T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
489.1 | ROMPER STOMPER ? | 27884::CARTER | | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:37 | 6 |
| You might be thinking about the film ROMPER STOMPER, which has gotten a
lot of rave reviews. It is a film about Nazi skinheads in Germany, I
believe. I have not rented it yet, but I have seen it in the video
store and plan to watch it some time.
Keith
|
489.2 | New movie | 31881::EGRACE | soul support | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:56 | 6 |
| No, this is a movie about an Irish family, done (I think) by the same
guy that did THE COMMITMENTS.
E Grace
|
489.3 | New Movie | 41344::SMYTH | | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:11 | 6 |
| Roddy Doyle wrote The Commitments and Alan Parker directed it.
Also Roddy Doyle wrote another book about an Irish family called The Snapper
which was turned into a moive also.
Great film full of Dublin wit and four letter words.
|
489.4 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:22 | 3 |
| "The Snapper" was directed by Stephen Frears. Very good movie.
-Stephen
|
489.5 | Thanks! | 31881::EGRACE | Flower?! What the heck's a *flower*?! | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:42 | 9 |
| AH! *THAT'S* IT!
I'll change the name of the topic now.
Any way, any idea where it can be seen in the Boston to Central Mass
area?
E Grace
|
489.6 | | 41344::SMYTH | | Thu Mar 10 1994 12:07 | 6 |
| No not really as i live in Ireland
But it is a great film.
Gavin
|
489.7 | | 31881::EGRACE | Flower?! What the heck's a *flower*?! | Thu Mar 10 1994 12:18 | 4 |
| Gee *thanks* Gavin! (*8
E grace
|
489.8 | Current Snapper showings | RANGER::CERQUA | | Thu Mar 10 1994 12:47 | 5 |
| For the Boston area: it looks like it ends tonight at the Harvard Sq.
Theater and starts tomorrow at Copley Place and at the Arlington
Capitol. It's also playing at the West Newton Cinema
- Paul
|
489.9 | Stephen... I remember you telling me about this one | 58378::P_CHAPLINSKY | | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:04 | 3 |
| Is this a newly released movie in the theaters or on video?
Patricia
|
489.10 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:28 | 4 |
| Here in Ottawa it has been playing at the Capitol Square for a few
weeks.
-Stephen
|
489.11 | very good movie | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'd fix it but I don't know how | Thu Mar 10 1994 15:18 | 8 |
| I saw it a few weeks ago in Havard Sq. and liked it a lot. It's a real
slice of life movie. None of the actors look like typical Hollywood
stars, and the acting is very good, and the situations very believable.
I especially enjoyed the performance by the actor who played the
father. It's very funny in places, too.
Lorna
|
489.12 | | 31881::EGRACE | Flower?! What the heck's a *flower*?! | Thu Mar 10 1994 15:46 | 4 |
| Thanks for the locations!
E Grace
|
489.13 | *** � | DECWET::JWHITE | decline to sign | Thu Mar 10 1994 17:13 | 8 |
|
i actually found this film rather disturbing. i mean, it's all
very funny and warm and all that, but these are really horrible
people living in a really horrible situation that is most likely
only going to become more horrible.
|
489.14 | | 42195::FIDDLERM | Higher than the Sun | Fri Mar 11 1994 04:36 | 12 |
| Re-1
Thats how life is for a lot of people.
Ths is a good film though, I don't know if anyone has plans to film The
Van, the third part of the trilogy. They had to change the name of the
family in The Snapper because Alan Parker held the right to the name
from The Commitments, and wouldn't let them use it.
Didn't the guy who played the father also play the same role in The
Commitments?
Mikef
|
489.15 | The Snapper | 41344::SMYTH | | Fri Mar 11 1994 04:58 | 9 |
| RE : Didn't the guy who played the father also play the same role in The
Commitments?
Yes it is the same actor, he also stars in Star Trek the Next Generation as the
engineer or somebody not quite sure.
Gavin
|
489.16 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Mar 11 1994 08:46 | 8 |
| >Yes it is the same actor, he also stars in Star Trek the Next Generation as the
>engineer or somebody not quite sure.
Colm Meany, better known (or so I would have thought) as Chief Miles O'Brien
formerly of the Federation starship Enterprise, now chief of operations
on space statin Deep Space 9.
- tom]
|
489.17 | A question about the film's chars. (and/or makers) | 3D::COULTER | If this typewriter can't do it, ... | Fri Mar 11 1994 09:57 | 27 |
| A question about tha movie, and perhaps how it's
being received in Ireland...
I don't know if my question would be considered a
"spoiler", so I'll ask it behind a <FF> for now.
There is nowhere in the movie a discussion by anyone
of the religious implications of the pregnancy. No
scenes with a church figure, no neighborhood talk or
gossip that's religion-based, etc. The conversation
seems almost totally slanted to "family planning" and
alternative actions. No one's religion is ever brought
up, as I recall. Would this really be true in such an
Irish neighborhood? Does the complete ABSENCE of a
religious view (Protestant, Catholic, etc.) part of
the statement being made? Because it doesn't take a
stand, is it considered (in Ireland) to be "anti-" any
particular religion?
I was just trying to place the film in broader slice of
what might be the same lives, and see what else the
writer, director, et al. may hve been trying to say.
dick
|
489.18 | Religion and unplanned pregancy | 41188::HELSOM | | Fri Mar 11 1994 12:39 | 26 |
| Re: -1
I'm only visiting Ireland, though I grew up in an Irish Catholic community in
London. I also haven't seen all of the film, though I've seen clips and read the
book. So here's my 2c worth, with caveats.
The Irish local press and to a lesser exent television and radio still talk as
though Catholic religion and ethics were all-important. But even in rural areas,
only some older people really hold to this view. Most middle class people across
Ireland, although usually raised as Catholics, are broadly liberal in the
American style (to the extent that the only prominent Irish conservative I can
think of is Sheila Lawlor, who lives in England and has acquired an English
accent.) And in Dublin, both middle-class and working-class people like those in
the film are more preoccupied with social life and staying alive.
Some of this is due to liberal Irish campaigners, like the President Mary
Robinson. But a lot of the reason must be that (particularly) middle-class Irish
people often study and work in England or America where they fit easily into the
educated and liberal middle classes.
So I'd say that the film rings true for north Dublin. But the general attitude
to women, and in particular the father's tendency to put his daughter on a
perverse pedestal, may be more signifcant than explicit religious influences in
the film.
Helen
|
489.19 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'd fix it but I don't know how | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:46 | 5 |
| re .13, Joe, I didn't think they were horrible people. In fact, I
thought the father was sort of a wonderful person really.
Lorna
|
489.20 | Made for UK TV? | SMAUG::LEHMKUHL | H, V ii 216 | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:36 | 4 |
| I think I saw this film was on the 1993 "Best TV" list
in the _Times_ (London), so I presume it was made for
television and originally aired on the box. Is this
correct? If so, there is hope for made-for-TV movies.
|
489.21 | | 42195::FIDDLERM | Higher than the Sun | Tue Mar 15 1994 03:53 | 6 |
| re-1 - yes, it was made by the BBC for TV, but shown at the movies. It
has been shown on TV in the UK, sometime last summer I think. There
have been quite a few BBC TV movies given a cinema release (recently
The Hawk, with Helen Mirren).
Mikef
|
489.22 | Risky Business | 4262::HASBROUCK | | Thu Mar 17 1994 13:14 | 9 |
| The film grated on me a bit. First, I expected a better sound track.
And for all the praises it sang to the joys of family life and
doting parents, and for the damning of dirty old men, I would have
expected some thoughtful point of view on what the film was all about -
teen pregnancy. Excuse me for pulling a Dan Quayle here. But if you're
going to roll alcohol abuse and teen promiscuity into a bale of cuteness, you'd
better be darned funny about it. Not funny enough, IMHO.
Brian
|
489.23 | | 31881::EGRACE | Really as beautiful as I seem. | Thu Mar 17 1994 13:43 | 5 |
| I didn't think it was *supposed* to be a "thoughtful movie about teen
pregnancy". I was under the impression that it was supposed to be a
movie about one family, and how they handle "something".
E Grace
|
489.24 | - | DECWET::JWHITE | real artists ship | Thu Mar 17 1994 14:09 | 5 |
|
re:.22
i agree
|
489.25 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Thu Mar 17 1994 14:25 | 9 |
| I didn't think either the drunkennness or the pregnancy was made to
seem "cute." The movie wasn't explicitly judgmental about the
characters' behaviour, but I don't think it (the behaviour) was implicitly
endorsed either. I enjoyed the movie's relative candour as well as its
colour and humour.
And I thought it was very well done.
-Stephen
|
489.26 | not sure | DECWET::JWHITE | real artists ship | Thu Mar 17 1994 14:36 | 8 |
|
i agree that it was neither judgmental nor endorsing, but i'm not
sure whether that's good filmmaking (as in, let the viewer reach
their own conclusions) or irresponsible filmmaking (as in, not
taking a stand on an important social issue).
certainly a well made and well worth watching film, however.
|
489.27 | | 31881::EGRACE | Poly and Ester Were Lovers | Tue Mar 22 1994 08:55 | 5 |
| Well, I finally saw it.
And *loved* it!
E
|
489.28 | me too | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't let the rapture pass u by | Wed Mar 23 1994 11:40 | 5 |
| re .27, E, I think the father in The Snapper was my favorite character
from any movie in 1993. I liked the movie a lot, too.
Lorna
|
489.29 | | 19007::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Mar 23 1994 12:02 | 12 |
| is this on video yet ?
I saw a bit of it on the comedy channel the other day...
(I guess a spoiler)
when he gos in to the bar to announce the birth...and the old guy at
the bar ask what was 7lbs 12oz...a turkey ? and the father replies no
its a baby...and the old guy says oh thats a good size baby, but a
small turkey !
Chris
|
489.30 | It has been releaseed on video in the Uk | 41344::SMYTH | | Thu Mar 24 1994 05:41 | 0 |
489.31 | | 31881::EGRACE | Poly and Ester Were Lovers | Thu Mar 24 1994 12:06 | 7 |
| I love the father, but the *mother* was a HOOT! Could she have been
any more laid back!
She is actually the reason I even heard of the film; I was told *I*
was in it. (*8
E
|
489.32 | showing in Wilton, NH | 3258::ROBERTS_CR | the evening sky grew dark | Wed Mar 30 1994 16:22 | 4 |
| The movie "The Snapper" is playing at the Wilton Town Hall theatre,
Wilton, NH - right now. I'm hoping to see it in the next few days.
carol
|
489.33 | PArt of 93 Boston Film Festival | 25700::DFIELD | | Wed Jul 20 1994 13:20 | 6 |
|
FYI....This film was part of the Boston Film Festival Sept ?? 93...I
thought it was pretty good myself.
-D
|
489.34 | who performed music? | COMICS::HUDSON | | Fri Dec 02 1994 04:36 | 5 |
| Does anyone know who performed the music used for the start and end
credits of the film? Sounded like an Irish band, with a female lead
singer, singing "I Can't Help Falling In Love With You"
nick
|
489.35 | | KIRKTN::GCULLION | | Sun Dec 04 1994 02:59 | 7 |
|
Last:
I think it was sung by a band called 'Lick the tins'
Maybe.
|
489.36 | Yep. | EPS::RODERICK | I saw Elvis kissing Santa Claus. | Thu Dec 08 1994 12:10 | 6 |
| Lick the Tins sang a version of tis song for the ending credits of
Some Kind of Wonderful. It's got to be the same version. Prominent
flute or recorder, light, fun. According to the box, the soundtrack
is available through Hughes Music.
Lisa
|