T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1135.1 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Good Heavens,Cmndr,what DID you do | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:04 | 7 |
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>it's called "Jack" and stars Robin Williams as a 10 year old with the
>body of a 30 year old.
Hmmm, this sounds like every role Robin has ever done. 8^)
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1135.2 | "Big"-like | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:06 | 3 |
| It also sounds a lot like "Big."
-Stephen
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1135.3 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | The Truth is out there..... | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:11 | 7 |
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Judge Reinhold and John Savage did a movie like this where they traded
places via some magic.
Chris
:)
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1135.4 | | CHEFS::UKFURNITURE | | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:17 | 2 |
| Vice-Versa
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1135.5 | | COMICS::MILLSS | ID4: Don't make plans for August ! | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:39 | 3 |
| Big vs. Vice-Versa ... One of the few cases where "Big" is definitely better !
Simes %^)
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1135.6 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Got into a war with reality ... | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:44 | 7 |
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"Freaky Friday"
"18 Again"
"Like Father Like Son"
"Vice Versa"
"Big"
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1135.7 | Big belongs in another catagory, not with the others | VAXCPU::michaud | ... and the beanstalk | Wed Jul 17 1996 11:56 | 16 |
| > "Freaky Friday"
> "18 Again"
> "Like Father Like Son"
> "Vice Versa"
> "Big"
"Big" does not fit in with the rest of these movies. All the
others are movies where two different characters change bodies
(or minds depending on your perspective).
"Big" on the other hand is a movie where one (1) character
does not change bodies with anyone else, the character's
own body changes.
From the description in .0 it sounds like this movie would
fall into the latter catagory of film(s), not the former
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1135.8 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Got into a war with reality ... | Wed Jul 17 1996 12:01 | 8 |
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Yes, and "Freaky Friday" should be in a separate category be-
cause it's 2 females changing places instead of 2 males. 8^)
In all cases, at least 1 character is affected by something
weird that transfers his/her mind from an adult's body to a
child's body ... or vice versa [no pun intended].
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1135.9 | medical vs supernatural | MSBCS::KNIPSTEIN | | Wed Jul 17 1996 12:22 | 6 |
| In this case, "JACK" is about a child who is born with a rare condition
whereby his body develops at an abnormal rate. So the difference here
is that it is not a change via magic or a weird, supernatural
occurence, but rather a medical condition.
Steve
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1135.10 | Robin Williams in a serious film? | VAXCPU::michaud | Tom Hanks | Wed Jul 17 1996 12:38 | 12 |
| > In this case, "JACK" is about a child who is born with a rare condition
> whereby his body develops at an abnormal rate. So the difference here
> is that it is not a change via magic or a weird, supernatural
> occurence, but rather a medical condition.
Ah, that sounds at least good to know that Robin Williams isn't
going to be doing a re-make of "Big" as it sounded very similiar
(though it wouldn't of been the first film he's been in that
ripped off earlier films, like Tootsie => Mrs. Doubtfire).
This film does not sound like it will be a comedy then, but
a possibly very serious film. Quite a departure for Williams!
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1135.11 | 90% comedy and 10% drama ? | POLAR::TYSICK | Threat Against Employees | Wed Jul 17 1996 13:10 | 2 |
| I'm sure there will be some "serious" moments but it is a comedy.
At least that's what the trailers looked like to me!
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1135.12 | please..... | STRATA::GARRITY | | Thu Jul 18 1996 19:58 | 6 |
| fyi to .10! Robin Williams has done some serious roles...just to name 3
of them::
1.Good Morning Vietnam
2.Awakenings(sp?)
3.Dead Poets Society
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1135.13 | | ODIXIE::LOWER | What fools these mortals be! | Fri Jul 19 1996 01:58 | 13 |
| The biggest difference in this film and all the others noted, is that
Jack does not try to hide his true self. In all the others, the body
exchange is kept secret, the man-child/woman-child is forced to pretend
to be older/younger than their chronological age. Jack doesn't. Here,
the comedy will be derived as much from how everyone else treats Jack
as how Jack treats himself. That is a much more complex set of
circumstances and should make for a much more poignant film. Don't
forget, if Jack is aging at four times the normal rate, by the time he
would graduate high school, he'd be 72 physically. Any kid he
befriends at ten will have to deal with that.
I, for one, look forward to seeing "Jack" as soon as it is released.
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1135.14 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | The Truth is out there..... | Fri Jul 19 1996 06:22 | 7 |
|
Another good serious role for Williams was "The World According to
Garp"
Chris
:)
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1135.15 | | TROOA::BUTKOVICH | chairman of the bored | Mon Jul 22 1996 01:20 | 2 |
| To continue the list.... he was very good in "The Fisher King". Not
exactly a "funny" role.
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1135.16 | FFC | QUARRY::reeves | Jon Reeves, UNIX compiler group | Wed Jul 24 1996 00:22 | 5 |
| To me, the big surprise is seeing that Francis Ford Coppola is directing this.
This doesn't look at all like the kind of movie he usually does -- though
looking at his filmography, I may be unfairly typecasting him.
It seems appropriate that one of his earlier titles is "You're a Big Boy Now".
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1135.17 | we say thumbs up | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Mon Jul 29 1996 13:48 | 46 |
| My daughter (age 11.5) and I saw a sneak preview of "Jack" this weekend
(double feature with "Phenomenon"). To our surprise, we each liked
"Jack" best.
I'd say it's 80% comedy; the rest is not schmaltz but a consideration of
prejudice, education, the quality of life, etc. There's a nice little
metaphor, not heavy-handed IMO, which pops up a few times.
I'm a big fan of Robin Williams, so I wasn't out for blood inspecting
his depiction of a 10-year-old; maybe twice I thought a nuance of
delivery was a bit too adult. It wasn't jarring enough for me to
remember now in which scenes they occurred.
The medical condition was not named, but the attending doctors told the
parents it was NOT progeria; Jack's cells were simply multiplying and
aging at a rate 4x normal. I could buy this as a mythical condition,
but I had trouble with the premise that his parents could keep him
effectively hidden from the community for TEN YEARS....
Bill Cosby did a great job (well, not a stretch really, considering his
education) as Jack's tutor and friend. The parents (Diane Lane
and...?) had relatively small, plain-vanilla roles--well no, I take
that back, the Mom had a funny-but-understandable skewed perspective
on, and interaction with, Jack. (You never know what she will have
been doing when she answers the doorbell, for instance.)
A standard caveat for and from me: DON'T WATCH THE TRAILER!! In our
sneak preview, "Jack" was shown first; among the trailers between the
movies was the one for "Jack" and I was disgusted at how many of the
great scenes were represented. Par for the course, I suppose.
It's rated PG13 for references to Penthouse magazine and discussions in
the treehouse including words like "boner" :-) plus the 10-year-olds'
fascination with gaseous bodily emissions. (I'm not a big fan of that
kind of humor, but I have to admit this was funny stuff!).
Cast trivia: one of the two 8-year-old girls was a minor character on
"Full House" (Michelle's best friend); I've always liked her. The
character's name is Jane (or Jade?). Fran Drescher does an over-the-
top (what else?) sleazy mom-with-a-heart-of-gold.
The trailer we were treated to (NOT) said "Jack" is "Coming August 2",
but I think the TV trailer said August 9. I'm looking forward to
reading more reaction to "Jack" here....
Leslie
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1135.18 | | MPGS::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Wed Jul 31 1996 17:00 | 10 |
| Forgot to say, don't miss the opening scene--GREAT Halloween costumes.
Jack's mom is the Wicked Witch of the East; another woman is a martini.
A nitty comment (not a spoiler): since this is supposed to be present-day,
I'm confused by the robotic measurement devices used on newborn Jack.
They made for interesting shots playing with the camera focus, but even
if this technology is in use today (and it looked pretty sloppy), one
would think it'd be used in quarantine, which wasn't Jack's situation.
Leslie
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1135.19 | | QUARRY::reeves | Jon Reeves, UNIX compiler group | Thu Aug 15 1996 20:47 | 10 |
| >The parents (Diane Lane and...?)
Brian Kerwin.
>Cast trivia: one of the two 8-year-old girls was a minor character on
>"Full House" (Michelle's best friend); I've always liked her. The
>character's name is Jane (or Jade?).
Dani Faith. I had to go to the "official" site for this info.
The more interesting cast trivia to me: the bartender is Don Novello, in a
rare appearance *not* as Fr. Guido Sarducci.
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1135.20 | | BUSY::SLAB | Candy'O, I need you ... | Fri Aug 16 1996 10:49 | 3 |
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Don was also the limo driver in "Head Office".
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1135.21 | Cute | POLAR::TYSICK | Bitemytongue&swallowpride&blood. | Tue Feb 11 1997 08:52 | 14 |
| To sum this one up..."Cute".
I found it dragged on at times and nothing special in between. In
it's defense, it was very funny at times and made ya realize the simple
theory of "live life to it's fullest".
2.5 outta 5
Jay
Spoiler:
The treehouse parts were great, especially seeing Bill Cosby's getting
in on the action.
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