Actors & Directors
- Barry Pepper
- Seth Green
- David Levien
- Vin Diesel
- Brian Koppelman
- Andrew Davoli
Release date: 2003-05-26 Run time: 94 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £2.25
Review Knockaround Guys [2001] / Entertainment in Video:
Release date: 1994-11-28 Run time: 101 min. Price: £10.99
Review 99-1 - Doing The Business / The Hard Sell [1994] / Ntv Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Michael Caine
- Oskar Homolka
- Eva Renzi
- Paul Hubschmid
- Guy Doleman
- Guy Hamilton
Release date: 2001-03-19 Run time: 97 min. Creator: Len Deighton RRP: £5.99 Price: £2.95
Review Funeral In Berlin [1967] / Paramount Home Entertainment:Funeral in Berlin (1967) is the sequel to 1965's The Ipcress File, again featuring Michael Caine as reluctant spy Harry Palmer. It was clearly the filmmakers' intention to make Palmer a harder-nosed James Bond, and director Guy Hamilton was brought to this project in between Goldfinger and Diamonds Are Forever for that purpose. There's espionage intrigue, easy women (Eva Renzi as Samantha Steel), and gunplay. But without the gadgetry, one-liners, or even the John Barry score of the first movie, the Bond comparison runs dry. Against the backdrop of a bombed-out industrial wasteland that was Berlin in the mid-Sixties, Palmer is sent to facilitate the defection of Col. Stock (Oscar Homolka). Numerous sub-plots weave together involving indifferent chief Ross (Guy Doleman from IPCRESS), mission aide Johnnie Volkon (Paul Hubschmid), and the untrustworthy Kreutzman (Günter Meisner, who was more memorable as Slugworth in Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory). It all comes down to revealing who's working for whom and who's really defecting in the set-piece funeral of the title. The main reason the series continued (Ken Russell's OTT Billion Dollar Brain came next) was the commanding presence of Caine. It's fun to hear him try German, and he manages a few subtle comic gems, such as when a waiter asks "Bitte mein heir?" and he replies, "No. [+]
Lager please", but the best moment of characterisation recalling the womanising Palmer of Len Deighton's novels is the put down guaranteed to win any woman: "You're useless in the kitchen. Why don't you go back to bed?" -Paul Tonks.
Actors & Directors
- Spencer Tracy
- Frank Sinatra
- Kerwin Matthews
- Jean-Pierre Aumont
- Mervyn Le Roy
Run time: 121 min. Creator: Fred Kohlmar RRP: £9.99 Price: £16.99
Review The Devil At 4 O'Clock [1961] / Columbia Pictures:Three convicts enroute to Tahiti are put to work at a children's leper hospital when their plane makes an unexpected stop on another island. There, Father Perreau is to get off and replace Father Doonan, who's been relieved of his duties by the cardinal. Once on the island, things get out of control when the volcano decides to erupt, and the Governor orders an evacuation. The convicts, priests and leper children are all on top of the island and have no sure way to get down and off to safety. All must work together if any are to survive.
Actors & Directors
- Will Patton
- Lynn Whitfield
- Tony Goldwyn
- George Segal
- Tom Mankiewicz
- Peter Boyle
Release date: 1995-06-12 Run time: 86 min. Creator: Dan Gordon Price: £10.99
Review Taking The Heat [1992] / Universal Pictures UK:
Actors & Directors
- Yoshino Takamori
- Yasunori Matsumoto
- Kazuhiro Nakata
- Kenichi Ogata
- Buichi Terasawa
- Toshiko Fujita
Release date: 1996-01-15 Run time: 45 min. Price: £5.99
Review Kabuto [1992] / Manga Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Jack Hawkins
- David Lean
- Peter O'Toole
- Anthony Quinn
- Omar Sharif
- Alec Guinness
Release date: 2003-04-07 Run time: 217 min. Creator: T.E. Lawrence RRP: £14.99 Price: £19.99
Review Lawrence Of Arabia [1962] / Uca Catalogue:In 1962 Lawrence of Arabia scooped another seven Oscars for David Lean and crew after his previous epic, The Bridge on the River Kwai, had performed exactly the same feat a few years earlier. Supported in this Great War desert adventure by a superb cast including Alex Guinness, Jack Hawkins and Omar Sharif, Peter O'Toole gives a complex, star-making performance as the enigmatic TE Lawrence. The magnificent action and vast desert panoramas were captured in luminous 70mm by Cinematographer Freddie Young, here beginning a partnership with Lean that continued through Dr Zhivago (1965) and Ryan's Daughter (1970). Yet what made the film truly outstanding was Robert (A Man For All Seasons) Bolt's literate screenplay, marking the beginning of yet another ongoing collaboration with Lean. The final partnership established was between director and French composer Maurice Jarre, who won one of the Oscars and scored all Lean's remaining films, up to and including A Passage to India in 1984. Fully restored in 1989, this complete version of Lean's masterpiece remains one of cinema's all-time classic visions. -Gary S Dalkin On the DVD: This vast movie is spread leisurely across two discs, with Maurice Jarre's overture standing in as intermission music for the first track of disc two. But the clarity of the anamorphic widescreen picture and Dolby 5. 1 soundtrack justify the decision not to cram the whole thing onto one side of a disc. The movie has never looked nor sounded better than here: the desert landscapes are incredibly detailed, with the tiny nomadic figures in the far distance clearly visible on the small screen; the remastered soundtrack, too, is a joy. [+]
Thanks are due to Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg who supervised (and financed) the restoration of the picture in 1989; on disc two Spielberg chats about why David Lean is his favourite director, and why Lawrence had such a profound influence on him both as a child and as a filmmaker (he regularly re-watches the movie before starting any new project). Other features include an excellent and exhaustive "making-of" documentary with contributions from surviving cast and crew (an avuncular Omar Sharif is particularly entertaining as he reminisces about meeting the hawk-like Lean for the first time), some contemporary featurettes designed to promote the movie and a DVD-ROM facility. The extra features are good-especially the documentary-but the breathtaking quality of both anamorphic picture and digital sound are what make this DVD package a triumph. -Mark Walker.
Release date: 1996-06-17 Run time: 30 min. Price: £6.99
Review Armitage III V4-Bit of Love / Pioneer Entertainment Europe Ltd:
Actors & Directors
- Brandon Lee
- Toshirô Obata
- Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
- Mark L. Lester
- Dolph Lundgren
- Tia Carrere
Release date: 1993-05-03 Run time: 75 min. Creator: Stephen Glantz RRP: £5.99 Price: £2.30
Review Showdown In Little Tokyo [1991] / Warner Home Video:Showdown in Little Tokyo is a 1991 martial arts action comedy which, in pitting Dolph Lundgren and Brandon Lee as LA cops against Japanese drug dealers, plays like a B-movie Tango and Cash or Lethal Weapon 2 (both released just two years before). Between career highs in Rocky IV (1985) and Universal Soldier (1992) it looked as if Lundgren might make it big at the box-office, and clearly wanting to be the new Schwarzenegger he is here directed by Mark L Lester, who had earlier helmed Arnie's Commando (1985). In the event both actor and director headed for straight-to-video territory. The 75-minute running time suggests the studio lost confidence and seriously cut the movie though, as the space between the action is filled with nothing but cringe-inducing dialogue, thriller clichés and Lundgren "romancing" Tia Carrere, it still makes sense. Basing its title on John Carpenter's 1986 fantasy-comedy Big Trouble in Little China and anticipating Rush Hour (1998), Showdown in Little Tokyo alternates between crude tongue-in-cheek moments and action so ludicrous it's unintentionally hilarious. A camp disaster which simply defies belief, this is stupidly entertaining so-bad-its-good six-pack entertainment. On the DVD: There are no extras other than the trailer. The anamorphically enhanced 1. 77:1 image offers a good transfer of a grainy print. The stereo sound is clear but for a modern action film seriously lacks impact: gunshots sound like a paper bag popping. [+]
-Gary S Dalkin.
Actors & Directors
- Bruce Willis
- Quentin Tarantino
- Ving Rhames
- Christopher Walken
- John Travolta
- Samuel L. Jackson
Release date: 1995-09-04 Run time: 148 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £0.01
Review Pulp Fiction [1994] / Touchstone Home Video:With the knockout one-two punch of 1992's Reservoir Dogs and 1994's Pulp Fiction writer-director Quentin Tarantino stunned the filmmaking world, exploding into prominence as a cinematic heavyweight contender. But Pulp Fiction was more than just the follow-up to an impressive first feature, or the winner of the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival, or a script stuffed with the sort of juicy bubblegum dialogue actors just love to chew, or the vehicle that re-established John Travolta on the A-list, or the relatively low-budget ($8 million) independent showcase for an ultrahip mixture of established marquee names and rising stars from the indie scene (among them Samuel L Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames, Harvey Keitel, Christopher Walken, Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer, Julia Sweeney, Kathy Griffin and Phil Lamar). It was more, even, than an unprecedented $100-million-plus hit for indie distributor Miramax. Pulp Fiction was a sensation. No, it was not the Second Coming (I actually think Reservoir Dogs is a more substantial film; and PT Anderson outdid Tarantino in 1997 by making his directorial debut with two even more mature and accomplished pictures, Hard Eight and Boogie Nights). But Pulp Fiction packs so much energy and invention into telling its nonchronologically interwoven short stories (all about temptation, corruption, and redemption amongst modern criminals, large and small) it leaves viewers both exhilarated and exhausted-hearts racing and knuckles white from the ride. (Oh, and the infectious, surf-guitar-based soundtrack is tastier than a Royale with Cheese. ) -Jim Emerson With Pulp Fiction writer-director Quentin Tarantino stunned the filmmaking world, exploding into prominence as a cinematic heavyweight contender after initial success with 1992's Reservoir Dogs. But Pulp Fiction was more than just the follow-up to an impressive first feature, or the winner of the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival, or a script stuffed with the sort of juicy bubblegum dialogue actors just love to chew, or the vehicle that re-established John Travolta on the A-list, or the relatively low-budget ($8 million) independent showcase for an ultra-hip mixture of established marquee names and rising stars from the indie scene (among them Samuel L Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames, Harvey Keitel, Christopher Walken, Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer, Julia Sweeney, Kathy Griffin and Phil Lamar). It was more, even, than an unprecedented $100-million-plus hit for indie distributor Miramax. [+]
Pulp Fiction was a sensation. It packs so much energy and invention into telling its non-chronologically interwoven short stories (all about temptation, corruption and redemption among modern criminals, large and small) it leaves viewers both exhilarated and exhausted-hearts racing and knuckles white from the ride. (Oh, and the infectious, surf-guitar-based soundtrack is tastier than a Royale with Cheese. ) -Jim Emerson.
Actors & Directors
- Ian Abercrombie
- Embeth Davidtz
- Bruce Campbell
- Richard Grove
- Marcus Gilbert
- Sam Raimi
Release date: 2002-11-11 Run time: 96 min. Creator: Ivan Raimi RRP: £10.99 Price: £9.99
Review Army Of Darkness [1993] / Starz Home Entertainment:It's hard not to feel there's something wrong when Army of Darkness, the third entry in Sam Raimi's lively Evil Dead series, opens with a 15 certificate. And indeed, this is not quite the non-stop rollercoaster of splat we're entitled to expect. Like Evil Dead II, it opens with a digest-cum-remake of the original movie, taking geeky Ash (Bruce Campbell) back out to that cabin in the woods where he is beset by demons who do away with his girlfriend (blink and you'll miss Bridget Fonda). Blasted back in time to 12th century England, Ash finds himself still battling the Deadites and his own ineptitude in a quest to save the day and get back home. Though it starts zippily, with Campbell's grimly funny clod of a hero commanding the screen, a sort of monotony sets in as magical events pile up. Ash is attacked by Lilliputian versions of himself, one of whom incubates in his stomach and grows out of his shoulder to be his evil twin. After being dismembered and buried, Evil Ash rises from the dead to command a zombie army and at least half the film is a big battle scene in which rotted warriors (nine mouldy extras in masks for every one Harryhausen-style impressive animated skeleton) besiege a cardboard castle. There are lots of action jokes, MAD Magazine-like marginal doodles and a few funny lines, but it lacks the authentic scares of The Evil Dead and the authentic sick comedy of Evil Dead II. On the DVD: Army of Darkness may be the least of the trilogy, but Anchor Bay's super two-disc set is worthy of shelving beside their outstanding editions of the earlier films. Disc 1 contains the 81-minute US theatrical version in widescreen or fullscreen, plus the original "Planet of the Apes" ending, the trailer and a making-of featurette. [+]
Disc 2 has the 96-minute director's cut, with extra slapstick and a lively, irreverent commentary track from Raimi, Campbell and co-writer Ivan Raimi, plus yet more deleted scenes and some storyboards. The fact that the film exists in so many versions suggests that none of them satisfied everybody, but fans will want every scrap of Army in this one package. -Kim Newman.
Actors & Directors
- Frank Lovejoy
- Fred Zinnemann
- Gary Cooper
- William Castle
- Glenn Ford
- Thomas Mitchell
- Grace Kelly
Run time: 162 min.
Review High Noon / The Americano (1952/1955) / The Video Collection DB0001:Double-Bill of 2 great westerns from the 1950's. HIGH NOON is one of the all-time classic westerns. Retired marshall Will Kane (Gary Cooper, - Beau Geste, Sergeant York) is just about to marry his fiancee (Grace Kelly, - Dial M For Murder, To Catch A Thief ), when news comes that three killers are on the noon train to town seeking revenge. As the townspeople desert him he must decide whether to stand and fight or leave before the men arrive. THE AMERICANO, is a less well-known , though still very excellent western starring one of Hollywood's greatest 'unsung' stars, Glenn Ford (Gilda, 3:10 To Yuma, Day Of The Evil Gun). Here he plays a rancher transporting his 3 prize bulls to their new owner in Brazil, and facing everything from piranha-infested rivers to bandits along the way.
Run time: 50 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £17.99
Review The Secret War - Vol. 4 Battle of the Atlantic(1988) / 2 Entertain Video/BBC Video:
Run time: 80 min. Creator: bob carruthers
Review THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR by the sword divided / cromwell productions:an 80 minute documentary narrated by robert powell plus a 96 page book
Actors & Directors
- Robert Mitchum
- Andrew Marton
- Bernhard Wicki
- Darryl F. Zanuck
- John Wayne
- Henry Fonda
- Ken Annakin
- Robert Ryan
- Richard Burton
Release date: 1994-06-06 Run time: 172 min. Creator: James Jones Price: £19.99
Review Longest Day, The 50th Anniversary Commemorative Limited Edition Box Set [1962] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:After seeing Saving Private Ryan, this epic tale about the Normandy invasion will look sanitised. But in its re-creation of events leading to the epochal battle, The Longest Day is captivating and grand, and the parade of famous actors who cross the screen naturally give the already charged action even more of a boost. Three directors worked on it: Ken Annakin (Battle of the Bulge), Andrew Marton (Crack in the World) and Bernhard Wicki (this film being his only credit). -Tom Keogh The Longest Day is Hollywood's definitive D-day movie. More modern accounts such as Saving Private Ryan are more vividly realistic, but producer Darryl F Zanuck's epic 1962 account is the only one to attempt the daunting task of covering that fateful day from all perspectives. From the German high command and front-line officers to the French Resistance and all the key Allied participants, the screenplay by Cornelius Ryan, based on his own authoritative book, is as factually accurate as possible. The endless parade of stars (John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Robert Mitchum, Sean Connery, and Richard Burton, to name a few) makes for an uneasy mix of verisimilitude and Hollywood star-power, however, and the film falls a little flat for too much of its three-hour running time. But the set-piece battles are still spectacular, and if the landings on Omaha Beach lack the graphic gore of Private Ryan they nonetheless show the sheer scale and audacity of the invasion. -Mark Walker.
Actors & Directors
- Steven Bauer
- Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
- Robert Loggia
- Brian De Palma
- Al Pacino
- Michelle Pfeiffer
Run time: 163 min. Creator: Oliver Stone RRP: £11.99 Price: £3.90
Review Scarface [1983] / Paramount Home Entertainment:Brian De Palma's update of the classic 1932 crime drama by Howard Hawks, Scarface is a sprawling epic of bloodshed and excess that sparked controversy over its outrageous violence when released in 1983. It's a wretched, fascinating car wreck of a movie, starring Al Pacino as a Cuban refugee who rises to the top of Miami's cocaine-driven underworld, only to fall hard into his own deadly trap of addiction and inevitable assassination. Scripted by Oliver Stone and running nearly three hours, it's the kind of film that can simultaneously disgust and amaze you (critic Pauline Kael wrote "this may be the only action picture that turns into an allegory of impotence"), with vivid supporting roles for Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, and Robert Loggia. -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- John Badham
- Dermot Mulroney
- Harvey Keitel
- Gabriel Byrne
- Bridget Fonda
- Anne Bancroft
Release date: 1996-11-18 Run time: 104 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £2.39
Review The Assassin [1993] / Warner Home Video:This is one of those Hollywood remakes of a European hit in which one can visualize a committee of studio executives sitting around and saying, "Okay, we know what made the original film unique and different and fun. How can we make that same movie and do exactly the opposite?" For-hire director John Badham (Saturday Night Fever) took La Femme Nikita, Luc Besson's undeniably sexy, original, and kitschy French film about a female assassin, and translated it into The Assassin, a calculating, mechanistic American thriller with no distinctive style. Bridget Fonda gamely plays the willowy street punk who becomes a high-society killer, but once that provocative irony is in place, the movie is pretty much a series of by-the-numbers action set pieces. Until, that is, Dermot Mulroney shows up as a love interest; but even that twist can't save this film. You're much better off with the original, subtitles and all. The DVD release has optional full-screen and widescreen presentations, production notes, theatrical trailer, optional French and Spanish soundtracks, and optional English, French, and Spanish subtitles. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Kelly LeBrock
- Bonnie Burroughs
- Bruce Malmuth
- Steven Seagal
- William Sadler
- Frederick Coffin
Release date: 1995-10-09 Run time: 91 min. Creator: Steven McKay Price: £5.99
Review Hard To Kill [1990] / Warner Home Video:
Actors & Directors
- James Mitchum
- Rik Shelach Nissimoff
- Reb Brown
- Peter Fonda
Run time: 90 min.
Review Freedom Fighters / Cannon Video:vietnam veterans are used by a president of an African country to smother the voice of protestors.
Actors & Directors
- Pernell Roberts
- Milla Jovovich
- Eddie Castrodad
- Robert Wiemer
Run time: 99 min.
Review The Night Train To Kathmandu (1988) / CIC VIDEO VHB2316:Very rare family film, notable also for being the film debut of then international model ( now established film star ),Milla Jovovich (Resident Evil, The Fifth Element, Joan Of Arc) (here billed simply as Milla). The story concerns Milla as a resentful 14 yr-old forced to leave her friends behind and accompany her family on their research trip to the Himalayas of Nepal. Once there she meets a mysterious young man and together they soon discover a world of romance and danger. With the added bonus of wonderful location footage from Nepal, this is a great example of old-fashioned family entertainment.
| Browse Action & Adventure:
Models & Brands: Knockaround Guys [2001], 99-1 - Doing The Business / The Hard Sell [1994], Funeral In Berlin [1967], The Devil At 4 O'Clock [1961], Taking The Heat [1992], Kabuto [1992], Lawrence Of Arabia [1962], Armitage III V4-Bit of Love, Showdown In Little Tokyo [1991], Pulp Fiction [1994], Army Of Darkness [1993], High Noon / The Americano (1952/1955), The Secret War - Vol. 4 Battle of the Atlantic(1988), THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR by the sword divided, Longest Day, The 50th Anniversary Commemorative Limited Edition Box Set [1962], Scarface [1983], The Assassin [1993], Hard To Kill [1990], Freedom Fighters, The Night Train To Kathmandu (1988) |