reason.
4) The SAS type folks then find a person full of disease like boils. Of course, they treat the person and don’t think that this is odd. The person is a priest, still alive, who they don’t bother really containing.
5) Most of the SAS types go down a very fast moving elevator. 1 stays up. We learn that you can watch porn anywhere, as the 1 at the top level is keen to view porn. Later (by the way) he see’s a hot lady on the level (which they previously cleared). So, we learn that SAS folks expect to find hot, naked ladies on levels of underground bunkers - which were previously found to have no hot naked ladies - and this is normal. Of course she eats him.
6) Back to our fearless heroes below. We learn that if you are SAS, and you see your unborn baby girl suddenly be a little girl, you should follow her. It’s a great idea. Then we learn that if she turns into a demon, that’s reasonable. SAS deal with that daily. Then, if you hear her again, you should follow her again. Then, as you *are* SAS, it’s normal to suck on another woman’s boils while satisfying your lesbian curiosity.
7) We learn that any other hallucination is something good, and should be followed, listened to, or otherwise obeyed. 8) We learn that SAS don’t find any weird things…weird.
9) We learn that demon’s don’t know how to use elevators. But they can discourse on philosophy, open doors, use radios, and basically anything else. Except elevators.
10) By touching an amulet, you can easily get infused with passion and deep spiritual belief you’ve never had before, and suddenly become obsessed with a new calling in life.
11) Bla bla bla.

It goes on. If any of this sounds ridiculous to you, that’s because it is. Really.

Watch this movie if you get it free, don’t value your time, or really want to laugh at how bad a movie can be.

The Devil’s Tomb,

By Mr. B “Bov” (MA USA) -

…Wow…All these actors must be hard-up for cash because this movie by far is the biggest disgrace to everything hollywood. Acting was atrocious, storyline(plot)could have been good if it was handled by talent but it wasn’t, and all in all an amazing disappointment! Don’t let the list of actors in this movie trick you…it’s total garbage and all these actors (Cuba Gooding Jr, Ray Winstone, Ron Perlman and Henry Rollins) should be ashamed. Sean Connery’s son Jason Connery shows us that talent is not inherited and hopfully he never directs again.

Entertaining for a low budget flick,

By Derek (USA) -

I was expecting much less from this movie. The beginning of the movie had me wondering how bad the movie was going to turn out to be, but it actually got better through out. Once the action started and the plot started coming together I was entertained for the rest of the movie. I just watched Terminator Salvation in the theaters which cost $200 million to make, and I actually found The Devil’s Tomb more entertaining and I didn’t feel like I wasted my money after watching it (unlike with Terminator). Give it a shot, you might like it.
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DVD Review: Between Love & Goodbye: Simon Miller, Justin Tensen, Rob Harmon, Jane Elliott, Casper Andreas: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 12 May, 10:23 PM
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DVD Review: Between Love & Goodbye: Simon Miller, Justin Tensen, Rob Harmon, Jane Elliott, Casper Andreas: Movies & TVDVD Review:  Between Love & Goodbye: Simon Miller, Justin Tensen, Rob Harmon, Jane Elliott, Casper Andreas: Movies & TV 200951310541153177801

Review
Helmer-scripter Casper Andreas
seems to have hit his stride
with the operatic excesses of
melodrama. –Ronnie Scheib, Variety

Product Description
Kyle and Marcel are in love at first sight. Marcel, who is from France,
marries his lesbian friend Sarah so he can stay in the US with Kyle.
Enter Kyle s sister, April, a former prostitute who needs a place to crash.
Taking a quick disliking to Marcel, April methodically drips poison into
their happiness. But where Marcel sees a conniving woman with a notso-
hidden agenda, Kyle only sees his sister in need. The perfect couple
falls headlong into possessiveness, jealousy and rage; trapped in the
tangled emotions found in that space between love and goodbye.

See all Editorial Reviews

Beware 5-star reviews by the film’ Producer,

By C. M. Szatmary -

  

It is shameful that the Executive Producer, Mich Lyon, for “Beyond Love & Goodbye” offers his film a 5-star review without identifying his participation.

between good & excellent,

By Mich Lyon (Scottsdale, AZ USA) -

  

In many movies - young, hot, handsome and talented - are the basis of the perfect union. However, in Casper Andreas’ third film, Marcel (Justin Tensen) and Kyle (Simon Miller) find themselves on the complicated side of love. This high drama takes you on the roller coaster ride of a modern gay relationship from hello to goodbye.

The story focuses on the common barriers to a gay relationship, including discriminatory immigration laws, New York City’s low income housing crisis and insidious family members (Rob Harmon as April). Kyle is unable to focus attention on his budding music career, sister, as well as, Marcel. Marcel, although prepared to deal with immigration and housing issues, is inexperienced at handling the ups, downs, ins and outs of loving another.

This movie is full of energy and the cast, as an ensemble, is good. The soundtrack is excellent, the direction by Andreas (”A Four Letter Word”) is fine. The dialog reflects the youth of the characters, barriers between cultures and reflects a time before legal gay marriage. The unanticipated ending brought a tear to my eye.

Romance Gone Wrong,

By Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
  

  

“Between Love and Goodbye”

Romance Gone Wrong

Amos Lassen

Marcel (Justin Tensen) and Kyle (Simon Miller) are lovers who share a romance that comes to no good. The film opens with French citizen, Marcel marrying Sarah, a lesbian so that he can stay in the United States with his boyfriend. Marcel and Kyle move in together and begin their lives together, However, when Kyle’s troubled transgendered sister, April (Rob Harmon) comes to live with them for a while, things begin to break down and the results are awful for the two guys. Kyle is unable to pay attention to both Marcel and April. Marcel wants more time with his lover; he feels that April is getting in the way but he deals with the problem with aggression and in an insulting manner. His relationship with Kyle begins to slip away from him. At the same time April is having her own problems especially when her body does not accept her breast implants. She has them removed, shaves her head and decides to return to being a man again.
This is a movie that is full of energy and the cast, as an ensemble, is quite good. The direction by Casper Andreas (”A Four Letter Word”) is fine but the trouble is in the screenplay. The dialog is quite poor and so much of what is said seems forced. The plot just does not ring true and we do not know whether to feel sorry for the guys or to hate them.
I often enjoy the films of Andreas but this one left me devoid of feeling. The ending, as shocking as it is, just made me angry. I expected much more. Nevertheless, the soundtrack is quite good and the boys are easy on the eyes. Maybe my judgment of the movie is incorrect; you will have to see for yourself.
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Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis O’Hare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV

Posted by admin  |  on 30 March, 07:58 PM
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Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis O’Hare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 51SC9HMdNAL. SL500 AA240

Amazon.com
When a famous person, like the nation’s first openly gay male city supervisor, inspires an acclaimed book (The Mayor of Castro Street) and Oscar-winning documentary (The Times of Harvey Milk), a biopic can seem superfluous at best. Taking over from Oliver Stone and Bryan Singer, Gus Van Sant, whose previous picture was the more experimental Paranoid Park, directs with such grace, he renders the concern moot. Unlike Randy Shilts’ biography, which begins at the beginning, Dustin Lance Black’s script starts in 1972, just as Milk (Sean Penn, in a finely-wrought performance) and his boyfriend, Scott (James Franco, equally good), move from New York to San Francisco. Milk opens a camera shop on the Castro that becomes a safe haven for victims of discrimination, convincing him to enter politics. With each race he runs, Harvey’s relationship with Scott unravels further. Finally, he wins, and the real battle begins as Milk takes on Proposition 6, which denies equal rights to homosexuals. He does what he can to rally politicians, like George Moscone (Victor Garber) and Dan White (Josh Brolin). While the mayor is willing, the conservative board member has reservations, and after Milk fails to back one of White’s pet projects, the die is cast, leading to the murder of two beloved figures. If Van Sant’s film captures Harvey in all his complexities (he was, for instance, a very funny man), Milk also serves as an enticement to grass-roots activism, showing how one regular guy elevated everyone around him, notably Cleve Jones (Emile Hirsch), the ex-street hustler who created the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial. Released in the wake of Proposition 8, California’s anti-gay marriage amendment, Milk is inspirational in the best way: one person can and did make a difference, but the struggle is far from over. –Kathleen C. Fennessy

Get to Know the Cast From Milk
 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037868777801
Sean Penn (Harvey Milk)

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037873477802
Josh Brolin (Dan White)

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037878177803
James Franco (Scott Smith)

Beyond Milk on DVD  Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037881277804

Get in on Blu-ray
 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037885977805

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 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037889077806

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Stills from Milk (Click for larger image)

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037893777807

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037898477808
 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 200933103793177809

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 2009331037978778010

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 20093310379125778011
 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 20093310379156778012

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 20093310379218778013

 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 20093310379265778014
 Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis OHare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV 20093310379312778015

Product Description
Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 03/10/2009 Run time: 129 minutes Rating: R

Excellent,

By Timothy P. Scanlon (Hyattsville, MDUSA) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
  

  

This review is from: Milk [Theatrical Release] (Theatrical Release)

Allow me to agree with at least one other reviewer that everyone should see this, especially those who think being gay is so far out of the mainstream that, as my father in law once said, “The Lord allowed AIDS to happen.”

Harvey Milk. A man of whom I know little. I lived on the other side of the world when he died, in a city in which it was not unusual to run into eunuchs. I’d heard of him since, in reference to gayness, but never associated any importance to him. Then I saw that Sean Penn was playing Milk, so I told my spouse that we need to see it.

Milk, it seemed, lived a pretty conventional lifestyle, working for an insurance company in New York. According to the script, anyway, in 1970 he met a flame and they headed to the west coast. Despite local resistance, they set up shop in the Castro district of San Francisco (after “The Haight” had become riddled with crime, homelessness and the like). Milk then decided it was time to get politically active.

In this portion of the film, I thought for a while that I was going to suffer from motion sickness. The camera seemed to move quite rapidly, and cut from the scene they were shooting to a historical scene, and back. But I adjusted. And Milk lost the first election, then the second, then the third. That, believe it or not, didn’t take too much time for the film to get across, except that Milk’s lover, Scott (played by James Franco) left after he said he couldn’t take another one. That’s when the action started (!)

I’m not gay, and have never been terribly sympathetic to many of the gay causes. At least I never payed much attention to ‘em. Yeah, I heard outrageous statements like I quoted above, but I just disregarded them. After this film, my spouse felt guilty that she didn’t know much about the Milk case. I pointed out that she wasn’t exposed to it much. Even to this day many of the gay “causes” aren’t seen as so mainstream. They’re seen as somewhat fringe. Some alleged “gay eccentricities” may have added to that exclusion, and I believe the film included that element. Indeed, that’s why Harvey Milk decided to go to Orange County, CA, without his gay supporters, and debate State Senator Briggs, played by Dennis O’Hare, the proponent of Proposition 6, a gay rights provision to which gays were opposed, on his own terms. And it paid off! The proposition was defeated!

Throughout the film, Milk was reciting a testament into his tape recorder, to be played only if he were assasinated. I wish I knew whether Milk really did that or whether it was added to the film for “effect.” Either way, it was the adhesive that kept the film together.

The historical clips also added to the film’s credibility, especially those of Anita Bryant. After Bryant’s success in some anti-gay initiatives around the country, Milk decided to bring her causes to the attention of the people of California, and that’s where the Proposition 6 movement began.

There’s so much I could say about the film. I don’t want to cover anything of the murder case, as I’ll give too much away. The acting was definitely Oscar material, especially for Sean Penn. The script and music were award-winning. But the reason I endorse it–especially for those most opposed to gay rights–is that it shows that those rights are no less constitutional or mainstream than the rights of blacks, women, or any other groups which have had to labor hard for the last 230 years!

Whether the film was timed to come out–no pun intended–after California’s Proposition 8, I don’t know. But it’s well timed in terms of trying to educate people as to why those right should be guaranteed.

Today we have people like Keith Olbermann to editorialize on those who opposed Proposition 8. We can thank God for Harvey Milk, the “first openly gay” person in politics in the US, for having opened to doors for those contemporay editorials.

It’s also, by the way, a testament to the cause of political activism in general; most activists find themselves in a rut deeper than that of Milk and his associates. This film may remind them to persist!

See this gem, and make sure those challenged by gay rights see it. Discuss it with them. Someday then we will be able to proclaim that “all men are created equal.”

A story that will teach tolerance ,

By Brian Danker “bpd582″ (San Francisco) -

  

The movie portrays a brave man.The movie “Milk” showed that any man who stands by his principles, will always leave a lesson to be learned.

The advances that the Gay communities of California have made in the past 30 years started with the Harvey Milk story.I have been a San Francisco Police officer for 24 years.I am proud to have known a few very brave S.F.P.D. officers who happen to have been gay.

In this state,the advances made for gay people for their civil rights and equal rights,begin with the Milk story.

I was in the movie and I played a real police officer at a homicide scene.The murder of Robert Hillsbough. The hates crimes committed against gays in this city back in the 1970’s were over the top.
I was honored to have, done my simple scene with Sean Penn.

I was honored to have been a member of that cast.Check out the cast on the web www.imdb.com

I know the damages that Dan White caused our city,and my Department.
It was a very sad day.

I can say this much about that tragic man.Besides being a former cop, and fireman a little talked about fact about Dan White. He was also a Viet Nam veteran.He served in the same unit that I was in in Viet Nam, the 173rd airborne. He served one year in the central highlands. We came home suffering along with 1000′S of other combat vets, suffering from P.T.S.D. He committed suicide after his release from prison. He was buried with full honors in the Veteran cemetery in San Bruno Calif.

It was not called that at the time of his trail. The fact that a man who was an Irish Catholic, a former Police officer, and a Viet Nam vet who could not, and did not seek help.The movie kind of showed that Milk made every effort to befriend Dan White.How Dan White did not understand that he was responsible to do the right thing. The murder of those two innocent men makes me sad, to know that In my life I walked the same paths.

I think a lot of school teacher’s will be able to add this movie to list of movies that teach tolerance.As a straight guy, I was honored to be in the movie.I wanted people to understand tolerance.

The Gay Struggle Personified ,

By James Morris (Jackson Heights, NY United States) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
  

  

Gus Van Sant has always been an excellent if somewhat eclectic director. Although I have enjoyed his previous efforts, I was somewhat apprehensive when I heard he was undertaking a film biography of Harvey Milk. A gay figure of this importance, I thought, should be handled by someone a little more mainstream. Like many gay people, I am weary of gay-themed films that reach no one beyond a gay audience, and the message I would want to emerge from a film about Harvey Milk should be heard by everyone.

As if reading my mind, Mr. Van Sant has fashioned a film that is accessible to all, while approaching his subject with sharp focus and a singleness of purpose that is at once definitive and topical. A stunning achievement, MILK manages to make its point without ever being preachy or trite, while remaining as true to the facts as any film bio could ever hope to be.

The film opens with snippets of gay history that many young gay people, let alone a straight audience, may be shocked to discover. During the opening credits, a barrage of vintage film clips remind us that a scant 50 years ago, gay men, lesbians and transsexuals were subjected to violence, harassment, physical abuse, arrest and humiliation by the very people that most citizens look to for protection; i.e. the police and judicial authorities. The newsreel images of gay bar raids that open MILK project a surreal yet somehow eerily familiar atmosphere that seems to alternate between the bizarre and the barbaric. Many people today are not aware that, in the 1940’s and 1950’s, right here in the USA, gay people were arrested for simply patronizing a gay bar (newspaper headline: “Den of Perverts Busted”). Many of those arrested had their names and employers published in the morning paper (!), and often found themselves unemployed and unemployable, branded with the label of “deviate”. It is this chilling fact of social injustice that clears the way for the film’s swing into a very important piece of gay history.

Skillfully telling us the story of Milk’s rise as a leader in the Castro Gay Community of San Francisco, Harvey Milk is seen throughout the film as a living, breathing flesh and blood person. Van Sant adroitly propels Sean Penn through a warts-and-all portrayal of a frail human being with an idealistic bent and a politician’s savvy. As with any good film, it is difficult, if not impossible, to discern which is more impressive - the balance of a perfect cast and lovingly detailed direction weave their way through a seamless portrait of an important historical figure, yet we are somberly reminded that many people remember Harvey Milk solely for the “Twinkie” defense of his star-crossed killer. The end result is that gay audiences emerge from seeing this film with a sense of pride and purpose, while straight audiences leave with a better knowledge of who we (gay people) are, what we want, and what we are struggling for. By word of mouth I expected a thrilling cinematic experience; what I got was a surprisingly near-perfect motion picture and some of the best acting I’ve ever seen. I heartily recommend MILK to any straight person who wants to get a grasp on what the last 30 years of gay history were really all about, and any gay person who wants to feel good about themselves. MILK is a triumph. See it.
Search Milk: Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Alison Pill, Diego Luna, Josh Brolin, Victor Garber, Denis O’Hare, Joseph Cross, Gus Van Sant: Movies & TV from AmAzon

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