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Forty years ago, a series with an on-the-rise soap actor and a campy premise barreled into the zeitgeist.
Premiering Sept. 26, 1982, Knight Rider hailed from creator Glen A. Larson, the man behind Battlestar Galactica and Magnum, P.I. It centered on a detective who suffers a near-fatal gunshot wound and is reborn with a surgically altered face, thanks to a mysterious benefactor, and drafted into the crime-fighting Foundation for Law and Government (Flag). David Hasselhoff, known at the time for The Young and the Restless, starred as Michael Knight, who drove a tricked-out, artificially intelligent Trans Am called Kitt, voiced by William Daniels, and reported to Flag director Devon Miles (Edward Mulhare).
THR‘s review praised the directing and stunts but noted the “fluffed, sugar-coated adventure” required viewers to “suspend knowledge of everything real.” However, the show found an audience seeking such escapism, and thanks to syndication and,...
Forty years ago, a series with an on-the-rise soap actor and a campy premise barreled into the zeitgeist.
Premiering Sept. 26, 1982, Knight Rider hailed from creator Glen A. Larson, the man behind Battlestar Galactica and Magnum, P.I. It centered on a detective who suffers a near-fatal gunshot wound and is reborn with a surgically altered face, thanks to a mysterious benefactor, and drafted into the crime-fighting Foundation for Law and Government (Flag). David Hasselhoff, known at the time for The Young and the Restless, starred as Michael Knight, who drove a tricked-out, artificially intelligent Trans Am called Kitt, voiced by William Daniels, and reported to Flag director Devon Miles (Edward Mulhare).
THR‘s review praised the directing and stunts but noted the “fluffed, sugar-coated adventure” required viewers to “suspend knowledge of everything real.” However, the show found an audience seeking such escapism, and thanks to syndication and,...
- 10/5/2022
- by Ryan Gajewski
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Throughout the 1960s, several theatrical films from two decades prior were reworked into television series, the majority of which lasted a maximum of two seasons. One of these cases involved the 1947 fantasy film “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,” starring Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison. The TV adaptation, which debuted in 1968 with Hope Lange and Edward Mulhare in the lead roles, did not fare particularly well and was cancelled by NBC after a single season. It was immediately picked up by ABC, but its tenure there was just as short.
The show did manage to garner six Emmy nominations during its short run, including one for Best Comedy Series. Lange also picked up a pair of Best Comedy Actress trophies, making her the second youngest champion in her category at the time. Over half a century later, she places behind a total of nine younger women, including three who triumphed in their 20s.
The show did manage to garner six Emmy nominations during its short run, including one for Best Comedy Series. Lange also picked up a pair of Best Comedy Actress trophies, making her the second youngest champion in her category at the time. Over half a century later, she places behind a total of nine younger women, including three who triumphed in their 20s.
- 7/21/2022
- by Matthew Stewart
- Gold Derby
“I tend to the bodily needs of these people, not the spiritual ones. Now, come along back to bed.”
Sharon Tate in Eye Of The Devil (1966) will be available on Blu-ray October 26th from Warner Archive
A forbidding French chateau and its surrounding vineyards are the setting for Gothic thrills in this haunting excursion into the occult. Deborah Kerr and David Niven, costarring for the first time since Separate Tables, lead an exceptional cast in a chiller reminiscent of the later The Wicker Man (1973), in which an innocent outsider to an enclosed world peels back layers of mystery to reveal a shocking truth. Vineyard owner Marquis Philippe de Montfaucon (David Niven) is called back to his castle Bellenac because of another dry season. He asks his wife and children to remain in Paris, but they still come after him. His wife Catherine de Montfaucon (Deborah Kerr) soon discovers that her...
Sharon Tate in Eye Of The Devil (1966) will be available on Blu-ray October 26th from Warner Archive
A forbidding French chateau and its surrounding vineyards are the setting for Gothic thrills in this haunting excursion into the occult. Deborah Kerr and David Niven, costarring for the first time since Separate Tables, lead an exceptional cast in a chiller reminiscent of the later The Wicker Man (1973), in which an innocent outsider to an enclosed world peels back layers of mystery to reveal a shocking truth. Vineyard owner Marquis Philippe de Montfaucon (David Niven) is called back to his castle Bellenac because of another dry season. He asks his wife and children to remain in Paris, but they still come after him. His wife Catherine de Montfaucon (Deborah Kerr) soon discovers that her...
- 9/29/2021
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Throughout the 1960s, several theatrical films from two decades prior were reworked into television series, the majority of which lasted a maximum of two seasons. One of these cases involved the 1947 fantasy film “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,” starring Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison. The TV adaptation, which debuted in 1968 with Hope Lange and Edward Mulhare in the lead roles, did not fare particularly well and was cancelled by NBC after a single season. It was immediately picked up by ABC, but its tenure there was just as short.
The show did manage to garner six Emmy nominations during its short run, including one for Best Comedy Series. Lange also picked up a pair of Best Comedy Actress trophies, making her the second youngest champion in her category at the time. Over half a century later, she places behind a total of nine younger women, including three who triumphed in their 20s.
The show did manage to garner six Emmy nominations during its short run, including one for Best Comedy Series. Lange also picked up a pair of Best Comedy Actress trophies, making her the second youngest champion in her category at the time. Over half a century later, she places behind a total of nine younger women, including three who triumphed in their 20s.
- 8/27/2021
- by Matthew Stewart
- Gold Derby
Stars: Barry Bostwick, Michael Beck, Persis Khambatta, Edward Mulhare, George Furth, Henry Silva | Written by Albert S. Ruddy | Directed by Hal Needham
Oh the 80s, how I love thee so… From the fashion and the music to the video games and the movies. And oh, what movies! From the decades big blockbusters to the direct-to-vhs dross that clogged video store shelves I loves me some 80s flicks. So when two of the decades most infamous flicks get re-released on DVD I just knew I had to check them out… First up, Megaforce!
I’ll admit, Megaforce passed me by back in the day, during the 80s I was all about the cheesy horror and anything Star Wars-esque. But, like any movie fan, the film’s reputation had not gone unnoticed by me… The film stars Barry Bostwick as Ace Hunter, leader of a mercenary army force who uphold peace,...
Oh the 80s, how I love thee so… From the fashion and the music to the video games and the movies. And oh, what movies! From the decades big blockbusters to the direct-to-vhs dross that clogged video store shelves I loves me some 80s flicks. So when two of the decades most infamous flicks get re-released on DVD I just knew I had to check them out… First up, Megaforce!
I’ll admit, Megaforce passed me by back in the day, during the 80s I was all about the cheesy horror and anything Star Wars-esque. But, like any movie fan, the film’s reputation had not gone unnoticed by me… The film stars Barry Bostwick as Ace Hunter, leader of a mercenary army force who uphold peace,...
- 12/15/2013
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Mediumrare Entertainment continue their trend of releasing some of the weirdest cult films and TV shows with four films that are making their UK DVD debuts – and two are also getting the Blu-ray treatment too! Check out all the details below. I know I’ll be snapping these up, will you?
Operation Condor: Armour Of God II (1991)
Global adventurer Asian Hawk (Jackie Chan) comes to Europe in search of the ‘Armour of God’, a magical relic from the Crusades. He hopes he can use it to bargain for the freedom of his girlfriend from a deadly cult. With his trusty companion (Andy Tam) by his side, his quest takes him from one perilous adventure to another. Directed by Jackie Chain himself, who performed all his own stunts, it was regarded as one of the most expensive films at the time. The third instalment of the Armour of God adventures,...
Operation Condor: Armour Of God II (1991)
Global adventurer Asian Hawk (Jackie Chan) comes to Europe in search of the ‘Armour of God’, a magical relic from the Crusades. He hopes he can use it to bargain for the freedom of his girlfriend from a deadly cult. With his trusty companion (Andy Tam) by his side, his quest takes him from one perilous adventure to another. Directed by Jackie Chain himself, who performed all his own stunts, it was regarded as one of the most expensive films at the time. The third instalment of the Armour of God adventures,...
- 9/9/2013
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
DVD Release Date: Sept. 4, 2012
Price: DVD $19.95
Studio: Hen’s Tooth
Barry Bostwick and Persis Khambatta aim to save the world in Megaforce.
The silly 1982 science fiction action movie Megaforce is a cult favorite and guilty pleasure if ever there was one!
Barry Bostwick (Some Guy Who Kills People) stars as Ace Hunter, leader of an elite task force of American adventurers who gallantly fight to uphold justice around the world. The team’s ultramodern weaponry plays a major part in their perilous mission to save a small democratic nation which has been invaded by a band of ruthless mercenaries led by the evil dictator Guerrera (Henry Silva, The Manchurian Candidate).
Megaforce is directed by stuntman-turned-filmmaker Hal Needham of Smokey and the Bandit and Cannonball Run fame. Needham brings his flair and knowledge of stunt work and automotive hijinks to the film for its frequent action scenes, which include many high...
Price: DVD $19.95
Studio: Hen’s Tooth
Barry Bostwick and Persis Khambatta aim to save the world in Megaforce.
The silly 1982 science fiction action movie Megaforce is a cult favorite and guilty pleasure if ever there was one!
Barry Bostwick (Some Guy Who Kills People) stars as Ace Hunter, leader of an elite task force of American adventurers who gallantly fight to uphold justice around the world. The team’s ultramodern weaponry plays a major part in their perilous mission to save a small democratic nation which has been invaded by a band of ruthless mercenaries led by the evil dictator Guerrera (Henry Silva, The Manchurian Candidate).
Megaforce is directed by stuntman-turned-filmmaker Hal Needham of Smokey and the Bandit and Cannonball Run fame. Needham brings his flair and knowledge of stunt work and automotive hijinks to the film for its frequent action scenes, which include many high...
- 7/12/2012
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
More long hidden horrors are now available as part of Warner's made-to-order Archive Collection. Oh, the classic terrors that await you, dearest reader! Dig it!
Head on over to the Warner Archives and order yours today!
The Awakening
Director: Mike Newell
Cast: Charlton Heston, Susannah York, Jill Townsend, Stephanie Zimbalist
Synopsis
Mention Bram Stoker’s name, and literature and movie buffs will conjure up Count Dracula. But there was more blood in Stoker’s pen. He also wrote The Jewel of the Seven Stars, later filmed with chilling effect as The Awakening, grippingly directed by Mike Newell (Dance with a Stranger, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire) and sensuously shot on Egyptian locations by veteran cinematographer Jack Cardiff. Charlton Heston stars as an Egyptologist with a passion that will trigger several mysterious deaths. He’s obsessed with a sorceress whose return has been prophesied – and whose tomb he opened...
Head on over to the Warner Archives and order yours today!
The Awakening
Director: Mike Newell
Cast: Charlton Heston, Susannah York, Jill Townsend, Stephanie Zimbalist
Synopsis
Mention Bram Stoker’s name, and literature and movie buffs will conjure up Count Dracula. But there was more blood in Stoker’s pen. He also wrote The Jewel of the Seven Stars, later filmed with chilling effect as The Awakening, grippingly directed by Mike Newell (Dance with a Stranger, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire) and sensuously shot on Egyptian locations by veteran cinematographer Jack Cardiff. Charlton Heston stars as an Egyptologist with a passion that will trigger several mysterious deaths. He’s obsessed with a sorceress whose return has been prophesied – and whose tomb he opened...
- 5/15/2012
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Joanne Woodward on TCM: Rachel, Rachel; Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams Schedule (Et) and synopses from the TCM website: 6:00 Am Count Three And Pray (1955) A Westerner turns preacher to overcome his shady past. Dir: George Sherman. Cast: Van Heflin, Joanne Woodward, Phil Carey. C-102 mins. 7:45 Am Rally Round The Flag, Boys! (1958) The arrival of an Army missile base shatters the peaceful life of a suburban town. Dir: Leo McCarey. Cast: Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Joan Collins. C-107 mins, Letterbox Format. 9:45 Am Paris Blues (1961) Two jazz musicians deal with romantic problems in Paris. Dir: Martin Ritt. Cast: Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Sidney Poitier. C-99 mins, Letterbox Format. 11:30 Am Signpost To Murder (1964) A convicted murderer, who escaped from a mental institution, hides out in the home of a woman whose husband is missing. Dir: George Englund. Cast: Joanne Woodward, Stuart Whitman, Edward Mulhare. Bw-77 mins, Letterbox Format. 1:00 Pm...
- 8/16/2011
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Actress Hope Lange, who received an Oscar nomination for the 1957 film Peyton Place and won two Emmy awards for the sitcom The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, died Friday at a Santa Monica hospital; she was 72. According to her husband, Charles Hollerith, Lange died after suffering an infection caused by an intestinal inflammation known as ischemic colitis. A child actor who already had 12 years of Broadway experience before she moved to film, Lange quickly found fame with her first two big film roles in Bus Stop and Peyton Place. The latter film nabbed the actress an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress and launched her career as one of the more popular ingénues of the late 50s. Appearing in The Young Lions, The Best of Everything and A Pocketful of Miracles, she segued into television in the late 60s, where she starred opposite Edward Mulhare in the romantic sitcom The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, which ran only from 1968-1970 but garnered the actress two Emmys; Lange later appeared in The New Dick Van Dyke Show from 1971-1974. Her later roles included Blue Velvet and Clear and Present Danger, as well as innumerable guest television appearances. Married previously to actor Don Murray and director Alan J. Pakula, Lange is survived by Hollerith, her third husband, as well as two children from her marriage to Murray, actor Christopher Murray and daughter Patricia Murray. --Prepared by IMDb staff...
- 12/22/2003
- WENN
OUT TO SEA
20th Century Fox
Fox's other summer nautical summer release finds those grumpy old men definitely up to speed.
In "Out to Sea", old pros Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau show why they're one of the screen's most enduring comedy teams, elevating what could have been "Love Boat: The Movie" to an amusing romp that ranks as the most satisfying of their recent pairings.
Of course, they get some able assists here from an all-AARP ensemble, including Donald O'Connor, Dyan Cannon, Gloria DeHaven, Elaine Stritch and the late Edward Mulhare, as well as some nimble direction from Martha Coolidge.
Serving as the navigator, Coolidge gives everyone a chance to shine, while adeptly giving just the right weight to both the comedic and heartfelt moments. It's a tricky balancing act that, save for a few rough patches, succeeds admirably (HR 6/30).
Michael Rechtshaffen
HEAD ABOVE WATER
Fine Line
Has there ever been a good movie about someone's comic efforts to dispose of a dead body? Even Hitchcock in "The Trouble With Harry" couldn't pull it off. The latest effort in a bizarre genre, "Head Above Water" makes "Weekend at Bernie"'s look like a masterpiece.
Despite the best efforts of the cast -- Cameron Diaz, Harvey Keitel, Craig Sheffer, Billy Zane, Shay Duffin -- Jim Wilson's attempt at black comedy simply does not come off, with the humor feeling strained and the violence simply repellent.
Diaz, looking luminous, at least manages to invest her role with a certain amount of energy and enthusiasm, while Sheffer and Zane seem at an understandable loss as to how to make their characters remotely believable. (HR 6/26).
Frank Scheck
GABBEH
New Yorker Films
A startlingly beautiful and occasionally moving experience, "Gabbeh" is 40-year-old Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 13th feature in 15 years. A lyrical and often hypnotic fable with interwoven stories of nomadic life, the New Yorker release -- in Farsi with English subtitles -- will draw strongly from its target audience in select-site engagements.
Makhmalbaf initially set out to make a documentary about a tribe in the remote steppes of southeastern Iran. Combining footage shot on location and material added later, "Gabbeh" is relatively crude by domestic standards and a short 75 minutes, but it's otherwise accessible to Western audiences.
Intent on capturing a vanishing way of life, Makhmalbaf became fascinated by the centuries-old tradition of families creating elaborate carpets, or "gabbehs," that tell stories with a pictorial artistry (HR 6/26).
David Hunter
Other reviews
Also reviewed last week were: "Fall" (HR 6/27-29), "Mondo" (6/30) and "The Innocent Sleep" (6/30).
20th Century Fox
Fox's other summer nautical summer release finds those grumpy old men definitely up to speed.
In "Out to Sea", old pros Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau show why they're one of the screen's most enduring comedy teams, elevating what could have been "Love Boat: The Movie" to an amusing romp that ranks as the most satisfying of their recent pairings.
Of course, they get some able assists here from an all-AARP ensemble, including Donald O'Connor, Dyan Cannon, Gloria DeHaven, Elaine Stritch and the late Edward Mulhare, as well as some nimble direction from Martha Coolidge.
Serving as the navigator, Coolidge gives everyone a chance to shine, while adeptly giving just the right weight to both the comedic and heartfelt moments. It's a tricky balancing act that, save for a few rough patches, succeeds admirably (HR 6/30).
Michael Rechtshaffen
HEAD ABOVE WATER
Fine Line
Has there ever been a good movie about someone's comic efforts to dispose of a dead body? Even Hitchcock in "The Trouble With Harry" couldn't pull it off. The latest effort in a bizarre genre, "Head Above Water" makes "Weekend at Bernie"'s look like a masterpiece.
Despite the best efforts of the cast -- Cameron Diaz, Harvey Keitel, Craig Sheffer, Billy Zane, Shay Duffin -- Jim Wilson's attempt at black comedy simply does not come off, with the humor feeling strained and the violence simply repellent.
Diaz, looking luminous, at least manages to invest her role with a certain amount of energy and enthusiasm, while Sheffer and Zane seem at an understandable loss as to how to make their characters remotely believable. (HR 6/26).
Frank Scheck
GABBEH
New Yorker Films
A startlingly beautiful and occasionally moving experience, "Gabbeh" is 40-year-old Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 13th feature in 15 years. A lyrical and often hypnotic fable with interwoven stories of nomadic life, the New Yorker release -- in Farsi with English subtitles -- will draw strongly from its target audience in select-site engagements.
Makhmalbaf initially set out to make a documentary about a tribe in the remote steppes of southeastern Iran. Combining footage shot on location and material added later, "Gabbeh" is relatively crude by domestic standards and a short 75 minutes, but it's otherwise accessible to Western audiences.
Intent on capturing a vanishing way of life, Makhmalbaf became fascinated by the centuries-old tradition of families creating elaborate carpets, or "gabbehs," that tell stories with a pictorial artistry (HR 6/26).
David Hunter
Other reviews
Also reviewed last week were: "Fall" (HR 6/27-29), "Mondo" (6/30) and "The Innocent Sleep" (6/30).
Fox's other nautical summer release finds those grumpy old men definitely up to speed.
In "Out to Sea", old pros Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau show why they're one of the screen's most enduring comedy teams, elevating would could have been "Love Boat: The Movie" to an amusing romp that ranks as the most satisfying of their recent pairings.
Of course, they get some able assist here from an all-AARP ensemble, including Donald O'Connor, Gloria DeHaven, Elaine Stritch, Dyan Cannon and the late Edward Mulhare, as well as some nimble direction from Martha Coolidge.
Boxoffice-wise, this throwback of a romantic comedy should experience exceptionally smooth sailing.
This time around, Matthau is Charlie, a compulsive gambler (talk about playing it close to home) whose less-than-winning ways at the racetrack have definitely put a strain on his relationship with his bookie. Undaunted, he comes up with a new can't-miss scheme -- talking skeptical brother-in-law Herb (Lemmon) into joining him on a Caribbean cruise where the promise of lonely, wealthy women could solve his little cash flow problem.
What he has failed to inform Herb is that he has volunteered both of them as dance hosts in order to gain free passage, his two left feet notwithstanding. Twinkle-toes Herb ends up having to do all the work, as Charlie woos the very eligible Liz LaBreche (Cannon) while trying to avoid the highly suspicious gaze of cruise director Gil Godwyn (Brent Spiner).
To further complicate matters, devout widower Herb has unwittingly found romance with Vivian (a glorious DeHaven), a former publisher who has been "shanghaied" by her well-meaning daughter and new son-in-law.
It's refreshing to see so many actors of a certain age working together and so effectively in the same movie. Having performed with each other on-and-off for over 30 years, Matthau and Lemmon have developed a terrific shorthand that translates into funny even when tyro Robert Nelson Jacobs' workable script isn't always up to snuff.
It also doesn't hurt to have O'Connor on board as a legitimate dance host (he naturally doesn't get away without strutting some of his famous stuff) or Stritch as Cannon's terminally feisty, gold-digging mom. Also doing fine work are DeHaven, Spiner, Rue McClanahan as the ship's owner and Mulhare (in his last screen appearance) as Matthau's suave, high-stakes nemesis.
Serving as navigator, Coolidge gives everyone a chance to shine, while adeptly giving just the right weight to both the comedic and heartfelt moments. It's a tricky balancing act that, save for a few rough patches, succeeds admirably.
As a double added bonus, the end credits feature the various cast members in a very funny interpretive dance sequence, plus those ever-popular outtakes accompanied by a number of well-placed bleeps preserving that PG-13 rating.
OUT TO SEA
20th Century Fox
A Davis Entertainment Co. production
A Martha Coolidge film
Director Martha Coolidge
Producers John Davis, David T. Friendly
Screenwriter Robert Nelson Jacobs
Executive producers Dylan Sellers, Barry Berg
Director of photography Lajos Koltai
Production designer James Spencer
Editor Anne V. Coates
Music David Newman
Costume designer Jane Robinson
Casting Jackie Burch
Color/stereo
Cast:
Herb Jack Lemmon
Charlie Walter Matthau
Liz Dyan Cannon
Vivian Gloria DeHaven
Godwyn Brent Spiner
Mavis:Elaine Stritch
Mac Hal Linden
Jonathan Donald O'Connor
Carswell Edward Mulhare
Shelly Rue McClanahan
Running time -- 106 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
In "Out to Sea", old pros Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau show why they're one of the screen's most enduring comedy teams, elevating would could have been "Love Boat: The Movie" to an amusing romp that ranks as the most satisfying of their recent pairings.
Of course, they get some able assist here from an all-AARP ensemble, including Donald O'Connor, Gloria DeHaven, Elaine Stritch, Dyan Cannon and the late Edward Mulhare, as well as some nimble direction from Martha Coolidge.
Boxoffice-wise, this throwback of a romantic comedy should experience exceptionally smooth sailing.
This time around, Matthau is Charlie, a compulsive gambler (talk about playing it close to home) whose less-than-winning ways at the racetrack have definitely put a strain on his relationship with his bookie. Undaunted, he comes up with a new can't-miss scheme -- talking skeptical brother-in-law Herb (Lemmon) into joining him on a Caribbean cruise where the promise of lonely, wealthy women could solve his little cash flow problem.
What he has failed to inform Herb is that he has volunteered both of them as dance hosts in order to gain free passage, his two left feet notwithstanding. Twinkle-toes Herb ends up having to do all the work, as Charlie woos the very eligible Liz LaBreche (Cannon) while trying to avoid the highly suspicious gaze of cruise director Gil Godwyn (Brent Spiner).
To further complicate matters, devout widower Herb has unwittingly found romance with Vivian (a glorious DeHaven), a former publisher who has been "shanghaied" by her well-meaning daughter and new son-in-law.
It's refreshing to see so many actors of a certain age working together and so effectively in the same movie. Having performed with each other on-and-off for over 30 years, Matthau and Lemmon have developed a terrific shorthand that translates into funny even when tyro Robert Nelson Jacobs' workable script isn't always up to snuff.
It also doesn't hurt to have O'Connor on board as a legitimate dance host (he naturally doesn't get away without strutting some of his famous stuff) or Stritch as Cannon's terminally feisty, gold-digging mom. Also doing fine work are DeHaven, Spiner, Rue McClanahan as the ship's owner and Mulhare (in his last screen appearance) as Matthau's suave, high-stakes nemesis.
Serving as navigator, Coolidge gives everyone a chance to shine, while adeptly giving just the right weight to both the comedic and heartfelt moments. It's a tricky balancing act that, save for a few rough patches, succeeds admirably.
As a double added bonus, the end credits feature the various cast members in a very funny interpretive dance sequence, plus those ever-popular outtakes accompanied by a number of well-placed bleeps preserving that PG-13 rating.
OUT TO SEA
20th Century Fox
A Davis Entertainment Co. production
A Martha Coolidge film
Director Martha Coolidge
Producers John Davis, David T. Friendly
Screenwriter Robert Nelson Jacobs
Executive producers Dylan Sellers, Barry Berg
Director of photography Lajos Koltai
Production designer James Spencer
Editor Anne V. Coates
Music David Newman
Costume designer Jane Robinson
Casting Jackie Burch
Color/stereo
Cast:
Herb Jack Lemmon
Charlie Walter Matthau
Liz Dyan Cannon
Vivian Gloria DeHaven
Godwyn Brent Spiner
Mavis:Elaine Stritch
Mac Hal Linden
Jonathan Donald O'Connor
Carswell Edward Mulhare
Shelly Rue McClanahan
Running time -- 106 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
- 6/30/1997
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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