T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
237.1 | Movie or "made for TV movie"? | 12368::michaud | Jeff Michaud, DECnet/OSI | Tue Jul 06 1993 14:04 | 3 |
| Was this a real movie? I thought this was a so called
"made for TV movie" (ie. take a 1/2 hour plot, stretch it to
2 hours and call it a movie) on FOX TV network last night?
|
237.2 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Tue Jul 06 1993 14:10 | 14 |
| >>Was this a real movie?
Yes, oh you mean did it play in a theater? No.
I think lots of TV movies have "come a long way baby" in providing good
entertainment/information. Though I myself shy away from TV movies, not
due to a supposed lack of quality just can't sit still for 2-3 hours
:^}
So, since I didn't get to see this, but I saw the ads, I was wondering
what others thought of it. I did see Groundhog Day and found the
seemingly infinite loop intriguing.
JT
|
237.3 | needless haste | RAGMOP::KEEFE | | Tue Jul 06 1993 15:38 | 13 |
| Compared to Groundhog Day...
..I thought it came out much the worse. His need to get out of the loop
as fast as possible seemed unnecessary. He could have taken several
'detours' as did Bill Murray in the movie. Specifically, his rush to
the finish line, when he literally had all the time in the world, meant
the unnecessary death of Denk the other scientist. As soon as he heard
the news he should have relaxed for the rest of the evening and tried
again in the morning. A few dozen more times and he could have gained
all of his goals easily.
Neil
|
237.4 | | WECARE::LYNCH | Bill Lynch | Tue Jul 06 1993 16:02 | 7 |
| This was a 1/2 hour "made for TV movie" that I think was on the
Showtime network.
I read in yesterday's Boston Globe that it is being expanded into
a full-length theatrical release. Re-written, re-cast, re-filmed.
-- Bill
|
237.5 | | 33018::KOCH | It never hurts to ask... | Tue Jul 06 1993 17:56 | 2 |
| No, this was a 2-hour made-for-TV-movie which is part of the FOX
network's expansion into being the 4th network.
|
237.6 | Maybe... | 15377::DEMON::COURT | Everybody thought it was a dog. | Wed Jul 07 1993 09:58 | 4 |
| According to TV Guide, though, it was based on a short film of the same
name - perhaps from Showtime?
Mike
|
237.7 | Not the same movie | 28218::PETERS | Be nice or be dog food | Wed Jul 07 1993 10:41 | 9 |
| I think the two movies are difficult to compare. Groundhog day in a
romantic comedy and 12:01 is a romantic thriller. The reason he rushed
through the film is because each day he saw the woman he love killed,
annoying to say the least. Another big difference is Bill Murry's
character went through a dark period and committed suicide a number of
times before the end of the movie. Ron Silvers' character just enters
his dark phase when his mother wakes him up and he decide he must get
it right this time.
Jeff Peters
|
237.8 | the short story came first | 22364::SHERMAN | empowerment requires truth | Wed Jul 07 1993 13:21 | 22 |
| This was an adaptation and expansion of "12:01," which appeared on pay
for view last year as a 30 minute shortie, and was, in turn, a film
adaptation of a short story of the same name by a fellow named Luboff.
"Ground Hog Day" was written and produced well after the story "12:01."
The original 30 minute version was, in my opinion, much punchier and
pithier. It involves a fellow who finds himself standing at the curb of
a busy street in downstown, at 12:01 PM. The "time bounce" theory is
introduced via a newspaper headline. In this version, he 'bounces' every
1:00pm, back to 12:01pm, giving him the same hour to relive over and
over. And despite taking ever greater chances each time, including
murder and then suicide, the show ends with him again standing at the
curbside, at 12:01, finding that he is indeed hopelessly trapped for
eternity in the same hour. It was a very powerful show.
The expanded "12:01" on FOX was entertaining, but not in the same class
(which I guess is common when a 30 minute great show gets stretched to
120 minutes).
ken
|
237.9 | The 30 minute version is a must-see | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Take me for a little while | Thu Jul 08 1993 14:44 | 9 |
| I agree re. the short film. Kurtwood Smith was extraordinary as the
man caught in the loop in the 30 minute movie. Jonathan Silverman
comes off as a confused bumbler, not someone emotionally wrought over
the implications that the situation present him with. The Fox movie
was entertaining, and Helen Slater was wonderful as the female
scientist/ love interest, but I strongly recommend the 30 minute
version to everyone.
NAZZ
|
237.10 | That's the guy | 22364::SHERMAN | empowerment requires truth | Thu Jul 08 1993 14:53 | 4 |
| Kurtwood Smith. Thanks -- couldn't remember his name. Most will
remember him as the crazed criminal ringleader in "Robocop."
|
237.11 | Other K.S> | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Thu Jul 08 1993 15:06 | 7 |
|
Or the father in Dead Poet's Society
Or the head cop in Oscar
(which, admittedly, might not be as memorable)
DFW
|
237.12 | GD vs 12:01 | DECWET::HAYNES | | Thu Jul 15 1993 18:34 | 13 |
| I enjoyed 12:01 completely. I agree that the agent's death was
unneccesary, and could have been rectified, but then I'm pretty sure he
was meant as a throw-away character from the start. The only thing
I didn't care about in Groundhog Day was the character Bill Murray
played, which seemed to be the same typecast he always plays; stuck on
himself, me me me person. 10 years and I still don't know if I like the
actor because he's always the same in any of the movies I see him in.
Also, I think the pair in 12:01 seemed a better match than the pair in
Groundhog Day. (OK, I know realistically that the oddest people can be
happy together, but these are movies, so I can get away with
stereotyping. Can't I?)
MBH
|
237.15 | 12:01 on video | 10529::HAYNES | | Mon Sep 12 1994 15:04 | 5 |
| I just saw the other day a made-for TV movie called 12:01 starring
Helen Slater and a guy that I can't think of the name for, on video.
I kind of liked this Groundhog Day rehashed movie... :)
Michael
|
237.16 | Moved by mod (who's just pickled tink) | 7892::BUSY::SLABOUNTY | I smell T-R-O-U-B-L-E | Mon Sep 12 1994 20:08 | 9 |
|
RE: .8
Excellent movie!! Saw it sometime last year on cable [USA?].
Jonathan Silverman, maybe?
GTI
|
237.17 | Good flick... | 10529::HAYNES | | Tue Sep 13 1994 15:48 | 6 |
| Actually, my wording was sort of off... I saw the video (literally)
recently, I saw the movie on TV when it first broadcast.. hehehe
It was enjoyable, wasn't it? <G>
Michael
|
237.18 | | BIS1::64150::SPINETTE | May the Force be with you... | Wed Dec 21 1994 09:00 | 8 |
| For info :
12:01 PM has won the "Prize/Award of the Audience" during
the 12th International Festival of Science-Fiction, Thriller
and Fantasy film, held on Brussels (Belgium) in March 1994.
The director - Jack Sholder - went to present the movie and
was also member of the jury.
Philippe.
|
237.19 | loose end | DONVAN::KEEFE | | Wed Dec 28 1994 16:19 | 10 |
| It's been a while since I've seen this, but this reply reminded me of
something that bugged me about the film, which is a spoiler...
The nasty co-worker, who turned out to be a good guy after all, was
killed on the last day. Since the hero had all the time in the world,
he should have stopped trying at that point, made a note, and tried
again the next day. With practice he should have been able to walk
through the entire day and gotten out of the loop while saving the
co-worker's life.
|
237.13 | I think it was a Showtime 30 minute movie | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Barros > Douglas | Wed Nov 29 1995 11:24 | 3 |
| 12:01 was tremendous! Starred Kurtwood Smith, I believe.
NAZZ
|
237.14 | Moderator message | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | We Await Silent Tristero's Empire | Wed Nov 29 1995 20:22 | 3 |
| The next 5 Notes are moved here from a duplicate topic (646).
- Dave, yer mod
|