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Review Warner Home Video  / What Ever Happened To Baby Jane [1962]
Actors & Directors
  • Wesley Addy
  • Robert Aldrich
  • Victor Buono
  • Joan Crawford
  • Bette Davis
  • Julie Allred
Release date: 2000-09-04
Run time: 128 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £2.44

Review What Ever Happened To Baby Jane [1962] / Warner Home Video:

A cultish horror favourite, 1962's What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? will make you think twice before hungrily unveiling a covered plate of food. Bette Davis stars as Jane Hudson, a onetime child actress and singer. As an elderly woman, she wishes to revive her vaudevillian career, but she has become a grotesque caricature of her former self. Over the years as her star faded, the star of her older sister Blanche (Joan Crawford) rose, outshining the career of the has-been Baby Jane. Jane was relegated to minor roles, which she only won when Blanche demanded that she be awarded them. The film opens years after a calamitous car accident leaves Blanche in a wheelchair, with no one to care for her except the increasingly insane and sadistic Jane and their servant, Norman. Trying to punish Blanche for her years of success, Jane tortures the house-bound woman, slowly trying to starve her to death, all the while attempting to recapture the fame of her youth. This dark drama also stars Victor Buono as the hefty pianist who answers Jane's ad for an accompanist, hoping to milk some money off the demented old woman. Both Buono and Davis were nominated for Oscars for their roles in this suspenseful and somewhat sick thriller that exploited well the real-life antagonism between Davis and Crawford, while at the same time rejuvenating both their careers. -Jenny Brown.

Review Pathe Distribution  / Point Break [1991]
Actors & Directors
  • John C. McGinley
  • Gary Busey
  • Lori Petty
  • Keanu Reeves
  • Kathryn Bigelow
  • Patrick Swayze
Release date: 2003-06-30
Run time: 117 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £4.95

Review Point Break [1991] / Pathe Distribution:

A rash of daring bank robberies erupts, in which the bad guys all wear the masks of worse guys-former presidents (nice touch). Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves), an impossibly named former football star who blew out his knee and became a crime-busting fed instead, figures out that none of the heists occur during surfing season, and all of them occur when, so to speak, surf's down. So obviously, he reasons, we're dealing with some surfer-dude bank robbers. He goes undercover with just such a group, led by a very spiritual, very guru-type guy played by Patrick Swayze, who has some muddled philosophies when it comes to materialism. If you can buy all that, this efficiently directed (by Kathryn Bigelow) action flick has some diverting moments (credit it, for example, for anticipating the extreme-sports fad). But Reeves's intelligent-sounding lines don't make him seem remotely intelligent, and that plot makes him look positively brilliant. -David Kronke Efficiently directed by Kathryn Bigelow and featuring some diverting action scenes, 1991's Point Break can be credited with anticipating the extreme-sports fad. A rash of daring bank robberies erupt in which the bad guys all wear the masks of worse guys-former presidents (nice touch). Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves), an impossibly named former football star who blew out his knee and became a crime-busting federal agent instead, figures out that none of the heists occur during surfing season and all of them occur when, so to speak, surf's down. So obviously, he reasons, we're dealing with some surfer-dude bank robbers. [+]
He goes undercover with just such a group, led by a very spiritual guru-type Patrick Swayze, who has some muddled philosophies when it comes to materialism. Reeves' intelligent-sounding lines don't make him seem remotely intelligent, but the plot makes him look positively brilliant. -David Kronke.

Review Cinema Club  / Hoop Dreams [1994]
Actors & Directors
  • Frederick Marx
  • William Gates
  • Peter Gilbert
  • Arthur Agee
  • Steve James
Release date: 2002-03-11
Run time: 100 min.
Price: £5.99

Review Hoop Dreams [1994] / Cinema Club:

This completely absorbing three-hour documentary follows the lives of two inner-city African American teenage basketball prodigies as they move through high school with long-shot dreams of the NBA, superstardom and an escape from the ghetto. Taking cues from such works as Michael Apted's 35 Up, director Steve James and associates shot more than 250 hours of footage, spanning more than six years, and their completed work actually moves like an edge-of-the-seat drama, so brimming with tension, plot twists, successes and tragedies that its length-170 minutes-is never an issue. Yet, what makes the film more impressive is how James moves his scope beyond a competitive sports drama (although the movie has plenty of terrific, nail-biting basketball footage) and addresses complex social issues, creating a scathing social commentary about class privilege and racial division. The film opens by introducing William Gates and Arthur Agee, two Chicago hopefuls, as they are being courted and recruited by various high schools to play ball, and continues until the pair are college freshmen. James allows the audience the experience of not only watching their journeys and daily routines (it's a sobering portrait of inner-city life), but also witnessing their maturation. Each takes a separate path along the way, stumbling over several obstacles (William suffers injuries, Arthur fails to meet his coach's high expectations); but James takes particular care to stress the importance and strong commitment of each character's family along the way, giving the film a essential centre. The parents and siblings emerge with as much depth and complexity as the two main "characters", and turn Hoop Dreams into an unforgettable film experience. -Dave McCoy.

Actors & Directors
  • Renee Coleman
  • Bruce Malmuth
  • Roger E. Mosley
  • Dolph Lundgren
  • David Soul
Release date: 1996-10-14
Run time: 97 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £3.99

Review Pentathlon [1994] / First Independent Video:


Review Entertainment in Video  / Gosford Park [2002]
Actors & Directors
  • Robert Altman
  • Kristen Scott Thomas|Stephen Fry|Richard E Grant|Ryan Phillippe
Release date: 2002-09-23
Run time: 137 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £4.99

Review Gosford Park [2002] / Entertainment in Video:

Gosford Park finds director Robert Altman in sumptuously fine form. From the opening shots, as the camera peers through the trees at an opulent English country estate, Altman exploits the 1930s period setting and whodunit formula of the film expertly. Aristocrats gather together for a weekend shooting party with their dutiful servants in tow, and the upstairs/downstairs division of the classes is perfectly tailored to Altman's method (Nashville, Short Cuts) of overlapping bits of dialogue and numerous subplots in order to betray underlying motives and the sins that propel them. Greed, vengeance, snobbery and lust stir comic unrest as the near dizzying effects of the plot twists are allayed by perhaps Altman's strongest ensemble to date. Maggie Smith is marvellous as Constance, a dependent Countess with a quip for every occasion; Michael Gambon, as the ill-fated host, Sir William McCordle, is one of the most palpably salacious characters ever on screen; Kristin Scott Thomas is perfectly cold, yet sexy, as Lady Sylvia, Sir William's wife; and Helen Mirren, Emily Watson and Clive Owen are equally memorable as key characters from the bustling servants' quarters below. Gosford Park manages to be fabulously entertaining while exposing human shortcomings, compromises and endless need for confession. -Fionn Meade On the DVD: Gosford Park, presented 2. 35:1-Anamorphic Widescreen transfer, is awash with the muted colours and sepia tones which permeate the film, the sound is excellent as the actors were individually miked, so you don't loose any of the dialogue giving away subtle plot developments. Extras are chunky, with deleted scenes, trailers a couple of documentaries. Most notable are the two commentaries which go a long way to unravelling some of the twistier plot devices and a Q&A session with the Altman and his crew filmed in New York. [+]
-Kristen Bowditch.

Review Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm  / Captain Corelli's Mandolin [2001]
Actors & Directors
  • Nicolas Cage
  • Irene Papas
  • John Madden
  • John Hurt
  • Christian Bale
  • Penélope Cruz
Release date: 2002-03-25
Run time: 127 min.
RRP: £14.99
Price: £3.75

Review Captain Corelli's Mandolin [2001] / Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm:

While Captain Corelli's Mandolin may frustrate admirers of Louis de Bernières' densely detailed novel, it proves Shakespeare in Love director John Madden is a worthy craftsman of literary films. It's a tastefully old-fashioned adaptation, preserving the novel's flavour while focusing on its love story set against the turbulence of World War II. Set on the Greek island of Cephallonia, the drama begins in 1940 with occupation by Italian troops, awkwardly allied with the Nazis and preferring hedonistic friendliness over military intimidation. That attitude is most generously embodied by Captain Corelli (Nicolas Cage), who is instantly drawn to the Greek beauty Pelagia (Penélope Cruz) despite her engagement to Mandras (Christian Bale), a resistance fighter whose absence leaves Pelagia needy for affection. Mandras's eventual return-and the inevitable attack by German bombers and ground troops-threaten to stain this Greek-Italian romance with deeply tragic bloodshed. Accompanied by pensive serenades from the captain's cherished mandolin, the film charts the unlikely attraction of Corelli and Pelagia, whose wizened physician father (splendidly played by John Hurt) fears for the worst. Their love is uneasy (and Cage's miscasting doesn't help), but the island's beguiling atmosphere is as seductive to them as it is to the viewer, thus making the outbreak of violence-and a climactic earthquake-jarringly traumatic. Emphasising nobility in war and the many definitions of love, the story's wartime context intensifies the film's admirable depth of emotion. Faults will be found by anyone who's looking for them, but Captain Corelli's Mandolin remains a sensuous, richly layered film that die-hard romantics will find hard to resist. -Jeff Shannon, Amazon. [+]
com.

Review Contender Entertainment Group  / Gunpowder, Treason And Plot [2004]
Actors & Directors
  • Clémence Poésy
  • Tim McInnerny
  • Richard Coyle
  • Kevin McKidd
  • Robert Carlyle
  • Gillies MacKinnon
Release date: 2004-04-19
Run time: 200 min.
RRP: £9.99
Price: £7.25

Review Gunpowder, Treason And Plot [2004] / Contender Entertainment Group:


Review ITV DVD  / Soldier Soldier - The Paddy And Tucker Story [1996]
Actors & Directors
  • Jerome Flynn
  • Rosie Rowell
  • Robson Green
  • Holly Aird
Release date: 2000-01-26
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £6.55

Review Soldier Soldier - The Paddy And Tucker Story [1996] / ITV DVD:


Review ITV DVD  / Fried Green Tomatoes At The Whistle Stop Cafe [1991]
Actors & Directors
  • Cicely Tyson
  • Jessica Tandy
  • Mary-Louise Parker
  • Mary Stuart Masterson
  • Kathy Bates
  • Jon Avnet
Release date: 2002-09-09
Run time: 124 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £8.40

Review Fried Green Tomatoes At The Whistle Stop Cafe [1991] / ITV DVD:

Kathy Bates stars as an unhappy wife trying to get her husband's attention in this amusing and moving 1991 screen adaptation of Fannie Flagg's novel Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe. After befriending a lonely old woman (Jessica Tandy), Bates hears the story of a lifelong friendship between two other women (Mary Stuary Masterson and Mary-Louise Parker, seen in flashback) who once ran a cafe in town against many personal odds. The tale inspires Bates to take further command over her life, and there director Jon Avnet (Up Close and Personal), in his first feature, has fun with the film. Bates develops a real attitude toward her thickheaded spouse at home and some uppity girls in a parking lot, but dignity is generally the key to Avnet's approach with the story's crucial relationships. Tandy is a joy and clearly loves the element of mystery attached to her character, and Masterson and Parker are excellent in the historical sequences. -Tom Keogh.

Review 4 Front Video  / A Kind Of Loving [1962]
Actors & Directors
  • John Schlesinger
  • Thora Hird
  • June Ritchie
  • Malcolm Patton
  • Bert Palmer
  • Alan Bates
Release date: 2001-01-08
Run time: 107 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £2.90

Review A Kind Of Loving [1962] / 4 Front Video:

Pity poor Vic (Alan Bates): when he begins a relationship with Ingrid (June Ritchie), a typist at the Lancashire factory where he works as a draughtsman; his life comes apart at the seams. Ingrid's gossiping, malicious friends are bad enough, but her mother Mrs Rothwell (the terrifying Thora Hird) is something else. Vic has to marry Ingrid-she's pregnant-and the only place for them to stay is chez Rothwell. There's a tenderness about A Kind of Loving which you don't find in the more abrasive "kitchen sink" films of the 60s. Vic is not a rebel like Arthur Seton in Saturday Night, Sunday Morning or a macho lunk like Richard Harris' rugby-league player in This Sporting Life. He's a likable, easygoing youngster who soon discovers that real-life love affairs are infinitely messier than he and his mates could ever have imagined. The acute, witty screenplay, adapted by Willis Hall and Keith Waterhouse from Stan Barstow's novel, shows how limited Vic and Ingrid's choices really are. They have no privacy or independence. Bounced into a marriage that neither necessarily wants, their romance quickly sours. Mrs Rothwell is truly the mother-in-law from Hell-a busybody and a tyrant. [+]
Look out for the Queen Victoria-like expression on her face when a drunken Vic throws up in her front room. Debut-feature director John Schlesinger captures the humour and the pathos in the young lovers' plight without ever making fun of them. -Geoffrey Macnab.

Review Odyssey Video  / Out Of Darkness [1993]
Actors & Directors
  • Beah Richards
  • Larry Elikann
  • Lindsay Crouse
  • Juanita Jennings
  • Diana Ross
  • Ann Weldon
Release date: 2000-06-02
Run time: 88 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £25.00

Review Out Of Darkness [1993] / Odyssey Video:


Review Meridian Entertainment  / Z Cars [1962]
Actors & Directors
  • Morris Barry
  • Matthew Robinson
  • Hugh David
  • Julia Smith
  • Brian McDuffie
Run time: 139 min.
RRP: £9.99
Price: £44.99

Review Z Cars [1962] / Meridian Entertainment:


Review 4 Front Video  / Genghis Khan [1964]
Actors & Directors
  • Francoise Dorleac
  • Henry Levin
  • James Mason
  • Omar Sharif
  • Stephen Boyd
  • Eli Wallach
Release date: 2003-01-13
Run time: 119 min.
Price: £5.99

Review Genghis Khan [1964] / 4 Front Video:


Review Uca Catalogue  / Big Fish [2004]
Actors & Directors
  • Albert Finney
  • Billy Crudup
  • Tim Burton
  • Ewan McGregor
  • Jessica Lange
  • Helena Bonham Carter
Release date: 2004-09-13
Run time: 120 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £0.50

Review Big Fish [2004] / Uca Catalogue:

After a string of mediocre movies, director Tim Burton regains his footing as he shifts from macabre fairy tales to southern tall tales. Big Fish twines in and out of the oversized stories of Edward Bloom, played as a young man by Ewan McGregor and as a dying father by Albert Finney. Edward's son Will (Billy Crudup) sits by his father's bedside but has little patience with the old man's fables, because he feels these stories have kept him from knowing who his father really is. Burton dives into Bloom's imagination with zest, sending the determined young man into haunted woods, an idealised southern town, a travelling circus and much more. The result is sweet but-thanks to the director's dark and clever sensibility-never saccharine. The film also features Jessica Lange, Alison Lohman, Helena Bonham Carter, Danny DeVito and Steve Buscemi. -Bret Fetzer.

Review Cinema Club  / The Land Girls [1998]
Actors & Directors
  • David Leland
  • Anna Friel
  • Steven Mackintosh
  • Tom Georgeson
  • Rachel Weisz
  • Catherine McCormack
Release date: 2001-03-19
Run time: 111 min.
Price: £5.99

Review The Land Girls [1998] / Cinema Club:

During the Second World War, Britain's women were asked to help out the farming industry by joining The Women's Land Army (The Land Girls). Three city gals make their way to the Lawrence farm in Dorset, and find themselves taking to the work easily enough. The only problem between them is each want young Joe (Steven Mackintosh) for their own reasons. Ag (Anna Friel) is the fiery sort who'll take pleasure where she finds it; Prue (Rachel Wiesz) just wants a lesson in the ways of the world; while Stella (Catherine McCormack) is looking for a way out of the private trap she's set in motion back home, but her feelings are the most sincere of the bunch. The film is Stella's story really (as adapted from the novel by Angela Huth), and has her affecting the on-off decision by Joe to join the RAF, the fight with the government to keep the East Meadow as it is and the paths the two other girls end up taking. Everything is very sweet-natured, especially when played out against a backdrop of rolling green hills, chuffing steam engines and knee-high socks tucked into Wellington boots. There's no comment on the effects of war as such, instead this film is more about the reasons why we make choices in life. -Paul Tonks.

Review 2 Entertain Video  / Cold Feet - The Complete 4th Series
Actors & Directors
  • Fay Ripley
  • Robert Bathurst
  • Ciaran Donnelly
  • John Thompson
  • Helen Baxendale
  • Tim Whitby
  • Paul Kousoulides
  • James Nesbitt
Release date: 2002-11-25
Run time: 405 min.
RRP: £19.99
Price: £7.85

Review Cold Feet - The Complete 4th Series / 2 Entertain Video:

The fourth series of Cold Feet marks something of a watershed for the six friends from Manchester. Previous series, punctuated with drunken bachelordom, mindless flings and wild stag weekends, give way to themes of alcoholism, broken families and divorce. It's also part-way through the fourth series that Jenny leaves Manchester for pastures new, thus departing Fay Ripley's hugely popular and instantly missable character. As fans have come to expect, however, such dramatic shifts are handled with assurance, finesse and sensitivity by writer Mike Bullen. Everything from the script to the acting is in tune with the exceptional comic and dramatic standards set by previous episodes. Hermione Norris as Karen delivers a remarkable performance as her world tumbles around her while James Nesbitt maintains his perfect portrayal of Adam, suitably moving and hilarious by turns. There's also room for a new character: Rachel's bubbly Australian workmate Jo seamlessly enters the circle of friends, providing Pete with a new love interest. As ever, we're left eagerly anticipating the next instalment, impatient for Bullen and company to tie up the numerous loose ends. Series 4 ends in a whirlwind of matrimony, marital dysfunction, a new arrival and all the indications that there's plenty to look forward to in the final series. -David Thwaites.

Review Granada Media  / Catherine Cookson - The Secret [2000]
Actors & Directors
  • Hannah Yelland
  • Stephen Moyer
  • Clare Higgins
  • June Whitfield
  • Colin Buchanan
  • Alan Grint
Release date: 2000-03-06
Run time: 153 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £14.00

Review Catherine Cookson - The Secret [2000] / Granada Media:


Review 4 Front Video  / Shanghai Express [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Anna May Wong
  • Marlene Dietrich
  • Warner Oland
  • Clive Brook
  • Josef von Sternberg
  • Eugene Pallette
Release date: 2000-02-07
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £5.99

Review Shanghai Express [1932] / 4 Front Video:


Review Warner Home Video  / Badlands [1973]
Actors & Directors
  • Martin Sheen
  • Terrence Malick
  • Ramon Bieri
  • Sissy Spacek
  • Warren Oates
Release date: 1997-09-08
Run time: 89 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £2.42

Review Badlands [1973] / Warner Home Video:

Still one of American cinema's most powerful, daring film-making debuts, Terrence Malick's Badlands is a quirky, visionary psychological and social enigma masquerading as a simple lovers-on-the-run flick. Inspired by the 1958 murders in the cold, stark badlands of South Dakota by Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate, the film's plot, on the surface, is similar to that of other killing-couple films, like Bonnie and Clyde and Gun Crazy. Martin Sheen, in an understated, sophisticated performance, plays the strange James Dean-like social outcast who falls in love with the naïve Sissy Spacek-and then kills her father when he comes between them. The two flee like animals to the wilderness, until the police arrive and the killing spree begins. What sets the film apart from others of its genre is Malick's complicated approach. Gorgeous, impenetrable images contrast sharply with Spacek's nostalgically artless narration, serving as ironic counterpoints, blurring concrete meaning and stressing that nothing this horrific is simple. Malick observes, rather than analyses, the couple in a manner as detached and apathetic as the couple's shocking actions. No judgment or definitive motivations are offered, though Malick's empathy often leans toward his senseless protagonists, rather than the star-struck society that makes killers famous. Compared with the interchangeable uniform cops who hunt them and the film's other nameless characters stuck in suburban banality, the couple are presented like tarnished, warped andfrustrated results of squelched individuality. Badlands, on one level, views America's suffocating homogeneity and, conversely, its continued obsession with celebrities (individuals considered different but adored) as hypocritical. [+]
Ambiguous and bold, the movie hints that society may be as guilty as the killers. -Dave McCoy Terrence Malick's Badlands has become a cornerstone in American cinema. Although not a success at the box office at the time of its release in 1973, its influence can be seen years later in the Tarantino-penned Natural Born Killers and True Romance among others, and it remains arguably one of the finest debuts by a director in Hollywood history. Astonishingly, Malick has only made two movies since: Days of Heaven (1979) and The Thin Red Line (1998). Badlands also brought Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek to the notice of Hollywood for the first time. Shot on a low budget, the film (based on Charles Starkweather and Caril-Ann Fugate's 1958 killing spree) portrays a loved-up couple on the run from the law who embark on a series of killings motivated by their need to survive. The film has become a classic, partly due to Tak Fujimoto's cinematography and partly due to the detached attitude the couple adopt towards murder. Like Tarantino's later anti-heroes and heroines, Kit and Holly are killers without conscience. Holly's naïve teenage mentality makes her passive attitude seem even more shocking, and her only comment that leads us to believe she has any grasp of the situation is when she mentions that Kit may be a little crazy. Yet there is also an innocent, "young love" side to the couple's actions which the audience cannot fail to feel pity for, greatly helped by the pairing of Sheen and Spacek as well as Malick's gift for drawing the finest and most sensitive performances from his actors. On the DVD: Badlands has been cleaned up nicely with a 1. 85:1 widescreen print and 5. 1 surround sound. Although seemingly short of extras the one included on the disc is a real gem: "Absence of Malick" offers insight into this notoriously publicity-shy director from the cast and crew and the reason why he ended up acting in his own movie. -Nikki Disney.

Review Warner Home Video  / Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? [1967]
Actors & Directors
  • Richard Burton
  • Sandy Dennis
  • George Segal
  • Mike Nichols
  • Elizabeth Taylor
  • Frank Flanagan
Release date: 1998-06-22
Run time: 124 min.
RRP: £6.99
Price: £9.90

Review Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? [1967] / Warner Home Video:

A word of advice: if George (Richard Burton) and Martha (Elizabeth Taylor) ever ask you over for late-night cocktails-pass. On the other hand, if you have the opportunity to see Mike Nichols's scorching film version of Edward Albee's sensational play, don't miss it! Elegantly photographed in crisp black and white by the great Haskell Wexler, the play has been "opened up" for the screen by director Nichols (The Graduate, Primary Colors) and producer/writer Ernest Lehman (North by Northwest) without diluting its concentrated, claustrophobic power. Taylor has never been better or brasher as Martha, letting loose with all the fury of a drunken, frustrated academic's wife on one crazy Walpurgisnacht bender. Burton plays her husband, George, the ineffectual history prof married to the college president's daughter. And George Segal and Sandy Dennis are young, callow Nick and Honey, who have no idea what sort of mind-warping psychological games they're being drawn into. Among the most successful theatrical adaptations (artistically and popularly) ever brought to the screen, the entire principal cast of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf was nominated for Oscars-and Taylor, Dennis and cinematographer Wexler won. -Jim Emerson.

Browse Drama:

Models & Brands:
What Ever Happened To Baby Jane [1962], Point Break [1991], Hoop Dreams [1994], Pentathlon [1994], Gosford Park [2002], Captain Corelli's Mandolin [2001], Gunpowder, Treason And Plot [2004], Soldier Soldier - The Paddy And Tucker Story [1996], Fried Green Tomatoes At The Whistle Stop Cafe [1991], A Kind Of Loving [1962], Out Of Darkness [1993], Z Cars [1962], Genghis Khan [1964], Big Fish [2004], The Land Girls [1998], Cold Feet - The Complete 4th Series, Catherine Cookson - The Secret [2000], Shanghai Express [1932], Badlands [1973], Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? [1967]

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