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Post by janntosh on Jun 21, 2021 15:39:42 GMT
was sandwiched between Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and Terminator 2 that summer. Have yet to watch this but know it has a large cult following of fans who love it.
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Post by Archelaus on Jun 21, 2021 16:14:59 GMT
I really like it as a fun, retro adventure comic book film. It needed a stronger lead with more personality. Other than that, I'm amazed at the visual effects while Timothy Dalton and Jennifer Connelly were superb in their roles.
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Post by mstreepsucks on Jun 21, 2021 16:26:59 GMT
Well it's almost as good as superhero films of today.
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Post by Prime etc. on Jun 21, 2021 16:34:58 GMT
People have said-why didnt it do well when Indiana Jones did? Indiana Jones was not really set in the 1930s--they were out in the jungle etc--this movie is totally set in the 1930s.
The lead is boring--I can't remember anything he said or did that was interesting--Dalton is the most compelling person in the movie. Him and the Rhondo Hatton lookalike. Connelly--they covered her up as much as possible.
I forgot WC Fields was in it too. I didn't know he was still active.
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Post by vegalyra on Jun 21, 2021 18:08:38 GMT
Great film, part of a pretty big wave of superhero and comic book films mostly set in the 1930s. Rocketeer, Shadow, Phantom, and Dick Tracy all showed up around the same time. It was a fun period. Rocketeer is probably my favorite of them, Dalton is in impressive form, and the romance story is good between Connelly and Campbell. I particularly like the animated film that Hughes and the FBI show to the protagonists, it was extremely well done and looks very period correct.
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Post by wmcclain on Jun 21, 2021 20:12:51 GMT
The Rocketeer (1991), directed by Joe Johnston. When a jet pack developed by aviation mogul Howard Hughes is stolen, gangsters, G-Men, nazis and one screen idol are all after it. It falls into the hands of a stunt pilot and his partner who have all sorts of damn heroic adventures before they are done with it. Sometimes these retro-adventure stories work, but sometimes they don't. I like this one but wish it were better. Critics gave it good reviews at the time but it didn't find much of an audience, so no sequels. It's too sweet and excessively Disneyfied. It was in development for a long time and the best ideas were jettisoned. For example, lovely Jennifer Connelly's character was originally inspired by nude model Bettie Page. No way! The narrative goes slack from time to time; maybe editing changes or a little more script doctoring would have helped. Timothy Dalton does a deliciously villainous interpretation of Errol Flynn, nazi spy. There actually was a biography of Flynn claiming that. A more serious biographer called the notion "pathetic", and author/actor Jim Beaver said of the writer: "I wouldn't trust him if he said the sun rose this morning". Dalton's best line: "I'm going to miss Hollywood". He then flies away but falls to his death on the HOLLYWOODLAND sign, obliterating just the LAND part. Alan Arkin's dirt-kicking accent is hard to take. Terry O'Quinn fanclub! He's a sane Howard Hughes. Always good to see Jon Polito. Some rather good aviation stunts. Finally, when we first saw this my wife said of Jennifer Connelly: "Her breasts cannot be that large!" A little later: "Well maybe they are". James Horner score. Available on Blu-ray.
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Post by politicidal on Jun 21, 2021 20:31:04 GMT
I love this movie quite a bit.
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Post by sdrew13163 on Jun 21, 2021 20:50:19 GMT
I need to watch this again soon. It’s very good.
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Post by Ass_E9 on Jun 21, 2021 21:28:28 GMT
I expected it to be corny as h*ll, but it was far better put together than, say, The Shadow and probably that one with Billy Zane in purple spandex.
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Post by ck100 on Jun 21, 2021 22:14:22 GMT
Still an entertaining heroic adventure film.
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Post by phantomparticle on Jun 21, 2021 22:58:02 GMT
I think it's a splendid movie. I love just about everything about that decade, the music, the movies, the stars and the gangsters who roamed the mid west. Yeah, it was a terrible ten years, too, sandwiched between The Depression and WWII, but we have a tendency to envision the world before we were born as larger than life, which is what this film does to the nth degree. Combining historical figures and incidents with fictional characters is tricky. They hit the right tone with this one.
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Post by Prime etc. on Jun 22, 2021 0:18:27 GMT
I notice Campbell isn't getting praise.
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Post by FridayOnElmStreet on Jun 22, 2021 6:53:29 GMT
7/10 Nice film.
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