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| 1. The Addiction Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (25)
Lili Taylor turns in an excellent performance as Kathleen, a philosophy student who is plunged into the dark world of the vampire. As she is transformed gradually in the movie the fact that she is a philosophy student plays a large role. She is forced to reconcile her new life with the existentialism that is the focus of her studies. As she becomes more sure of herself in her new life, an elder vampire Peina (played by the creepy Christopher Walken) throws a wrench in the works. Lili Taylor's voice is marvelous in the dark settings where her character contemplates her new existence with philosophy. Where will her journey into darkness take her...? This movie is well written, visually appealing, and the main charcters are deep. You will want to watch it more than once to be sure.
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| 2. Subway Stories Director: Jonathan Demme, Seth Zvi Rosenfeld, Abel Ferrara, Alison Maclean, Lucas Platt, Patricia Benoit, Julie Dash, Craig McKay, Ted Demme, Bob Balaban | |
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Description Reviews (7)
My only problem with this movie is that it is not yet available on DVD. IF you haven't seen this and are a fan of short stories, you will love this movie.
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| 3. King of New York Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (53)
Officers Dennis Gilley (David Caruso) and Thomas Flanigan (Wesley Snipes) are part of a team of cops that are looking to stop White. They are outraged that he is on the street and that they are seemingly unable to stop him by fair means. They decide to resort to foul means and end up all the worse for their efforts. Throughout the film, the line is sometimes blurred between the good guys and the bad guys. There is no happy ending here, and justice may or may not be deemed to have been served, depending upon the viewer's own subjective viewpoint. The performances are good overall, and in particular, Fishburne's manic character, Jimmy Jump, is a good foil for Walker's coolly detached character, Frank White. This is not really a character driven movie, however, but rather a plot driven one. There is a lot of action, a lot of shootings and carnage, and some car chase scenes that will keep the viewer on edge. The violence, when it occurs, is bloody and protracted. Moreover, in addition to being bimbos and sex toys, the women also pack high powered heat and shoot with the best of them. Despite some plot holes, the film entertains, though just how entertaining the viewer will find this film will depend on the viewer's tolerance for violence. The DVD itself is pretty much no frills, offering pretty standard features, such as widescreen, a theatrical trailer, scene access, and a music video. There is no commentary. The picture, though dark, is clear, as is the sound.
What makes this director a nihlistic sick mother is his attitude and language in his commentary (which quite frankly I enjoy!)- during the film his voice-over commentary reveals a sick mind- every woman who appears on the screen is singled out by the director and called a "piece of ..." while other such ditties do not pass unnoticed. This director has a serious mental abberation, a problem which he uses film to work out- hes basically working out his emotional problems by directing very sick films. While I enjoy his choice of language in the commentary and his absolute honesty, I cant help thinking what a sick mother this director is in real life.
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| 4. King of New York Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (53)
Officers Dennis Gilley (David Caruso) and Thomas Flanigan (Wesley Snipes) are part of a team of cops that are looking to stop White. They are outraged that he is on the street and that they are seemingly unable to stop him by fair means. They decide to resort to foul means and end up all the worse for their efforts. Throughout the film, the line is sometimes blurred between the good guys and the bad guys. There is no happy ending here, and justice may or may not be deemed to have been served, depending upon the viewer's own subjective viewpoint. The performances are good overall, and in particular, Fishburne's manic character, Jimmy Jump, is a good foil for Walker's coolly detached character, Frank White. This is not really a character driven movie, however, but rather a plot driven one. There is a lot of action, a lot of shootings and carnage, and some car chase scenes that will keep the viewer on edge. The violence, when it occurs, is bloody and protracted. Moreover, in addition to being bimbos and sex toys, the women also pack high powered heat and shoot with the best of them. Despite some plot holes, the film entertains, though just how entertaining the viewer will find this film will depend on the viewer's tolerance for violence. The DVD itself is pretty much no frills, offering pretty standard features, such as widescreen, a theatrical trailer, scene access, and a music video. There is no commentary. The picture, though dark, is clear, as is the sound.
What makes this director a nihlistic sick mother is his attitude and language in his commentary (which quite frankly I enjoy!)- during the film his voice-over commentary reveals a sick mind- every woman who appears on the screen is singled out by the director and called a "piece of ..." while other such ditties do not pass unnoticed. This director has a serious mental abberation, a problem which he uses film to work out- hes basically working out his emotional problems by directing very sick films. While I enjoy his choice of language in the commentary and his absolute honesty, I cant help thinking what a sick mother this director is in real life.
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| 5. Cat Chaser Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (3)
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| 6. Cat Chaser Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (3)
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| 7. Dangerous Game (1993) Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (17)
Madonna is still the same as in 1993, my but she stagnated! And this filmmaker is the original "Phatom Father," not Rudy Winston, father of another moviemaker (in connection with David Lynch), Barry Gifford. He read to his children, he cared for his children the best he knew how, but basically he was not a good person and in a bad field. Can being a gangster and killer the same as being a bad film maker? I really didn't see much difference. We are all as good as we know how to be when raising a family, but making sordid, vulgar films is as bad as killing other bad people in real life. I saw very little redeeming value in this flick. So much in the dark, very little beauty of any kind -- just bad in every way.
There is a minimal amount of music that wells up at dramatic times, swirling around and distracting us from the film. The sound editing is excellent as well, getting the sounds of real life just right. I'm also a fan of films that touch on the making of a film. I don't think that such movies can help not disclosing a lot about the filmaker of the film that looks at making films. A bit autobiographical? One can't help but think so. Add in Madonna's excellent performance, and you have a film to be recommended.
Madonna dose decent job in this film, so dose James Russo. It's not a typical Hollywood film. One should examine it if one has connected with reality and with understanding. I saw this film in 1993 of Venice film festival, and I still remember it after decade. I do think I hardly see great performance in actors after this film.
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| 8. Bad Lieutenant Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Reviews (61)
After much thought I have to say that "Bad Lieutenant" really is a monstrous train-wreck of a movie, but what keeps you watching, utterly mesmerized, unable to look away for an instant, is Keitel's performance as the titular character. He's never given a name in the film, or even in the credits, he's just the "Lieutenant," and "Bad?" "Bad" doesn't even begin to describe this guy, as the front of the DVD case puts it, "Gambler. Thief. Junkie. Killer. Cop." After surviving on the mean streets of New York for 20 years, he has seen, and pretty well done, it all; the "Lieutenant" is a man who exists in a nihilistic Hell of his own making, and we watch as he roars headlong towards his own destruction, along the way, plumbing the very depths of abject human depravity. A lapsed Catholic, he is still wracked by guilt for the truly awful deeds he commits, whether it's doing and/or selling drugs, booze, sex, gambling, thieving, killing, the "Lieutenant" is a soul in torment. Unable to find a way out, he is sinking deeper and deeper into a morass of yet MORE drugs, MORE booze, MORE bets he can't cover, and more, meaningless, cold, emotionless, and depraved, sexual acts. Yet somewhere deep inside this blasted shell of a man, there still exists a spark of humanity, so lost in the wretched, savage squalor of his life, that even HE doesn't know it's there. Then one day he becomes involved in the investigation of a crime that shocks even him... the brutal rape of a Catholic nun. Initially coldly dismissive of what the young woman had been through, he listens in on her conversations with her superiors and is shocked to his core to discover that even though her bruises are still fresh, she has already forgiven her attackers. She knows their names but won't pass them on to the police. The "Lieutenant" can barely comprehend how can such a thing can be, how can she forgive such a terrible act... such a terrible sin? If she can forgive so much, then maybe, just maybe, he himself can find some kind of redemption, maybe someone - God? - can forgive him HIS sins. After his confrontation with the nun, howling out his characters pain, and anger, and hurt, and fear, Harvey Keitel gives the most searingly honest, desperate, and emotionally raw performance of his career. Bleak, brutal, depraved, and honest, are some of the words that I would use to describe this film, which is NOT easy to watch, especially this NC-17 version, but it's a film that SHOULD be watched by anyone who is serious about Cinema as an art form. Between them, Ferrera and Keitel have produced an extraordinary cinematic experience, unbending and uncompromising in its exploration of the human condition, powerful and unforgiving, it forces you to actually THINK about the subject matter, and to face the rotten darkness in the heart of this particular human soul. I would like to end this review with a bit of trivia concerning Keitel's performance. Regardless of whether you love this film or hate it - like "2001," this film seems to generate extreme reactions - no one can argue about the power, and sheer gut-wrenching truthfulness, of Keitel's performance. Depending on exactly when the film was released, Keitel would have been eligible for a shot at either the '92 or '93 Oscar for Best Actor. So who won? Well, I looked it up, and Keitel "lost" to, either, Al Pacino in "Scent of a Woman" in '92, or, God help us, Tom Hanks in "Philadelphia" in '93! Next time I find myself getting even mildly curious about who's taking home one of the gold statuettes, this little bit of trivia will kind-of put the whole tawdry circus into perspective!
There is no real story here, other than Harvey Keitel's character going around doing bad things over and over again throughout the movie. No real plot, not real story line. It's just a montage of scenes of a bad cop doing things bad cops do. Thumbs way down.
Be prepared for this highgly recommended film that should go down in history as the most viceral and daring film of the 90's. But be warmed, this film has the power to bring everybody down!. I haven't watch a film like this again!
Then he is brought into a case where a young nun is brutally violated. She knows the two men who have committed the terrible act but refuses to name them to the police. "I have already forgiven them," she says. This throws Keitel into a moral and spiritual quandary, and how he resolves it might be shocking to some but is understandable, given his character.
This is perhaps Harvey Keitel's finest performance. I felt his humanity in spite of all his nasty acts. Underneath it all was a very troubled human being. Wisely, the screenwriter didn't give him a name. We just think of him as the bad cop. And also, wisely, we don't get any back story. I had been actually waiting for it. I wanted to know the reason that would make a man act this way. But my curiously was never satisfied. Instead, I was thrown into the man's current moral dilemma. The result was a deeply disturbing journey into the depths of depravity and redemption. I applaud the filmmakers, as well the director Abel Ferrera, who, with the help of Zoe Lund, also wrote the screenplay. It took a lot of courage to bring this story to the screen. Highly recommended. ... Read more | |
| 9. Crime Story TV Series Vol. 8 Director: Gary Sinise, Michael Mann, David Jackson, Bill Duke, Leon Ichaso, Colin Bucksey, Paul Krasny, Peter Medak, David Soul, Mimi Leder, Eugene Corr, Robert Dalva, Abel Ferrara, Alan Myerson, John Nicolella, James A. Contner, Francis Delia, Mark Rosner, James Quinn, Jan Eliasberg | |
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| 10. Ms. 45 Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Description Reviews (15)
The late Zoe Tamerlaine (who has an uncanny resemblance to Denise Richards) stars as Thana, a sexy mute woman, who is the victim of rape and burglary. She survives, killing one of the rapists. But she doesn't call the cops...she instead takes the dead rapist and starts sawing up his body, later disposed in garbage bags. She then takes his 45 caliber, and this is when the movies gets really crazy. Her world becomes very delusional, and Thana starts shooting guys out of paranoia. But progressively she becomes even more trigger happy, and starts to kill any guy who advances on her, even when he is posing no immediate threat to her. The movie climaxes with a very wild, bloody shootout. "Ms. 45" has been quoted as Ferrara's "Taxi Driver"; Ferrara's direction is a less-gritty Scorsese, displaying New York through funny dialogue and scenes. The movie will satisfy gorehounds, and it will keep the viewer interested in this gory black comedy from start to finish. "Ms. 45" has been banned in many countries, and it had to be cut to get an "R" rating. Ferrara's excellent direction is a huge accomplishment this being only his second major film, and it places "Ms. 45" much higher than other feminist revenge films (eg I spit on your grave). After watching this movie, you'll see where they got the idea for "American Psycho"...
"Ms. 45" tells the story of Thana, a mute young woman who works in a clothing shop in New York City. Despite her disability, a disability that her male boss seems to remind her of every chance he gets, Thana does have a one thing going for her; she's pretty to the point of spectacular, although in the beginning of the film her natural shyness and tendency to hover in the background away from her co-workers obscures her looks. Life for this young seamstress looks like it will be a series of uneventful occurrences until the day two attackers rape her. These unfortunate, and to be frank, unlikely incidents cause something inside of Thana to snap. She kills one of her attackers in her apartment and promptly dismembers his body, remembering to take his .45 pistol in the process. What follows is a rampage through the streets of the city, as Thana guns down in cold blood any man who has the temerity to hit on her or annoy her in any way. She murders, by turns, a pimp, an insufferable photographer, several gang members, an Arab sheikh and his chauffer, a guy she meets in a bar, and many other gentlemen who are definitely in the wrong place at the wrong time. A curious thing happens to our anti-heroine as she embarks on her bloody sprees: she begins to blossom into full beauty. Thana dresses up, puts on make up, and casts fetching come hither looks at potential victims before the bullets start flying. A big round of applause must go to Zoe Lund, the actress who played the Thana character. Certainly, a script that calls for the lead performer to play a mute must rely on something other than dialogue to propel the movie, and Lund fills the role to a tee with her wonderfully expressive face and doe like eyes. Her silent screams of anguish during the opening rape sequences convey the horror of the situation as well as, if not better than, using vocalized expressions of agony. Lund's transformation into a sexy angel of death is also intriguing to watch. It is quite unfortunate this actress died a few years ago, and even more regrettable that she didn't star in more films. Yes, she's that interesting to watch. "Ms. 45" definitely falls in that loveable 1970s and early 1980s sub genre known as the "revenge" movie. The body count in this movie easily stacks up with anything Charles Bronson produced in his "Death Wish" franchise (with the possible exception of "Death Wish 3"). Ferrara doesn't take the usual route with this film, however, since he fills his picture with plenty of religious and gender imagery. For example, pay attention to the closing sequences of the film, when Thana goes on a rampage at a party. Obviously, her costume for the party is symbolic, but also pay attention to how the lady behind her holds the knife. I could take the opportunity here to present some sort of grand explanation or synthesis of what all of these symbols mean in the context of the movie, but I won't because I don't really know how they all fit together. I do know Ferrara takes his religion seriously (see "Bad Lieutenant," mentioned above), but the spiritual imagery in "Ms. 45" isn't as obvious as it is in the later 1992 Keitel film. The Ferrara canon, if these two films are any indication, cry out for a budding film student with an eye towards writing a master's thesis or dissertation. The DVD version from Image Entertainment falls squarely into the mediocre category. There are no extras for the film: no trailers, no commentaries, no production stills, no cast interviews, and no television spots. The only thing you will find here is a menu screen. At least the transfer quality of the film more than makes up for these shortfalls, as the picture looks great for such a low budget production. The soundtrack really works well with the movie, too. Abel Ferrara continues to direct films, but he may never approach the visceral impact of "Ms. 45." If you enjoy films in the vein of "Death Wish," this winner is definitely up your alley. ... Read more | |
| 11. Miami Vice 2: The Prodigal Son Director: Vern Gillum, Jim Johnston, Gabrielle Beaumont, Lee H. Katzin, Tim Zinnemann, Edward James Olmos, George Mendeluk, Bill Duke, Richard A. Colla, Michael O'Herlihy, Leon Ichaso, John Wharmby, David Anspaugh, Robert Iscove, David Soul, Abel Ferrara, Michelle Manning, Russ Mayberry, Michael B. Hoggan, Richard Compton | |
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| 12. Body Snatchers Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Description Reviews (17)
An EPA agent and his family are visiting an army base where there might be toxic waste leaking into the environment. Little do they know that chemicals are not the real threat. Strange pods have been found in the marsh. As you are probably aware, the pods grow into duplicates of people and then replace them. On an army base, once an officer has been taken, it is easy to trap the lower ranks. It also means that the pod people have access to weapons supplies. But the locale is not the only improvement in this version. We get plenty of key scenes where you never quite know who is still themselves and who can not be trusted. The conversion process has also been improved to explain how the pods can copy people and what happens to the bodies afterwards. There is quite a bit of nudity in this version, so it is not as accessible as the earlier versions, but is definitely worth it.
"My mommy's dead" is also true for Marti, Andy's stepbrother. As far as Marti's concerned, her father has already replaced her mother with a pod, her stepmother. Body Snatchers is about family dissolution as much as organic decomposition. "Pod movies" are more terrifying than run-of-the-mill invasion stories (like Independence Day, The Day of the Triffids, The War of the Worlds) because the aliens don't want to just kill us or enslave us, they want to be us. In Body Snatchers, Major Collins tells the pod people before he blows his own brains out, "You won't take my soul!" Better dead than pod. Abel Ferrara (director of Ms. 45, Bad Lieutenant, and The Addiction) has done what Don Siegel did in 1955 and what Philip Kaufman did in 1978 - - given us a version of Jack Finney's novel The Body Snatchers that reveals its own era. Besides the Communist-McCarthyite argument everyone sees in it, Siegel's version set in 1950s "Santa Mira" was about rural America and its repression. Kaufman's film in 1970s San Francisco showed the emptiness and disconnection in urban life that couldn't help but lead to the Greedy Age of the 1990s. Kaufman even set it near Silicon Valley, the center from which the economic tidal wave washed over everything. Ferrara's version, besides being a story of families torn up, is about militarism and ecological catastrophe. We first see Marti reading in the family car, isolated from dad, stepmom, and brother. (Marti never makes the distinction that Andy is only her stepbrother; he's always her brother and she spends half the movie risking her own life to save him from the pods. In this movie the children have a better sense of what family should be than most adults.) At the next army post on Steve's list of possible polluters, Marti hooks up with Jenn, the punk daughter of the post commander. Jenn's mom is drunk, passed out on the couch as Jenn mocks social etiquette and formally introduces Marti to her. "Mom's an alcoholic. That means I'll probably be one too," Jenn says, finishing her mother's drink. You might escape the pods, but you can't escape your family. In Santa Mira in the fifties, we saw pods being distributed from the back of a truck on Main Street. In San Francisco in the seventies pods were kept in a greenhouse from which they were sent on to the rest of the country. But in the nineties soldiers take them out of a swamp (possibly polluted from all the toxic chemicals on the base) when they're ready to replace human beings. It's not just an unlucky coincidence that the water around the post is good for growing body snatchers. These chemicals were always meant for killing. ("You don't know a thing about chemical warfare, do you, Dr. Malone?" the commander asks the scientist.) Once the pods have taken over the post, the commander gives truck drivers their assignments - - transporting pods to other military bases from which the invasion will spread. The army itself is a family, like the race of pods. When the pods happened upon the army post, they found a family that already had an ethic of individuals subordinating their welfare to the goals of the group. Individual death means nothing. At the end of the movie, Marti and Tim (a young helicopter pilot Marti's become attracted to) take their (perhaps futile) revenge against the invaders for destroying their families.
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| 13. New Rose Hotel Director: Abel Ferrara | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (30)
Well, "New Rose Hotel" is the type of film that exists in the twilight zone between films that are so bad they're painful to watch, and films that are so bad they're a laugh riot. The story has something to do with two cyber-pirates (Walken & Dafoe) who hire Asia Argento to fall in love with a prestigious Japanese scientist, and collect a large sum of money in the process. The events unfold with a maximum of confusion and even when things actually seem to be making sense, they just get confusing again. That's not to say "New Rose Hotel" is ALL bad. Sterling Video, which released this specimen, is a company pretty notorious for pushing out low-budget, bill-paying dreck featuring brand-name stars under the radar of the mainstream so as to pass unnoticed to the library shelves at your local video store. And this is no exception. While Walken and Dafoe bring trademark professionalism to their nothing roles, you know this wasn't a movie made for Academy Award consideration. Ferrara, however, seems to have given up hope after filming, allowing the editor to piece together what little story there was using the gimmick of close-circuit cameras for stylistic value. And Asia Argento, it must be said, is an AMAZINGLY bad actress who would have no career if she wasn't the daughter of Italain director Dario Argento; she mumbles her lines to the point where you won't be able to make out what she's saying (not a bad thing, considering this film makes good use of her physical assets). "New Rose Hotel" is a low-budget, confusing mess that would be completely forgettable without the presence of Walken and Dafoe. Some scenes retain a sense of style, but other than that this is a lost cause. If you're compelled to rent this, go in with your expectations low and it'll pass easier.
Many complained that they didn't understand what was going on. Sucks for them, I guess they just aren't very bright I know I watched it, and had no trouble seeing what was going on. I read the book afterward, and thought it was quite a well-done adaptation, though I would have thought that they could have come up with a better william gibson story to do a movie of, considering the brevity of this particular one, and the abundance of other stories out there, many of which are considerably longer.
As a story, New Rose Hotel is to be honest way to short to even contemplate making a movie out of it. There's just not enough there and when I watch the movie, it shows immensely. Dafoe and Walken are 2 of my favourite actors and there performance together I found to be of good status. What this movie needed to do was give the viewer a good explanation as to the status of the society , this different world, basically an atmosphere. Instead it gives you a blurred corporate scene and then your thrown into a bar with women that can't sing and the 2 main characters forcing themselves to make out there enjoying the poor entertainment. The exchanging of information should have been more secretive and when people wispered in others ears you should have been given a zoom on that audio. Then there was the main guts of the story, with the nano technologist. This was what could have been the movies saviour, alas it was brushed over and the conversations where the main focus of the movie. This brings me to my last annoyance. The person in charge of camera directing should have been .... Instead of seeing people interacting together at important sections of the story, you got terrible close ups of single faces that were below amateur quality and destracted you from the dialogue. All in all Gibson should have written extra material for the movie and a lot more should have been spent on atmosphere to enhance the intrigue of the story, even if it meant getting more cost effective actors. ...I like to end with a positive note, and the only one I can make as far as capturing the story goes, is that the end scene that Dafoe acted out at the end was effective enough. If your like me and a fan of William Gibson and these two great actors, you may want this movie as part of your collection, but I tell you now, after your first viewing it's one that will sit and gather dust very quickly.
Like many of Gibson's stories, this is hardly science fiction-- in fact, it's more purely noir than many other more noir-y looking films that come to mind. As such, it's about money, love, betrayal, women, memory, machismo--that sort of stuff. Having read the story after seeing the film, I'd almost say the movie was better, while still being true to Gibson's spirit: less of the narrator's whiny voice, more Fox; more mystery, less pseudo-futuristic-cosmopolitanism. And a much better finish. The best part is really the much-maligned last quarter, which in its memory flashbacks leads you to discover for yourself who betrayed whom and why. The conclusion, if you care about these sorts of issues at all, is really quite sad and moving. Not knowing when it would end, I jumped up close to the TV to hear Argento's reply to Dafoe's last line. To end there shows that these guys knew what they were doing. ... Read more | |
| 14. Crime Story (Pilot Episode) Director: Gary Sinise, Michael Mann, David Jackson, Bill Duke, Leon Ichaso, Colin Bucksey, Paul Krasny, Peter Medak, David Soul, Mimi Leder, Eugene Corr, Robert Dalva, Abel Ferrara, Alan Myerson, John Nicolella, James A. Contner, Francis Delia, Mark Rosner, James Quinn, Jan Eliasberg | |
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