T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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567.1 | oops | 36058::TARDUGNOM | | Tue Jun 07 1994 21:24 | 3 |
| Looks like my transmission broke up and added extra letters
that shouldn't be on Michele's name.....unavoidable when
off site..
|
567.2 | | BOOKIE::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Tue Jun 07 1994 22:42 | 3 |
| RE .1 - And took off some letters... (seeing as "Michelle" has 2 l's :-) )
-- Nina
|
567.3 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Jun 08 1994 09:58 | 26 |
| Well, Michelle Pfeiffer is "ok" by me, so the extra letters are
not inappropriate. ;-)
The movie, however... well, I'm not going to rush to see it, though if
anyone whose opinion I trust raves about it I suppose I might. Part of
my problem with it is that Jack Nicholson looks so much like a werewolf
(and one who enjoys his job!) that I find it redundant to make a movie
about it.
Another problem is that the "beast inside all of us" treatment is
usually - IMHO - done *way* too broadly, thus allowing the audience to
maintain some distance from it. "Well, *my* beast inside is much better
behaved than *that*," we can say, or "why couldn't poor Dr. Jekyll Just
Say No?"
But I suppose a movie demonstrating someone who's a decent person most
of the time but becomes Very Selfish And Rude when driving a car
wouldn't be big box office. They'd have to push "selfish and rude" into
"armed with flamethrowers and nuclear explosives" to even get it
filmed...
Then again, perhaps the "killing the thing he loves" bit will be worked
up as a metaphor for abusive relationships - "Women Who Love
Werewolves," today on "Geraldo"?
-b
|
567.4 | ~~~~ | 36058::TARDUGNOM | | Wed Jun 08 1994 21:21 | 7 |
| 567.3
I thought your reply was funny and boy I needed a laugh tonite...
I agree about the "ho hum" Werewolf angle but who knows maybe
it will surprize us and be a decent flick.
by the way what the "original note" should have read was
"......Pfeiffer looks rather interesting"
|
567.5 | a mere observation . . . | 36058::CARROLLJ | Even a clown knows when to strike | Wed Jun 08 1994 21:49 | 6 |
| re .3
as for pushing 'rude' up to the machine-gun and flame-thrower
level . . . why does that remind me of Falling Down ? :-)
- Jim
|
567.6 | FWIW | 65320::RIVERS | Stupid, STUPID rat creatures! | Thu Jun 09 1994 10:54 | 7 |
| re. 5 (which was re. 3)
That's what I thought of, too. :)
kim
|
567.7 | Gettin' twitchy... | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Jun 09 1994 11:45 | 17 |
| Odd; that's what *I* thought of when I wrote it. But us
movie-review-type folks oftentimes like to obscure our references a wee
bit, to give others the joy of picking up clues. But you're just
supposed to chortle to yourselves in glee, not let everybody else in on
it. ;-) [Though if anybody ever does a critique of my critiques, they
could add a footnote there indicating "Obviously a veiled reference to
"Falling Down," which, judging by her lack of direct comment on it, the
critic has never actually seen."]
'course, since I haven't seen "Wolf" either, I suppose it's appropriate
to discuss it in terms of other movies I haven't seen. Would this be a
sort of nihilist school of criticism, or is it more deconstructionist?
But what I really want to know is, why didn't they cast Nicholson as
Lestat?
-b
|
567.8 | mouthing off ( again ) . . . | 36058::CARROLLJ | Even a clown knows when to strike | Thu Jun 09 1994 17:31 | 22 |
| >But you're just supposed to chortle to yourselves in glee, not let
>everybody else in on it. ;-)
Whoops! My mistake - but I'm young, still. I'll learn myself good
for next time, you betcha! :-)
>Would this be a sort of nihilist school of criticism, or is it more
>deconstructionist?
A bit of both, but it'd be more of a recursive, nested method -
referring to referring to itself, etc. Sort of like "this sentence no
verb." :-)
>But what I really want to know is, why didn't they cast Nicholson as
>Lestat?
What? WHAT?? No, no, no - I can see Sting, maybe - or Bowie - to
mention two of the names that have been batted around. But Jack? Not
nearly tall, blond or gaunt enough, imo. Might as well cast Danny
DeVito . . .
- Jimbo
|
567.9 | not too good... | 38110::TRAVIS | eclat, humaniste, passion | Fri Jun 10 1994 19:47 | 7 |
| .3 re Jack Nicholson looking/acting like a werewolf.
The advertisement I saw at the theatre referred to
Nicholson as "Jack" which in reality likened him to
the wolf character in the movie. Not good marketing here, IMO.
Bill
|
567.10 | TIME loved it | HUMOR::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Thu Jun 16 1994 19:52 | 4 |
| FWIW, Time magazine this week (or last week) had an extremely glowing review
of "Wolf." Seems it contains a fair amount of dark humor...
-- Nina
|
567.11 | More FWIW | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri Jun 17 1994 09:38 | 10 |
| NPR's Bill Shales (?sp?) bemoans (behowls?) the length and pacing of
the movie, saying "Any werewolf story that can't be told in under two
hours shouldn't be told at all".
Overall, he gave it a mixed review. Could have been crisper and
apparently the ending was a bit sloppy. But there were good aspects
too, like a minimal amount of on-screen gore, i.e., emphasis on the
characters instead of their blood.
John
|
567.12 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jun 17 1994 09:46 | 12 |
| > NPR's Bill Shales (?sp?) bemoans (behowls?) the length and pacing of
I believe it's Tom Shales (though I'm not sure of the spelling either),
apparently if the LA Times and occasionally (but regularly) NPR.
He's a tough critic to please, he seems to like almost nothing.
Also, his reviews run too long - once he gets his teeth into a movie,
the grinding and tearing continue until his eight minutes are up.
Frankly, I think that if you can't review a movie in three minutes or less,
you shouldn't review it at all.
- tom]
|
567.13 | Those two guys | 16913::MEUSE_DA | | Mon Jun 20 1994 20:10 | 6 |
|
Siskel & Ebert (sp?) gave it two thumbs upward yesterday.
|
567.14 | WOLF pretty ho-hum, except for Jack | 39702::COVITZ | | Tue Jun 21 1994 08:36 | 9 |
| Well, I saw WOLF this weekend, and have to agree with the review
described in .11. It was almost 2hrs/15min - which was about 30
minutes too long, given many of the plot twists were totally obvious.
I love Jack, and was able to sit through it only because of him;
Michelle was fine; James Spader was eh. Lack of gore was a decided
plus - some, but not enough to get more than a minor wince from me, and
I can't stand the sight of blood. If you like Jack or Michelle, go; I
suggest waiting for the video so you can fast forward through the
boring parts.
|
567.15 | | 36058::TARDUGNOM | | Fri Jun 24 1994 11:09 | 6 |
| I saw this last weekend and I did not like it. It wasn't suspenceful
enough, there didn't seem to be any chemistry between Michelle and
Jack Maybe I wasn't in the right frame of mind...
SISKEL AND EBERT GAVE IT 2 THUMBS UP I can't believe that!
What a mistake...I actually thought it was a lousy movie...
|
567.16 | it's twue. | 16913::MEUSE_DA | | Fri Jun 24 1994 19:43 | 9 |
|
re.15
Yep, two big thumbs up.
Honest.
Dave
|
567.17 | good flick | 19280::JACOBSON | | Mon Jun 27 1994 10:07 | 3 |
| I saw the movie this weekend it and loved it. Jack Nicholson was great.
He has some great lines too. Michelle Phieffer was good but not great.
I would give two thumbs up.
|
567.18 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 27 1994 15:34 | 40 |
| I was a bit disappointed by this film. While the movie is entertaining, it
wasn't the block buster that I was expecting after hearing all of the positive
reviews in the press and media.
As a couple have said earlier, the story tended to drag in parts. Jack
Nicholson was great at times, but other times he just seemed to play "Jaaack"
without a lot of thought as to what his character should be doing.
Michelle Phieffer was ok but didn't particularly add anything to the story
other than her usual breathtaking good looks. At one point Jack's character
makes a pretty good speech to her about how there's not much to her character
other than good looks and oddly enough it pretty much summed up most of her
performance.
The slow motion jumping around and other attempts at looking like a wolf were
not that good. Yes they did try to pick up the mannerisms of a real wolf rather
than a wolfman but it didn't work all that well.
The thing that bothered me the most was that the theme of most wolfman
stories was all but missing except for a brief discussion early in the film.
These stories usually revolve around the main character's struggle between good
and evil. The wolf inside the man is suppose to be a metaphor for the "evil"
that exists in everyone and the ethical battle we all have with ourselves.
While this story brushed on that, it was pretty much just a monster story
watered down by the fact that it is no longer politically correct to think of
wolves entirely as bad guys. After all they are just animals trying to carve
out an existence like anyone else.
Perhaps that is the new theme. This film is just trying to carve out a box
office take like everyone else. Ok, it wasn't that bad but it certainly wasn't
that great.
Since it's summer and since I really like Jack and since I'm in love with
Michelle Phieffer because of her drop dead good looks I'll be generous and give
it:
*** on my scale which runs from 0-5.
George
|
567.19 | Probably worth full price *once* | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Tue Jul 05 1994 13:38 | 22 |
|
Capsule review: A little too long, extremely predictable, though the
moment everyone was expecting still managed to elicit starts and
shrieks.
The subplot, or secondary theme, or whatever, is the more interesting
part of this movie -- the impact of a sudden infusion of power on the
human personality. It doesn't say anything particularly new in this
area, basically that with power good people can still be good and bad
people will probably get worse.
The slight variation on the lycanthropic legend makes for an ending
with better closure than the more traditional treatments.
Competently acted, with Pfeiffer's closing moments probably being the
high point. Nicholson suave, Spader oily. Someone should have
tightened the second half of the script. The slow motion bits were
tiresome. It seems to me there ought to be some method of
demonstrating the impact of witnessing superhuman capability without
those extremely dorky slow motion shots.
DFW
|
567.20 | Predictable plot deterred from the suspense | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Will edit for food | Wed Jul 06 1994 15:22 | 12 |
| I agree totally with the previous review. Way, way too predictable,
and that for me spoiled an often stylish and well acted drama. I
especially enjoyed the office scenes! (Believe it or not!) How Jack
goes about his business of revenge was wonderful, and the subdued
excitement of his two fellow workers was just right. On the other
hand, Kate Nelligan was wasted, and I didn't believe Michelle
Pfeiffer's character for a minute.
Despite my reservations, I'd still give it a 6.5 on the 1-10 scale, and
I would be remiss if I didn't note that my wife liked it more than me.
NAZZ
|
567.21 | Heightened senses. | 37811::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Mon Jul 11 1994 19:01 | 5 |
| I thoroughly enjoyed how the characters gradually acquired the senses
of the wolf, and how it affected their daily lives. The extremely acute
senses of smell and hearing were very well done; any dog owner would
have been able to identify!
Jim
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567.22 | who was the 1st wolf? | PCBUOA::LPIERCE | Do the watermelon crawl | Tue Dec 19 1995 15:16 | 23 |
|
I saw the movie lastnight on HBO. I liked it as a cable movie, but I'm
gald I didn't go see it.
Question behind spoiler:
Who was the 1s wolf? I got the impression that the 1st wolf was
Michelle and then sonewhere along the line she bit the little snob who
was sleeping w/ Jacks wife - then he bit Jack.
The snob was showing signes of wolfness from the begining - then at the
end Michelle was a wolf - and she made alot of comments about why she
cant' tell you what she does for work/a living.
we never saw the snob or Michelle get bit - so we know Jack didn't do
it. and I know that the snob was the one to kill the wife...
what do you think?
Lkp
|
567.23 | Werewolf? THERE, there wolf! | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Wed Jan 03 1996 13:01 | 41 |
| MHO on -.1, behind spoiler:
<spoiler>
<splr>
We never find out who the first wolf is; he's just a stray werewolf
wandering around New England who Jack has the misfortune to come
across. I think the transition to wolf was ultimately complete, i.e.,
you never turned back into a human afterwards.
Jack *did* bite Mr. Snobby, in passing when he came to the guy's
apartment because he suspected his wife was sleeping with him. So he
transformed into a werewolf just a bit behind Jack.
The old guy who made a study of Lycanthropes said that "sometimes, the
passion of the wolf by itself is enough to create a werewolf". My guess
is that Michelle was thus transformed by the passion shared with Jack.
Or,since only a bite was required, one could speculate that Jack was a
bit overly agressive in his amours.
JIm
|