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Bruce Willis and Malcolm McDowell YEAR: 1991 Score: **1/2 |
SUNSET: James Garner is the real life Marshall
Wyatt Earp and Bruce Willis is cowboy actor Tom Mix portraying
Earp in a movie, and they team-up to solve a murder in old
Hollywoodland...
Reminiscent of those episodes of "Rockford Files" with Garner and the classier, prettier and younger Tom
Selleck, but since there's really no clashing between the REAL cowboy
and the FAKE one there's not much chemistry either. It's like watching
two friends agreeing upon everything — what's the fun in that? But there
are some decent performances and you'll have light fun watching. Meanwhile, as usual, Bruce
Willis is passable doing his ever-charming-reaction acting style and
James Garner keeps the ball rolling at a comfortable pace. Although in
the end you'll forgot you've seen anything: except maybe cult icon
Malcolm McDowell's final moments as a bizarre, classy and then monstrous
villain as the affable comedy morphs wickedly into a chilling/thrilling Hammer Film.
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Year: 1980 Score: ***1/2 |
S.O.B.: Before THE PLAYER, a film that poked fun at Hollywood films, writers,
producers, directors, and how they're made from behind-the-scenes,
there was S.O.B., a wacky mesh of everything thrown into the pot, and beyond...
There are good moments, like anything involving Richard Mulligan
(as buried lead William Holden futilely attempts to protect him from bad choices) as a hit-making director who made a big budget
disaster, losing his mind and becoming a suicidal maniac.
Writer/director Blake Edwards is making a statement here and it's still
not very clear what it is: but he might've felt similar many times throughout a hit/miss career...
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Year: 1986 Score: **1/2 |
He has his own wife, Julie Andrews (paling to hot young hippie Rosanna Arquette), the queen of G
rated musicals, playing an actress who is the queen of G-rated
musicals... and she takes off her top in the movie-within-a-movie (being
recut by Mulligan's character to redeem itself). Herein lies the parody
of a parody, but things get too physical and eventually, though
sporadically entertaining, it gets downright tiresome.
A FINE MESS: For
a bad movie this wasn't THAT awful. A lot of running around and hijinks
and pratfalls and all things Blake Edwards. Ted Danson and Howie Mandel
make an odd team — sometimes it's not apparent which one is the
straight man in the pair. Which is strange: It would seem Mandel would play the goofy
sidekick but he's about as smooth with the ladies as Danson, only Danson
gets more of them. Ted's basically playing his CHEERS Sam Malone on speed. The
plot involves... well no matter — it's just a screwball
comedy send-up of the Laurel and Hardy films and overall is a fairly
decent time waster.
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Elegantly Misleading Classy Title Sequence YEAR: 1962 Score: **1/2 |
DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES: Jack
Lemmon and Lee Remick play a good looking young couple who meet, get
married, and then become hopeless drunks; especially Remick who doesn't
want to change no matter what. Not bad directing by Blake Edwards and
the acting is decent, although it tends to get extremely hammy...
And it's
funny seeing Jack Lemmon on screen with Jack Klugman, the original
"Felix Unger" with the TV "Oscar Madison", but they're not such THE ODD COUPLE as one is a drunk and the other a recovering drunk/AA sponsor,
which is what this movie turns out to be — a searing two hour ad for
Alcoholics Anonymous.
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Bruce Willis and Kim Basinger Year: 1987 Score: * |
BLIND DATE: If
you make a comedy where the funniest part is a Rick Dees radio bit
played in the background, you're in big, big trouble. This is a tedious
rollercoaster ride centering on a blind date between a yuppie (Bruce
Willis) and a beautiful woman (Kim Basinger) who gets really weird when
she's drunk...
Everything goes awry for him while she remains untouched
since she has no real purpose but to eventually drive this poor
bastard's life down the drain. She has an ex-boyfriend stalking them, adding frenzy to the frenzied chase. This is not only an
out-and-out ripoff of Martin Scorsese's AFTER HOURS but feels like a
dull unending nightmare — one of those where every character exists to
annoy either other, and their audience.
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Year: 1982 Score: **1/2 |
VICTOR/VICTORIA: Kind of a drag, pun
intended... but the first hour is pretty okay. Robert Preston is irritating since his every single line seems like something from a stage play (albeit his style),
but Julie Andrews is intriguing as an out-of-work American singer in
Paris who, with Preston (her gay friend), ends up posing as a man
dressed up as a woman — thus becoming a huge nightclub attraction.
James
Garner, whose bodyguard Alex Karras has a secret, is a bigwig who falls in love with Andrews: first thinking she's a
she then finding out she's a him and his manliness is questioned. Once
the "relationship" begins with Garner and Andrews, the film goes
downhill — well past the entertaining first half with Andrews and
Preston struggling together as everything gets too muddled. Blake
Edwards has so many wheels turning in different directions the vehicle
gets stuck in the mud. But the mud isn't intentionally/altogether uncomfortable to wallow in as Julie steals
both shows.
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YEAR: 1989 Score: **1/2 |
SKIN DEEP: A scene involving two men running around a dark room wearing
glow-in-the-dark condoms fighting over a girl is quite hilarious and
brings back THE PINK PANTHER style of slapstick that made Blake Edwards
famous...
But the rest of the movie, dealing with a bearded piano-playing
playwright who's addicted to sex played by John Ritter, is hit-or-miss and often
gets weighed down by its own navel-gazing while conquest conversations with a bartender seems to feed Edwards' alter-ego more than move the character's story.
Ritter is able to
display his subtle pratfalls and dry witty charm, and is thoroughly
convincing since he's had so much practice playing sex-starved men. And, although this character is much luckier than his game-changing Jack Tripper from THREE'S COMPANY, the lack of underdog charm makes this Ritter role not very relatable or altogether engaging. Leaving no reason to review Blake Edwards' earlier THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN starring Burt Reynolds because... they're basically the same film.
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John Vivyan & Ross Martin in MR LUCKY Year: 1960 Score: *** |
MR LUCKY: Most
episodes of the one-season-wonder television series directed by
creature-feature turned BRADY BUNCH director Jack Arnold, the coolest,
most surprising
aspect of Blake Edward's MR LUCKY is it takes two early-binge-style episodes for
the
story of an honest gambler running a casino on a boat, three miles away
from the law's reach, to establish itself (with the boat!) — and without
being a two-part
pilot with a set-up agenda...
Like Edwards' PETER GUNN star Craig Stevens,
MR. LUCKY lead
John Vivyan is a
perfectly good-enough actor for the twists and turns to occur around his
well-suited charm as he's faithfully flanked
by sidekick, Andamo,
played by Ross Martin, who'd become famous as another number two on WILD WILD WEST. With a fickle Spanish accent that hardly matters
anyway, he keeps their combined energy fresh and engaging: along with
the
usual Blake Edwards wallpaper of gorgeous women, often as
unpredictable and spontaneous as the mazy plot-lines in which they're
caught: the good episodes are serious and breezy while the mediocre entries
play semi-comedic upfront. Either way, at 24 minutes per,
LUCKY is pretty decent bet.
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