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Ric Review

Cliffhanger

Cliffhanger In his ongoing, career long effort to refine the art of mindless action movies into that of a respectable form of entertainment, Sylvester Stallone tried many different things and many different concepts, usually from his own original screenplays but he was also not above taking the work of other writers and giving it his […]

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A Clockwork Orange

Clockwork Orange Without a doubt the greatest of all of Stanley Kubrick’s Masterpieces (and that says a HELL of a lot), this 1971 milestone about how a teenage hoodlum (Malcolm McDowell), whose prime interests are rape, ultraviolence, and Beethoven, is captured, sent to prison, and then “cured” through a specialized conditioning / brainwashing technique, only […]

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Close Encounters Of The Third Kind

Close Encounters Of The Third Kind: Director’s Cut Best remembered today as one of Steven Spielberg’s “calling card” films (along with Jaws, Raiders, and E.T.) that established him as THE premier blockbuster director, one can look back at this movie from 1977 and be forced to acknowledge that, along with not aging all that well, […]

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Club Paradise

Club Paradise This 1986 comedy, a reunion of the director and writer of the Immortal Classic Caddyshack, can best be chalked up as a monumental failure, a project with a promising cast and premise, that bombs mostly because it’s just not funny at all.  This viewer counted maybe 4 separate occasions during the movie that […]

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Clue

Clue The story concept of having a bunch of various characters gathered together in a old, dark spooky mansion is one that has been around since the days of silent movies (usually involving some sort of nefarious schemes) and many of the oldschool detective stories also embraced the idea of the detective gathering all of […]

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Cobra

Cobra Sylvester Stallone was pretty much in his prime in the 80s, as he and Arnold redefined the action genre for all time.  That being said, this Sly entry from 1986 is entertaining enough despite being loaded with flaws and a lack of plausibility.  The inspiration is easy enough to figure out: Stallone intended this […]

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Cocoanuts

Cocoanuts Before movies being projected in theaters had really started to catch on with the masses, the primary form of entertainment for most people was the world of vaudeville, traveling road productions that were considered variety shows of the highest order and despite all of the singers, jugglers and other novelty acts that comprised these […]

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Collateral

Collateral Ah yes, L.A.  The City Of Angels.  It possesses an atmosphere as unique as the souls who inhabit it while still retaining an urban feel that is not quite as brick and mortar, cut and dry as its East Coast counterpart of New York City.  A place where a simple car ride for some […]

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Color Me Blood Red

Color Me Blood Red The last (and least) of H.G. Lewis’ so-called “Blood Trilogy” is also incredibly dull and slow-paced as well.  Released in 1965, it tells the story of a struggling artist who in a quest to discover his “voice” (and satisfy a very pretentious art critic) realizes that if he uses human blood […]

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Color Of Money

Color Of Money The original 1961 film The Hustler was in some ways a bit of an overrated anomaly, in that it popularized the game of pool into the mainstream while showcasing possibly a career best performance by Paul Newman as pool shark “Fast” Eddie Felson, nearly topped by Jackie Gleason’s iconic turn as rival […]