Posts Tagged ‘1980s’

Inspector Morse

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The comedy stylings of Lewis and Morse.

The comedy stylings of Lewis and Morse.

Series 1

The Dead of Jericho (6 January 1987)

Written by Anthony Minghella (based on Colin Dexter’s novel). Directed by Alastair Reid.

Morse (John Thaw) meets a woman, Ann Staveley (Gemma Jones), in his choir. When she’s found dead of an apparent suicide, Morse suspects murder and, with the help of Sergeant Lewis (Kevin Whately), sets out to prove it.

Like most Morses, the plot in this début tends toward meandering a bit and, really, that’s the way it should be. Thaw is fantastic, as usual, and Minghella’s script captures the melancholy of Dexter’s novels well. Reid’s directing does the job just fine, though the 16mm grain does grate a bit. It’s amazing they got their eye in so quick.  [...]

The Die Hard Tetralogy

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Die Hard (1988)


John McClane (Bruce Willis) is at an office Christmas party when the building is taken over by terrorist. One of the best action films of all time. Bruce Willis is superb as the prototypical American hero, and Alan Rickman hams it up as the “terrorist” leader. It’s the film that pretty much created the modern action film, and it’s sure a fun ride.
Rating: ★★★★☆

Die Hard 2: Die Harder (1990)


Or: Die Hard in an airport. Follows the Aliens dictum for sequels: if you can’t make it better, make it louder. And it’s certainly action-packed, but it’s let down by the ludicrous plot and the sometimes headache-inducing editing. Still, it’s fun to watch Bruce Willis reenact the American Monomyth again, and Harlin does know how to shoot an explosion.
Rating: ★★½☆☆

Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995)


This time, Willis gets some help from Samuel L. Jackson as they play a deadly game of Simon Says all over New York City. Even dumber than Die Harder, but the action set-pieces are still fun to watch and the Willis/Jackson dynamic is all right once they get past the initial idiocy and settle into the film.
Rating: ★★☆☆☆

Life Free or Die Hard (2007)


As is customary for Die Hard sequels, Live Free or Die Hard (worst title yet, and the rest-of-the-world version, Die Hard 4.0, isn’t much better) is dumb but fun. It’s basically a series of effects sequences strung together by something that is almost but not entirely unlike an intelligent plot.
Rating: ★★½☆☆

Overall Rating: ★★★☆☆

Fletch (1985)

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Chevy Chase proves, once again, that cocaine is a hell of a drug.

Chevy Chase proves, once again, that cocaine is a hell of a drug.

Fletch (Chevy Chase) is an undercover reporter, trying to expose drug ring at the beach. One day, Fletch is approached by Alan Stanwyk (Tim Matheson) who claims to be dying of cancer and wants Fletch to kill him. Fletch, immediately suspicious and sensing an opportunity to put on a great many disguises and make a great many snarky comments, turns his muck-raking eye on Stanwyk and starts to unravel the tangled connections between the drug ring and Stanwyk.  [...]

Ator l’invincibile 2 (1984)

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Also known as Cave Dwellers and The Blade Master.
Written and Directed by Joe D’Amato.

If there was a script for this movie, I doubt whether anyone involved had actually seen it; the movie doesn’t seem to know in what time period it’s set, and the actors mostly walk around looking slightly confused and talking really, really, really slowly. If you like bad movies, this is the movie for you. Otherwise, stay way. Far away.

Rating: ★½☆☆☆

(Add two stars if you’re watching the MST3K version.)

La Morte Vivante

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Also known as The Living Dead Girl (Jean Rollin, 1982).

In this Rollin classic, Catherine (Françoise Blanchard) is raised from the dead by a toxic spill, and returns to her old home, where, protected by her childhood “blood sister”, Hélène (Marina Pierro), she goes on a killing spree.  [...]