Online Experts Movie Reviews


Related Subjects: Health
Family movie reviews for "Online Experts" sorted by average review score:

P.D. James - Death of an Expert Witness
Released in DVD by Wellspring Media, In (04 February, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Herbert Wise
This three-part, 1983 drama remains an honorable and largely captivating effort to adapt the unique structure of a P.D. James mystery novel to television. Despite bizarre production values--including intense lighting (presumably to accommodate the all-video shoot) and a near-absence of tone that often makes good actors look as if they're knocking about between rehearsals--the show holds up where it counts.

James's extensive, pre-murder set-up survives a script translation, and the terrific cast infuses urgency into the story of a forensic scientist (Geoffrey Palmer) bludgeoned to death by any one of many suspects: among them a hostile ex-lover (Meg Davies), her brother and the victim's boss (Barry Foster), and an angry cousin (Brenda Blethyn) living as "a friend" with the deceased's ex-wife. So many possibilities, and the rather dour but thorough Scotland Yard Commander Adam Dalgliesh (Roy Marsden), burdened by the recent death of his wife, sifts through them all with deceptive impartiality and quiet self-disapprobation. --Tom Keogh

Average review score:

THE ADAM DALGLEISH SERIES
I'VE SEEN THE WHOLE ADAM DALGLEISH SERIES WRITTEN BY P.D. JAMES -WHO INCIDENTALLY, LIVES IN NORFOLK, U.K., STARRING ROY MARSDEN AS INSPECTOR DALGLEISH...THEY WERE ALL FILMED IN NORFOLK VILLAGES, WHICH IN THEMSELVES ARE VERY PICTURESQUE....MANY OF THEM IN THE OLDE WORLD SETTING WITH THE VILLAGE-GREEN IN THE CENTRE OF THE VILLAGE. TO GET BACK TO MY REVIEW OF THE SERIES - THEY ARE ABSOLUTELY GRIPPING, AND U DON'T KNOW WHO THE KILLER, MURDERER, WHATEVER U WANT TO CALL THE PERSON WHO COMMITS THE CRIME UNTIL RIGHT AT THE END. I HONESTLY BELIEVE THAT EVERYONE WHO WATCHES THE SERIES WILL ENJOY IT & BECOME QUITE ADDICTED TO
IT, AND ALSO WANT TO READ THE BOOKS. IM NOT QUITE CERTAIN BUT I THINK THERE WERE 6 OR 7 TITLES...ENJOY!


Efficiency Expert
Released in DVD by Front Row Video, Inc (22 June, 2001)
MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Mark Joffe
Starring: Anthony Hopkins
The Efficiency Expert (released in theaters as Spotswood), a warm-hearted, wacky comedy with a social conscience, takes place in Australia in the "Swinging '60s," and its character, substance, music, and design are so authentic one nearly forgets that it was made in 1991. Sir Anthony Hopkins is wonderful as Errol Wallace, the efficiency expert of the title, who devises painful belt-tightening measures for struggling companies. Wallace is hired to modernize the dotty, antiquated Ball Moccasin Factory, and he's stunned at the impossibility of the task. The cutting room resembles a workshop full of Santa's elves; the men literally dance jigs while they work. Still, Wallace takes the bull by the horns and deputizes a young man, Carey (the winning Ben Mendelsohn), to help him downsize the factory. It's like trying to disband a tribe; many of the employees have been there for 30 years; romances blossom there. Homely Wendy (Toni Colette, of Muriel's Wedding and The Sixth Sense) loves Ben, but he lusts after tarty Cheryl (Rebecca Rigg), whose nasty shark of a boyfriend, Kim, is played by a young Russell Crowe. Wallace thinks he's teaching these factory workers how business works, but it's he who learns a lesson. "Work isn't just about money," declares old Mr. Ball, the factory's owner (the exceedingly touching Alwyn Kurts). "It's about dignity, about treating people with respect. People need to make things." The movie's message has timeless resonance, as job security and pride in manufacturing vanishes from large industrialized nations. --Laura Mirsky
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English efficiency consultant goes to Aussie shoe factory
Excellent funny movie about efficiency consultant, Hopkins, that goes to evaluate an Aussie shoe factory, and eventually ends up saving it. The owner is an idealistic capitalist who attempts to shelter employees from external changes by losing money. Eventually he has to face the music or else all his employees will lose their jobs. Very timely movie given all the talk about downsizing.


Expert Weapon
Released in DVD by Simitar Video (29 September, 1998)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Steven Austin
Starring: Sam J. Jones
Average review score:

Expert Weapon
I was very disappointed with Expert Weapon.Sam Jones was great in Flash Gordon but in this movie well i think he should have left it alone.The acting and fighting scenes were so stupidly made,it was like as if a actor was standing there waiting to be hit.This is the type of film that reminded me of the early '80's low and cheap. Please do not waste your money on a low budget film like this.Rent it or look for a diffrent type of action film.

This video is only $19.95
Action Star Ian Jacklin stars along with Flash Gordon's Sam J Jones, Judy Landers and Joe Estevez. This film is NOT available in Canada. If you have questions please call the films producer and distributor at 1-800-906-4749. ~Screen Pix Home Video


Let's Dance Salsa - Advanced and Expert Combinations DVD
Released in DVD by Inecom,Inc (10 May, 2002)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:

as bad as it gets
This is by far the worst salsa dancing i ever saw... Ive been dancing for a couple of years now and i was looking something do improve my repertorium. Im trying to sell my copy but i dont think theres anyone interested.

Worst salsa video around - why can't I rate it 0?
I've been dancing Salsa for more than 2 years and had a look at several videos. This video series is so bad that you think it must be a joke, but after a while you start to realize that these guys are serious about it. Susie dances worse than many beginners I've seen, hopping around like she's doing jive. Marlon is more mumbling than dancing, his method in teaching is not having one. His moves are very basic and some look just ridiculous. Actually I'm speechless. If you're so bad it's a crime to let people pay $ for a DVD... At least my friends and I had a good laugh! If you want to get a fabulous instructional video, from beginner to advanced, get the RedHotSalsa series from Ron and Bethana Rosario! This is Salsa!

less formal salsa style danced by many in Latin America
If you want to be spoon-fed one regimented unvarying way to dance salsa choose another video. (Then God help you when you want to dance with a partner who didn't learn the same exact way you did). If want to learn the more "formal" New York mambo style choose another video. If you want formal ballroom/dance studio salsa look elsewhere.

However if you want to learn a cumbia backstep style of salsa, Marlon Silva's set of videos are the only ones I've found. If you dance with many different dance partners from different parts of Latin America, this will make you a more flexible leader who's better able to find a step to match her style. Or if you teach beginners to dance salsa - once again - I like this step better. Marlon Silva teaches you to switch and vary your "basic step" and later to improvise and find your own personal style. And if you want to watch lots of new moves there's lots of interesting material here that you can incorporate into *any* style of salsa.

I switch back and forth among different steps and styles, but if I had to choose one I prefer this cumbia-style of salsa to the New York mambo style. I won't bother to argue with those who say the New York style is the "proper" style of salsa. I've danced salsa most every week for seven years and dance to have fun with my partner, not to impress dance judges in a "Strictly Ballroom" competition setting. I first learned salsa (and merengue) in a university town with lots of international students right off the plane from Central and South America. And if you dance salsa where there are plenty of dance partners from Latin America (particularly the Caribbean) just look around: this is the style I see a lot of people dancing to *salsa* songs (and not just to cumbia songs).

In my opinion this cumbia-style salsa step feels more smooth and flowing and makes it easier to get swept up in the music than the New York style. And when I'm teaching a beginner to follow, that means this style makes it easier for them to catch onto and enjoy the distinctive feel of salsa rhythms (I often hear "aha" from women who had a quick lesson in New York style and didn't "get it"). Most complete beginners I ask prefer this style if they try both briefly. Later I teach them the New York style too for variety.

Marlon Silva doesn't spoon feed you a single basic step. Before he moves on to even basic turns, he suggests ways to vary your basic step and find your own style. Once you get more experience, he will encourage you to improvise. I chose another simpler video to get my "spoon fed" salsa to start off with, but quickly moved on to this one. Marlon Silva is more of relaxed informal natural street dancer, not a studio instructor. He definitely emphasizes feeling the music rather than precise technique.

I would agree with some of the other reviewers that Suzie Neff appears a little stiff and uninspiring in these videos. Maybe that would make a bigger difference if I was trying to learn the woman's part - I don't know. It doesn't affect my opinion of the video as a way to learn how to lead salsa steps and moves.

If this is a style of salsa you'd like to learn, Marlon Silva's instructional videos fill a valuable and neglected niche.


Anyone Can Be An Expert Skier 1: The New Way to Ski
Released in DVD by GetFitNow.com (15 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating:
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Anyone Can Be An Expert Skier 2: Powder, Bumps, and Carving
Released in DVD by GetFitNow.com (15 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating:
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Let's Dance Salsa Advanced and Expert Combinations DVD
Released in DVD by Inecom,Inc (22 August, 2001)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Let's Dance Salsa Ultimate Collection - From Beginner to Expert (3 DVD Set)
Released in DVD by Inecom,Inc (22 August, 2001)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Let's Dance Salsa: Advanced and Expert Combinations
Released in DVD by Inecom,Inc (21 January, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Health