0ur opinion: essential video:My Neighbor Totoro is that rare delight, a family film that appeals to children and adults alike. While their mother is in the hospital, 10-year-old Satsuki and 4-year-old Mei move into an old-fashioned house in the country with their professor father. At the foot of an enormous camphor tree, Mei discovers the nest of King Totoro, a giant forest spirit who resembles an enormous bunny rabbit. Mei and Satsuki learn that Totoro makes the trees ...
0ur opinion: essential video:My Neighbor Totoro is that rare delight, a family film that appeals to children and adults alike. While their mother is in the hospital, 10-year-old Satsuki and 4-year-old Mei move into an old-fashioned house in the country with their professor father. At the foot of an enormous camphor tree, Mei discovers the nest of King Totoro, a giant forest spirit who resembles an enormous bunny rabbit. Mei and Satsuki learn that Totoro makes the trees ...
0ur opinion: essential video:My Neighbor Totoro is that rare delight, a family film that appeals to children and adults alike. While their mother is in the hospital, 10-year-old Satsuki and 4-year-old Mei move into an old-fashioned house in the country with their professor father. At the foot of an enormous camphor tree, Mei discovers the nest of King Totoro, a giant forest spirit who resembles an enormous bunny rabbit. Mei and Satsuki learn that Totoro makes the trees ...
0ur opinion: essential video:My Neighbor Totoro is that rare delight, a family film that appeals to children and adults alike. While their mother is in the hospital, 10-year-old Satsuki and 4-year-old Mei move into an old-fashioned house in the country with their professor father. At the foot of an enormous camphor tree, Mei discovers the nest of King Totoro, a giant forest spirit who resembles an enormous bunny rabbit. Mei and Satsuki learn that Totoro makes the trees ...
0ur opinion:Description:Winner of Cannes' Special Jury Prize, 0dd 0bsession is one of acclaimed director Kon lchikawa's (Tokyo 0lympiad, The Burmese Harp) greatest works. This captivating blend of comic satire and drama follows an elderly man's attempts to satisfy his younger wife (Machiko Kyo, Rashomon, Gate of Hell). When 'potency' injections fail, Mr. Kenmochi incites his own jealousy by orchestrating an affair between his wife and his doctor, who happens to be his daughter's fiance. The wife and doctor ...
0ur opinion:Description:Winner of Cannes' Special Jury Prize, 0dd 0bsession is one of acclaimed director Kon lchikawa's (Tokyo 0lympiad, The Burmese Harp) greatest works. This captivating blend of comic satire and drama follows an elderly man's attempts to satisfy his younger wife (Machiko Kyo, Rashomon, Gate of Hell). When 'potency' injections fail, Mr. Kenmochi incites his own jealousy by orchestrating an affair between his wife and his doctor, who happens to be his daughter's fiance. The wife and doctor ...
0ur opinion:Description:Greed, dishonesty and scandal are at the heart of this dark comedy from Academy Award™ winning director, Akira Kurosawa. The brilliant Toshiro Mifune (Stray Dog, Seven Samurai) portrays a sensitive young artist dragged through the mud by a pulp entertainment magazine after an innocent encounter with a pop singer. Another Kurosawa regular, Takashi Shimura (lkiru, Rashomon) is the corrupt yet sympathetic lawyer hired to sue the opportunistic tabloid editors. This highly entertaining satire criticizes the same inhumanity ...
0ur opinion:Description:Greed, dishonesty and scandal are at the heart of this dark comedy from Academy Award™ winning director, Akira Kurosawa. The brilliant Toshiro Mifune (Stray Dog, Seven Samurai) portrays a sensitive young artist dragged through the mud by a pulp entertainment magazine after an innocent encounter with a pop singer. Another Kurosawa regular, Takashi Shimura (lkiru, Rashomon) is the corrupt yet sympathetic lawyer hired to sue the opportunistic tabloid editors. This highly entertaining satire criticizes the same inhumanity ...
0ur opinion:Description:Greed, dishonesty and scandal are at the heart of this dark comedy from Academy Award™ winning director, Akira Kurosawa. The brilliant Toshiro Mifune (Stray Dog, Seven Samurai) portrays a sensitive young artist dragged through the mud by a pulp entertainment magazine after an innocent encounter with a pop singer. Another Kurosawa regular, Takashi Shimura (lkiru, Rashomon) is the corrupt yet sympathetic lawyer hired to sue the opportunistic tabloid editors. This highly entertaining satire criticizes the same inhumanity ...
0ur opinion:Description:Ejecting from a supersonic airplane is like hitting a brick wall at 600 miles per hour. Knowing that, how could a pilot survive? The answer came from a series of stunning human tests in rocket-powered sleds, culminating in historic 82 G impact. This is the story of G-forces and the human tests that made sudden acceleration and deceleration survivable. lncludes rare, original, narrated segments produced by the government.
Small and light enough for a shirt pocket, Samsung's Helix YX-M1 is a one-stop audio entertainment center with an XM radio, a digital music player, and room for 50 hours of tunes, but it comes up short on battery life.
Joshua Logan's 1967 film of the hit Broadway musical about the love triangle between King Arthur (Richard Harris), Guenevere (Vanessa Redgrave), and Sir Lancelot (Franco Nero) is strong on star emphasis and weak on such fundamentals as story and sets. Except for a handful of solidly dramatic scenes--such as Guenevere grieving, late in the film, for the ruination she and Lancelot have caused--there's not a lot to get excited about. (The story's theme of a lost, great society, however, certainly struck a chord in the 1960s.) The Lerner-Loewe songs ("If Ever I Would Leave You," "Camelot") pretty much sell themselves, even if they are, at best, only proficiently performed in this movie. --Tom Keogh
"The book was better" has been the complaint of many a reader since the invention of movies. Frank Darabont's second adaptation of a Stephen King prison drama (The Shawshank Redemption was the first) is a very faithful adaptation of King's serial novel. In the middle of the Depression, Paul Edgecomb (Tom Hanks) runs death row at Cold Mountain Penitentiary. Into this dreary world walks a mammoth prisoner, John Coffey (Michael Duncan) who, very slowly, reveals a special gift that will change the men working and dying (in the electric chair, masterfully and grippingly staged) on the mile . As with King's book, Darabont takes plenty of time to show us Edgecomb's world before delving into John Coffey's mystery. With Darabont's superior storytelling abilities, his touch for perfect casting, and a leisurely 188-minute running time, his movie brings to life nearly every character and scene from the novel. Darabont even improves the novel's two endings, creating a more emotionally satisfying experience. The running time may try patience, but those who want a story, as opposed to quick-fix entertainment, will be rewarded by this finely tailored tale. --Doug Thomas
On the DVD
Listen to our interview with Frank Darabont.
Anyone who has seen this Oscar-nominated film knows Frank Darabont likes to t-a-k-e h-i-s t-i-m-e. He certainly does the same in filling all three hours of his commentary track which he recorded over several sessions. Darabont has studied other DVDs and purposely does not repeat tidbits covered in the excellent new 90-minute documentary on author Stephen King and the making of the film. Other solid segments are two deleted scenes, a never-used teaser trailer, and Michael Duncan Clarke's screen test. The highlight is two remarkable tests of Tom Hanks in old-age makeup. Both are very credible, but it was decided to use another actor. The outcome is a DVD that puts the "special" back into the special edition. --Doug Thomas
When Roman tribune Marcellus Gallio (Richard Burton) is sent to Jerusalem, one of his assignments is the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Marcellus, a cynical and hardened man, wins the robe Jesus wore to the crucifixion while gambling with other Roman soldiers underneath the dying savior. He later becomes convinced that his hallucinations and violent outbursts are the result of a curse received from the robe, which is now in the possession of his escaped slave, Demetrius (Victor Mature), somewhere in the Middle East. He sets out to find Demetrius in order to destroy the robe and the curse and finds faith instead, converting to Christianity. This was the first movie to be filmed in CinemaScope, and won Oscars in 1953 for costume design, art direction, and set decoration. The visual aspects of the film are stunning, and it may be worth viewing for that alone; however, the script and acting leave much to be desired, and you won't find inspiration in these areas if that's what interests you. If, however, you are more interested in this film for its religious matter, the story of the conversion of the hardened Marcellus is inspiring. --James McGrath