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Post by moviemouth on May 4, 2020 5:35:54 GMT
 The legendary true-story of Capt. Richard Francis Burton and Lt. John Hanning Speke's tumultuous expedition to find the source of the Nile river. Roger Ebert review - www.rogerebert.com/reviews/mountains-of-the-moon-1990Cinematography by Roger Deakins    Score composed by Michael Small
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Post by wmcclain on May 4, 2020 11:11:21 GMT
Mountains of the Moon (1990), directed by Bob Rafelson. The filmed on location epic of Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke in their expeditions to central Africa, searching for the source of the Nile river. (As Burton says: It's wrong to say we discovered the source of the Nile; Africans had already discovered it long before). Exploration involves a lot of suffering: combat wounds, insects, disease. I don't know if it was intended, but the pastoral herdsman locals are often friendly, but the more advanced kingdoms are not. Civilization can be a negative indicator of hospitality. It doesn't have traditional plot acts or dramatic beats. The two men are friends but often don't get along; this is worse back in England when factions take sides in their disputes. The film hints at attraction between them that they may not realize themselves. A maverick Victorian, Burton (played by Patrick Bergin ( Patriot Games (1992)) was one of the great adventurers of his age. Polyglot, prolific author, traveler to forbidden cities and translator of forbidden books. Iain Glen has an early role as Speke, and Delroy Lindo is an escaped slave who we first meet when he is menaced by lions. Fiona Shaw is Burton's love interest back in England, later his wife. If you've ever wanted to see Aunt Petunia from Harry Potter nude, this is your chance. Director Rafelson began in quirky independent films like Head (1968), Five Easy Pieces (1970), The King of Marvin Gardens (1972) and Stay Hungry (1976). He went through a thriller phase -- The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981) and Black Widow (1987) -- before finding his way to this historical epic. Photographed by Roger Deakins ( Barton Fink (1991), The Hudsucker Proxy (1994), Stormy Monday (1988)). My thumbnails are from an early DVD of poor quality. As far as I know this is the only disc edition we have: a flipper with 4:3 cropped on one side and non-anamorphic widescreen on the other. No proper subtitles, but it has the old Closed Captions if you can deal with those. We don't get many on-location historically-based adventures and I hope someday we could have a better home video edition. 
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Post by theravenking on May 4, 2020 11:55:15 GMT
There is a Spanish blu-ray available.
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Post by politicidal on May 4, 2020 12:24:40 GMT
Saw it a couple years ago and really liked it. It's a thoughtful and rousing true-life adventure movie. Patrick Bergin was very good in this so was Iain Glen. And who knew Aunt Petunia was so hot back in the day? 8/10.
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Post by moviemouth on May 4, 2020 16:42:07 GMT
Mountains of the Moon (1990), directed by Bob Rafelson. It doesn't have traditional plot acts or dramatic beats. The two men are friends but often don't get along; this is worse back in England when factions take sides in their disputes. The film hints at attraction between them that they may not realize themselves.
Those are some of the reasons the movie is so powerful for me. It is unlike any historical epic I have seen before. I watched it for the first time last night and it made such an impression that after I noticed it only has 3,000 votes on IMDB I felt the need to recommend it to everybody here. I intended to rent it streaming on Amazon Prime, but it was only available to buy streaming for $4.99. It is well worth it imo.
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Post by politicidal on May 4, 2020 16:53:37 GMT
wmcclain no regrets! She was hot in this movie. There, I said it.
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Post by rudeboy on May 5, 2020 5:47:52 GMT
I saw it back in the day - I remember it had some very good reviews although it didn't make much money, back during the twenty minutes when Patrick Bergin seemed destined to be a big star. I enjoyed it and have always meant to watch it again one of these days.
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Post by OldAussie on May 5, 2020 8:57:30 GMT
My 1990 ratings -
1. Miller's Crossing 2. Mountains of the Moon
really excellent and highly recommended.
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