 |
 |
Format: VHS
 Sep 1998
 Rated R
 Recording Mode: Dolby Surround
 Sound: Stereo
 Closed Captioned
 96 min.
 Color
 UPC: 097363349532 |
 |
 |
| * Actual items for sale may vary from the above information and image. |
 |
|
 |
|
* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
|
View all Good Items |
|
* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
|
 |
 |
 |
Movie Description As in his 1977 film THE LATE SHOW, Robert Benton focuses on a private detective who's playing the back nine. With the passing of a quarter century, however, the director's tone had grown more somber. Paul Newman stars as the detective, Harry Ross, living in semiretirement in Santa Monica on the estate owned by his movie-star friends, Jack (Gene Hackman) and Catherine Ames (Susan Sarandon). When Harry delivers a package as a favor to Jack, he finds fellow private dick Lester Ivar (M. Emmett Walsh) dying from a bullet wound. Harry checks out Ivar's apartment, where he uncovers 20-year-old clippings relating to the disappearance of Catherine's first husband. As he tries to get to the bottom of the case, he enlists the help of a former lover, LAPD lt. Verna Hollander (Stockard Channing), and receives unsolicited assistance from feckless chauffeur Reuben Escobar (Giancarlo Esposito). Ex-cop and former studio security chief Raymond Hope (James Garner) also seems to know a thing or two about the case. Strong ensemble acting and Benton's characteristically nuanced and intelligent writing highlight this sinuous, richly textured murder mystery.
Synopsis A retired private investigator agrees to help his movie star friends and becomes embroiled in a dangerous and complex murder mystery.
Industry Reviews "...[A] mesmerizing mood piece..." Rolling Stone - p.74 - Peter Travers
"...[The filmmakers capture] haunting moods, not to mention the near unbearably beautiful shades of chartreuse green and almost poison red that infiltrate the evening sky in Southern California..." Sight and Sound - p.63-4 - Robin Dougherty
"...Vivid performances, especially the one by the now raspy-voiced Newman, eloquently deliberate..." Entertainment Weekly - p.78 - David Everitt
"...Mr. Newman still has the wisecracking vigor and panache that have always shaped his screen roles. He inhabits his shrewd, world-weary character with the ease that only lifelong movie stardom can bring..." New York Times - p.E22 - Janet Maslin
"...[A] tart-tongued murder mystery..." Premiere - p.18 - Christine Spines
"...No one on screen has aged better than Newman....His eyes remain flinty and hypnotic and his ability to be a hero even in repose remains unimpaired..." Los Angeles Times - Kenneth Turan (03/06/1998)
|
 |
|