Categories
Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos Sports (TV & Videos) TV Series WWF/WWE (Pro Wrestling)

“THE TOTAL PACKAGE” LEX LUGER & DIAMOND DALLAS PAGE VS. “MACHO MAN” RANDY SAVAGE (WITH ELIZABETH) & WCW WORLD CHAMPION “BIG SEXY” KEVIN NASH (WITH “HOLLYWOOD” HULK HOGAN) (WCW Thunder: Taped January 15, 1998)

SUMMARY:                       RUNNING TIME: 9:14 Min.

Recorded on the January 15, 1998 edition of WCW Thunder, this tag team match’s location isn’t identified.  “The Total Package” Lex Luger opts to go it alone without his already-injured partner, Diamond Dallas Page.  As for the nefarious New World Order (NWO) faction, “Macho Man” Randy Savage (with Elizabeth) isn’t getting along with his own partner, WCW World Champion “Big Sexy” Kevin Nash. 

Despite lingering issues with his longtime Mega-Powers cohort, “Hollywood” Hulk Hogan is present as a mediator between Savage and Nash.  Inflaming the situation further is The Giant (Paul Wight) and seemingly the entire NWO horde.

The ringside commentators are Bobby “The Brain” Heenan, “Iron” Mike Tenay, & Lee Marshall.      

Note: The match’s short running time includes ring entrances.

REVIEW:

The match-up is potentially good, but the result is predictable WCW TV dreck.  Having Page play injured and thereby subject to more of the NWO’s ringside gang abuse (without ever tagging in) proves pointless.  Though Luger supplies a welcome amount of offense, this bout’s purpose is strictly to sell nothing more than NWO internal dissension.  Seeing Savage & Nash turn on each other is fun (beyond Luger’s contributions), but the rest is pure WCW trash.  Backfiring as comedy, Hogan’s ridiculously overplayed facial expression realizing that the formidable Giant is standing behind him in the ring is proof enough.    

Even worse, the long-mandatory WCW non-finish where the entire NWO storms the ring (this time, against The Giant) instantly renders this match’s impressive star power inconsequential.  The fact that fans are cheated out of anything close to a watchable finish is, of course, besides the point.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       2 Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE

Categories
Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

CRAZY LIKE A FOX: FOX HUNT (Season 1, Episode 8)

SUMMARY:                            RUNNING TIME: 45:00 Min.

CBS first televised this Bob Sweeney-directed episode on March 3, 1985.  After an aborted car chase, private detective Harry Fox (Warden) is in a San Francisco hospital, now immobilized with a broken arm and leg.  In the middle of the night, a semi-conscious, drugged-up Harry witnesses his surly roommate (Carlson) being suffocated by a professional hitman (Zee). Otherwise eerily silent, this assassin’s sole ‘trademark’ is a distinctive limp in the form of a dragging foot. 

Only Cindy (Peyser) initially believes her father-in-law’s outlandish claim, as she prods a skeptical Harrison (Rubinstein) into pursuing leads on this supposed culprit.  Meanwhile, with their young son (Kiger) away on a ski trip, Harrison & Cindy cope with a wonky electrician’s (Howell) decimation of their home. 

Realizing that their quarry is far out of his attorney son and daughter-in-law’s league, Harry, with help from his favorite cronies (Kirby & Manza), tries slipping out of the hospital and evading his supercilious nurse (Reese).  To protect his family, Harry finally urges Harrison & Cindy to back off, unaware that the elusive killer intends to invade their home to silence them.   

Harry Fox, Sr.: Jack Warden

Harrison K. Fox, Jr.: John Rubinstein

Cindy Fox: Penny Peyser

Josh Fox: Robby Kiger

Mrs. Flood (Nurse Flood): Della Reese

Herbert Lowe: John A. Zee

Manny: George Kirby

Papa John: Ralph Manza

Nurse Janet: LaGena Hart (aka LaGena Lookabill Greene)

Electrician (Schafer): Hoke Howell

Lt. Conley: Robert Hanley

Riley: Steve Carlson

Mrs. Riley: Bernadette Williams

Police Officer: Mark Solinger

Mr. Pancrest: Fred Carney

Hospital Clerk: Lewis Dauber

Motorcycle Bandit: Unidentified Stuntman

REVIEW:

Watchable on a level somewhere between average and mediocre, “Fox Hunt” opts for formulaic TV pap vs. any semblance of originality.  Even the pratfall by which the killer will be inevitably snared is telegraphed practically with blinking lights.  Still, what the ultra-predictable “Fox Hunt” has going for it is likability: a trait that this classy ensemble (especially Peyser, Reese, & Rubinstein) exudes, as far as sharing light comedic repartee.  The show’s good production values also partially compensate for such a rudimentary script.    

Though “Fox Hunt” is easily forgettable, its harmless entertainment value ensures at least one decent viewing.  In that sense, the undemanding Crazy Like a Fox bridges viewer demographics between fans of buddy action shows (i.e. Hardcastle & McCormick) to TV programs closer in spirit to Murder, She Wrote.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:          4½ Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Digital Movies & TV International/Foreign-Language Films Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos

AND THEN THERE WERE NONE {aka AGATHA CHRISTIE’S TEN LITTLE INDIANS} (1974)

SUMMARY:                     RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 38 Min.

Directed by Peter Collinson, producer Harry Alan Towers’ second remake of the same-named 1945 film now shifts Agatha Christie’s legendary whodunnit to an empty luxury hotel deep in the Iranian desert. 

Like the two cinematic adaptations before it (1945 and 1965), the movie is set in the present day, with various character names, nationalities, and/or their crimes loosely altered from Christie’s novel (as well as her own stage play adaptation) to better accommodate the cast.  Still, there’s no mistaking that Towers relies heavily upon the 1965 film’s script.

For instance, secretary ‘Vera Claythorne’ (the novel & the 1945 film) becomes 1965’s ‘Ann Clyde’ and now ‘Vera Clyde.’ Condescending British spinster Emily Brent (the novel & the 1945 film) is replaced by a conceited German film actress (1965) and then an equally conceited French actress (1974). The novel’s obnoxiously stupid British playboy Anthony Marston becomes a boozy, free-loading Russian expatriate for the 1945 film before transforming into Fabian’s obnoxious 1965 pop-rock star. For 1974, Fabian’s ‘Michael Raven’ is re-imagined as Charles Aznavour’s smarmy French pianist, ‘Michel Raven.’  Similar revamps further apply to the general, the ex-police detective, and the married servants. 

Transported by helicopter to an abandoned Iranian resort hotel two hundred miles from civilization, eight European strangers ostensibly attend a private house party.  Left to entertain themselves, the guests and a married servant couple are mortified by accusations of ghastly crimes from the ominously recorded voice of their absent host, ‘U.N. Owen.’ 

Loosely adhering to the “Ten Little Indians” nursery rhyme (a copy of which appears in each guest room), the ten captives are then targeted for death, one by one.  Alliances are inevitably made, but can anyone evade a predator’s vengeful wrath?   

Hugh Lombard: Oliver Reed                                                               

Vera Clyde: Elke Sommer  

Judge Arthur Cannon: Richard Attenborough                                     

Dr. Edward Armstrong: Herbert Lom

Ilona Morgan: Stéphane Audran

Wilhelm Blore: Gert Fröbe

General André Salvé: Adolfo Celi

Otto Martino: Alberto De Mendoza                         

Elsa Martino: Maria Rohm

Michel Raven: Charles Aznavour (Note: the character’s name is a slight tweaking of the same role Fabian played in the 1965 film.)

U.N. Owen’s Voice: Orson Welles

Notes: Serial shlock film producer Harry Alan Towers bizarrely filmed And Then There Were None (aka Ten Little Indians) three times in a quarter-century: the other instances being 1965 and 1989.  Set in a wintry chalet in the Alps, the headliners for his 1965 black-and-white potboiler are Hugh O’Brian, Goldfinger’s Shirley Eaton, & Fabian (suffice to say, the pop star’s death scene is laughably amateurish). 

Towers’ low-rent 1989 rehash shifts Christie’s plot to a 1930’s South African safari camp, with Lom now playing the General and Sylvester Stallone’s kid brother, Frank, cast as the macho Lombard. Though it is Towers’ worst-produced rendition, ironically, the 1989 film sports two advantages over his two previous efforts: 1. Christie’s original character names, crimes, etc. are mostly kept intact; and 2. In spite of eye-rolling ineptitude, this South African caper tries to invoke the gore and the captives’ growing sense of terror, as described in the novel. 

Yet, of Towers’ increasingly muddled remakes, none of them bothers imitating the 1945 film’s classy, almost spoofy sense of humor.

REVIEW:

Impressing no one, producer/co-writer Harry Alan Towers lazily resorts to a script mash-up plundering the original 1945 film and, even more so, his own 1965 remake (entitled Ten Little Indians”).  Beyond an authentic Iranian locale, this 1974 version’s other distinction is a diverse, heavily-accented European cast – many of them possessing famous credits.  The bleak reality, however, is that the hotel’s musty furniture is more compelling to stare at for ninety minutes than witnessing this half-hearted ensemble bore viewers to death. 

Aside from zero romantic chemistry percolating between Reed’s creepy Lombard and Sommer’s Vera, only Aznavour briefly manages to affect a welcome ounce of charisma.  Like two iconic Bond villains (Fröbe & Celi) in this same cast, even the reliable Lom merely winces his way through the motions, so to speak. 

Worse yet, it’s unsurprising that the ominous psychology permeating Christie’s novel is again disregarded in this retelling.  Tiresomely lacking necessary depth and even basic logic (i.e. an explanation for the culprit’s international scheme), this would-be whodunnit translates as cinematic cardboard. 

Let’s rate the four film adaptations this way: directed by René Clair, 1945’s black-and-white And Then There Were None merits 8 or 9 stars as a clever black comedy with a game cast of character actors – even in its worst moments, the original movie falls to maybe a 7.  1965’s black-and-white Ten Little Indians (Towers’ first remake) hovers between 5 and 7 stars, as crass violence and dull performances replace the original movie’s viewer-friendly charm.

No matter how dubiously, this ultra-bland 1974 adaptation only surpasses Towers’ rock-bottom 1989 cheapo due to its better production values. It’s an instance of Hollywood’s slippery slope to mediocrity; by spawning far too many remakes, Christie’s surefire source material for a big-screen suspense thriller is gradually reduced to unwatchable dreck.

Ultimately, 1974’s And Then There Were None should be viewed at one’s own peril.  This unrepentant snooze-fest ensures that viewers won’t be getting back the 98 minutes (or any other price of admission) spent on it.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  3½ Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE