Rugs Movie Reviews


A Scary Baby, Jane
Bette and Joan forever..Whatever Happened to Baby Jane was the very first movie I had seen with either actress. I saw it about seven years ago on AMC when I was 11. That would make the year about 1996. Anyway, 1996 was not a very glamorous or melodramatic year, and just the sight of Bette Davis caked in ghostly white Baby Jane makeup was enough to capture my imagination. Who was this tragic creature, I wondered. The story was just brilliant. I had never seen anything like it. Between the rats in the cellar, dramatic alcoholism, and the haunting appearance of Bette, I was in some kind of cinematic realm I had never entered before - and I loved it! So, naturally, I became a huge fan of Bette Davis - much to the confusion of everyone else my age.
It is only as I look at the film now, that I realize Joan Crawford was just as much the equal of Bette, and possibly the better actress in general. That she was able to give such a sensitive and subtle performance at this stage in her life - alcoholism had taken a great toll - is proof that she really was a master. The character of Blanche was originally intended to be just as bizarre and crazy as Baby Jane. However, Joan insisted that her character be glamorous and appear somewhat human. This must have helped the film tremendously - because the humanity of Blanche allows us to feel sympathy for her character - without that sympathy her character wouldn't have been the "straight man" and the film, simply, wouldn't have worked! When you want to acknowledge who really saved Baby Jane - thank Joan Crawford, the real genius behind the project (she was, remember, the one who found the book in the first place and insisted that Robert Aldrich direct it, skyrocketing his career and Bette's!) What a shame that Joan didn't receive the Oscar, but how glad I am that she accepted for Anne Bancroft at the Oscars! Go Joan...the ultimate diva.
This is a classic....

Miss movies like theseI with this movie would get a better treatment with the DVD. Its one of the best comedies ever. Actually, its a family comedy that you can watch with any age group. The adults will get the minor sex jokes, and the teenagers will too, but enjoy the rest. Kids will enjoy the fun of Bill Murray father like figure to one of the kids.
This is a must see comedy.
Best Summer Camp Movie Ever
SOOOOOOOOOOO Funny!

IT'S OFFICIAL!!!!!!!"Voyager Time Capsule: Kathryn Janeway": A new, exclusive interview with Kate Mulgrew talking about how she landed the role of Janeway, the challenges of playing a female captain and her Broadway play on Katharine Hepburn, "Tea At Five." Also includes archival interviews with the actress and rare behind-the-scenes footage. "The First Captain: Genevieve Bujold": Reveals rare footage and outtakes of Ms. Bujold as Captain Janeway, with commentary by Executive Producer Rick Berman.
"Cast Reflections: Season One": Voyager's principal cast members discuss their reactions to joining the Trek franchise, getting fan mail, and auditioning. Also featured: Armin Shimerman discussing his role as Quark in the pilot episode.
"On Location With the Kazon": Supervising Producer David Livingston guides viewers on an exclusive tour of the desert locale used for the Kazon Village in the pilot episode. Includes interviews with Director Rick Kolbe and behind-the-scenes footage of the cast.
"Red Alert: Visual Effects Season One": Dan Curry and the Visual Effects crew give a blow-by-blow of some spectacular visual effects created for Season One. Highlights include: behind-the-scenes footage of exploding space station, utilizing fire elements in crashing Chakotay's ship and secrets of shooting the Voyager ship model.
"Launching Voyager On The Web": Veteran Web site designer and producer Marc Wade explains how, in the early days of the internet, an interactive Voyager Web site was created to help launch the series. Included is rare footage of Kate Mulgrew and Robert Picardo playing their roles for the Web-based trivia game, plus an overview of Star Trek's history on the Web.
"Real Science With Andre Bormanis": Science Consultant and writer Bormanis explores how the writers strive for authenticity by incorporating real space phenomena and scientific theories. For Season One, Andre discusses how Hubble photos helped create "the Badlands," voyaging through wormholes, and the possibilities of time travel.
"Lost Transmissions From The Delta Quadrant": Hidden in the Voyager menu, viewers who search and click with their DVD remote can find special interview clips with Kate Mulgrew, Michael Piller, Brannon Braga and guest star Vaughn Armstrong (from "Eye of the Needle").
As with the releases of TNG and DS9 boxed sets, A new season of Voyager will be available every other month throughout 2004.
Arriving February 24, 2004!
Star Trek- Voyager must have!!!

I will NEVER forget this movie!I wasn't prepared for how much I would be impressed by the clever, modest Derek Flint. One of the highlights of the movie is when, seeing a fly in the office of his friend, Chief Cramden, takes out a cigarette holder and goes into "hunt and seek" mode....eyeing the little beast as it flies around the room. He then uses the cig holder as a blow dart and NAILS the fly to the wall! That scene alone was impressive enough to make me a fan forever!
Coburn's sense of cool defines this movie...the way he handles Flint's knowledge of just about everything, his unflappability in the face of iminent death and his ability to estricate himself from the closest of calls will have him endearing himself to YOU as well! Edward Mulhare makes an excellent, comic-book style villain against Coburn, and Gila Golan plays the femme fatale that Flint eventually wins over to the side of the angels.
From the Bob Peak poster art to the Jerry Goldsmith score, not to mentiion Coburn's great take on what should have been a MUCH larger franchise, I guarantee you'll become a fan of the very personable Mr. Flint.
dead on target
Our Man Flint Is ZOWIEThe villans' (there are three, including a Caucausian named Dr. Lee and a Chinese named Dr. Schneider) nefarious plan also poses a challenge to the Bond films: controlling the world's weather. Plus, Flint fights much, much better than 007.
He's also a rebel, unlike the office bug 007, and balks at being hired by the major super powers. Whoever created the Flint character should take a big bow; James Coburn as Derek Flint is endearing, hysterical (while doing everything with a straight face)and a Super guy, not just a mere super spy. He's an inspiration for kids of all ages to hit the books, to explore and discover.
I've heard that James Coburn would have done more 'Flints' but they couldn't come up with good scripts. A real shame, for with five or six 'Flints,' Coburn would have become a megastar.
Thank you, Mr. Coburn, Mr. Flint.


it's decent, but nowhere near as good as "Moulin Rouge"
A TRULY SPECIAL EDITIONBased on the 1957 Broadway hit, "West Side" was brought to the screen with all it's original energy and vibrancy. This special edition pulls out all the stops presenting the film in the widescreen format in newly re-mastered 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround with an option to view the film with or without it's original intermission. Bonus features include a stills gallery, collectible scrapbook, theatrical trailers and the original one-hour documentary "West Side Memories" which is great but is sorely missing the presence of two of its cast members: Natalie Wood (due to her untimely death in 1981; archival interviews would have been welcome) and George Chakiris (contractual).
Natalie Wood is perfect as "Maria". She turns in a stellar performance. I disagree with her detractors. Natalie was the best possible choice to play "Maria", with her dark hair and eyes she can easily pass for a latina, her accent does waiver in some spots but it doesnt hinder her performance. A latina wasn't necessarily needed to play this role, yes the role was that of a young Puerto Rican girl, but Natalie more than does the role justice. As I recall, the role of "Maria" was originated on Broadway by Carol Lawrence who isnt any more Puerto Rican than Miss Wood is. Listen to Miss Lawrence on the Original Broadway Cast CD, she doesnt even have an accent! Just one viewing of Natalie's performance in the final scene is proof enough she was more than up to the challenge.
Great edition of a great film musical masterpieceThe positives unquestionably outweigh the negatives. From the opening sequences, of spectacular overhead shots of upper Manhattan, to the first shots of the guys dancing on the street, you can tell you are in for something special. Although not featuring any individual dancers of the quality or charisma of Fred Astaire or Gene Kelly, the film harkens back, almost, to an earlier period of the musical, to Busby Berkeley and his great ensemble dancing. But this is a completely jazzed up Berkeley, and the dancing possesses an edgy, energetic, hyped up style that had never before been witnessed onscreen. The music more than matched the exhilaration of the dancing. Not since the days of George Gershwin had a composer with the classical credibility of Leonard Bernstein cooperated in a stage and then screen production. The opening dance number, with woodwinds and horns battling out a melody, was unique in its blend of organized chaos, both in terms of orchestra and dancers.
Although the highpoint of WEST SIDE STORY was its score and choreography, the songs interspersed through the story are frequently superb, from the great "When You're a Jet" that opens the film to the incredibly exhilarating "America" to the gloriously beautiful "Somewhere" one knows the songs are dramatically above average. I was never a huge fan of the plot. Once you have caught on to the ROMEO AND JULIET remake angle, the plot unfolds pretty much as expected. In fact, I'm not in general a fan of updated remakes of Shakespeare, though there are exceptions (like FORBIDDEN PLANET fascinatingly updating THE TEMPEST).
The problem with the film lies almost entirely in the casting, most importantly Natalie Wood, but extending to others. In a film pitting Anglos and Hispanics, and all the Hispanics save one (Rita Morena) portrayed by Caucasian performers, you automatically have half the actors miscast. I love Natalie Wood, but she is as wrong for this role as it is possible for a performer to be. She looks like a white girl with make up smudged on to make her look darker, never like someone who could pass for Puerto Rican. On top of this, she was not a singer, though she was at least adequate as a dancer. Marni Nixon was one of the great voiceover artists of her generation, but I still think the film would have been dramatically improved by casting an Hispanic actress who could sing in the lead role. Richard Beymer is adequate in his role, but, again, they could have cast someone who could actually sing. Russ Tamblyn's voice was also dubbed, but he was such a spectacular dancer that he could only have been replaced with a loss to the film as a whole. George Chakiris was spectacular as Bernardo, but, again, it would have been nice to have seen a Puerto Rican in the role. This is all, I know, wishful thinking conducted in the early 21st century, when ethnics would have been cast in the proper roles, but in 1961, no studios would have taken the chance of casting Hispanics in sympathetic Hispanic roles. Today, when watching WEST SIDE STORY, the inappropriate casting of people of the wrong ethnicity in central roles stands out like a sore thumb, and the persistent dubbing is grating.
Nonetheless, WEST SIDE STORY remains one of the great triumphs of the film musical. It is entertaining, funny, exciting, and extraordinarily well photographed. It is also one of the few times where popular entertainment seems to be blurring the line between it and serious art. The casting decisions lessen the overall impact of the film, but do not keep it from being a success.
Interestingly, two of the main actors from the film would later appear, though separately, in TWIN PEAKS, with Richard Beymer (Tony) playing the scheming Benjamin Horne and Russ Tamblyn (Riff) the exceedingly bizarre Dr. Jacoby, the latter looking very much like a somewhat older, bearded version of himself (with bizarre eyeglasses, I think with one red and one yellow lens), while the former is barely recognizable. Being a huge fan of both the film and the series, they thus have become oddly linked in my mind.


it's decent, but nowhere near as good as "Moulin Rouge"
A TRULY SPECIAL EDITIONBased on the 1957 Broadway hit, "West Side" was brought to the screen with all it's original energy and vibrancy. This special edition pulls out all the stops presenting the film in the widescreen format in newly re-mastered 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround with an option to view the film with or without it's original intermission. Bonus features include a stills gallery, collectible scrapbook, theatrical trailers and the original one-hour documentary "West Side Memories" which is great but is sorely missing the presence of two of its cast members: Natalie Wood (due to her untimely death in 1981; archival interviews would have been welcome) and George Chakiris (contractual).
Natalie Wood is perfect as "Maria". She turns in a stellar performance. I disagree with her detractors. Natalie was the best possible choice to play "Maria", with her dark hair and eyes she can easily pass for a latina, her accent does waiver in some spots but it doesnt hinder her performance. A latina wasn't necessarily needed to play this role, yes the role was that of a young Puerto Rican girl, but Natalie more than does the role justice. As I recall, the role of "Maria" was originated on Broadway by Carol Lawrence who isnt any more Puerto Rican than Miss Wood is. Listen to Miss Lawrence on the Original Broadway Cast CD, she doesnt even have an accent! Just one viewing of Natalie's performance in the final scene is proof enough she was more than up to the challenge.
Great edition of a great film musical masterpieceThe positives unquestionably outweigh the negatives. From the opening sequences, of spectacular overhead shots of upper Manhattan, to the first shots of the guys dancing on the street, you can tell you are in for something special. Although not featuring any individual dancers of the quality or charisma of Fred Astaire or Gene Kelly, the film harkens back, almost, to an earlier period of the musical, to Busby Berkeley and his great ensemble dancing. But this is a completely jazzed up Berkeley, and the dancing possesses an edgy, energetic, hyped up style that had never before been witnessed onscreen. The music more than matched the exhilaration of the dancing. Not since the days of George Gershwin had a composer with the classical credibility of Leonard Bernstein cooperated in a stage and then screen production. The opening dance number, with woodwinds and horns battling out a melody, was unique in its blend of organized chaos, both in terms of orchestra and dancers.
Although the highpoint of WEST SIDE STORY was its score and choreography, the songs interspersed through the story are frequently superb, from the great "When You're a Jet" that opens the film to the incredibly exhilarating "America" to the gloriously beautiful "Somewhere" one knows the songs are dramatically above average. I was never a huge fan of the plot. Once you have caught on to the ROMEO AND JULIET remake angle, the plot unfolds pretty much as expected. In fact, I'm not in general a fan of updated remakes of Shakespeare, though there are exceptions (like FORBIDDEN PLANET fascinatingly updating THE TEMPEST).
The problem with the film lies almost entirely in the casting, most importantly Natalie Wood, but extending to others. In a film pitting Anglos and Hispanics, and all the Hispanics save one (Rita Morena) portrayed by Caucasian performers, you automatically have half the actors miscast. I love Natalie Wood, but she is as wrong for this role as it is possible for a performer to be. She looks like a white girl with make up smudged on to make her look darker, never like someone who could pass for Puerto Rican. On top of this, she was not a singer, though she was at least adequate as a dancer. Marni Nixon was one of the great voiceover artists of her generation, but I still think the film would have been dramatically improved by casting an Hispanic actress who could sing in the lead role. Richard Beymer is adequate in his role, but, again, they could have cast someone who could actually sing. Russ Tamblyn's voice was also dubbed, but he was such a spectacular dancer that he could only have been replaced with a loss to the film as a whole. George Chakiris was spectacular as Bernardo, but, again, it would have been nice to have seen a Puerto Rican in the role. This is all, I know, wishful thinking conducted in the early 21st century, when ethnics would have been cast in the proper roles, but in 1961, no studios would have taken the chance of casting Hispanics in sympathetic Hispanic roles. Today, when watching WEST SIDE STORY, the inappropriate casting of people of the wrong ethnicity in central roles stands out like a sore thumb, and the persistent dubbing is grating.
Nonetheless, WEST SIDE STORY remains one of the great triumphs of the film musical. It is entertaining, funny, exciting, and extraordinarily well photographed. It is also one of the few times where popular entertainment seems to be blurring the line between it and serious art. The casting decisions lessen the overall impact of the film, but do not keep it from being a success.
Interestingly, two of the main actors from the film would later appear, though separately, in TWIN PEAKS, with Richard Beymer (Tony) playing the scheming Benjamin Horne and Russ Tamblyn (Riff) the exceedingly bizarre Dr. Jacoby, the latter looking very much like a somewhat older, bearded version of himself (with bizarre eyeglasses, I think with one red and one yellow lens), while the former is barely recognizable. Being a huge fan of both the film and the series, they thus have become oddly linked in my mind.


it's decent, but nowhere near as good as "Moulin Rouge"
A TRULY SPECIAL EDITIONBased on the 1957 Broadway hit, "West Side" was brought to the screen with all it's original energy and vibrancy. This special edition pulls out all the stops presenting the film in the widescreen format in newly re-mastered 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround with an option to view the film with or without it's original intermission. Bonus features include a stills gallery, collectible scrapbook, theatrical trailers and the original one-hour documentary "West Side Memories" which is great but is sorely missing the presence of two of its cast members: Natalie Wood (due to her untimely death in 1981; archival interviews would have been welcome) and George Chakiris (contractual).
Natalie Wood is perfect as "Maria". She turns in a stellar performance. I disagree with her detractors. Natalie was the best possible choice to play "Maria", with her dark hair and eyes she can easily pass for a latina, her accent does waiver in some spots but it doesnt hinder her performance. A latina wasn't necessarily needed to play this role, yes the role was that of a young Puerto Rican girl, but Natalie more than does the role justice. As I recall, the role of "Maria" was originated on Broadway by Carol Lawrence who isnt any more Puerto Rican than Miss Wood is. Listen to Miss Lawrence on the Original Broadway Cast CD, she doesnt even have an accent! Just one viewing of Natalie's performance in the final scene is proof enough she was more than up to the challenge.
Great edition of a great film musical masterpieceThe positives unquestionably outweigh the negatives. From the opening sequences, of spectacular overhead shots of upper Manhattan, to the first shots of the guys dancing on the street, you can tell you are in for something special. Although not featuring any individual dancers of the quality or charisma of Fred Astaire or Gene Kelly, the film harkens back, almost, to an earlier period of the musical, to Busby Berkeley and his great ensemble dancing. But this is a completely jazzed up Berkeley, and the dancing possesses an edgy, energetic, hyped up style that had never before been witnessed onscreen. The music more than matched the exhilaration of the dancing. Not since the days of George Gershwin had a composer with the classical credibility of Leonard Bernstein cooperated in a stage and then screen production. The opening dance number, with woodwinds and horns battling out a melody, was unique in its blend of organized chaos, both in terms of orchestra and dancers.
Although the highpoint of WEST SIDE STORY was its score and choreography, the songs interspersed through the story are frequently superb, from the great "When You're a Jet" that opens the film to the incredibly exhilarating "America" to the gloriously beautiful "Somewhere" one knows the songs are dramatically above average. I was never a huge fan of the plot. Once you have caught on to the ROMEO AND JULIET remake angle, the plot unfolds pretty much as expected. In fact, I'm not in general a fan of updated remakes of Shakespeare, though there are exceptions (like FORBIDDEN PLANET fascinatingly updating THE TEMPEST).
The problem with the film lies almost entirely in the casting, most importantly Natalie Wood, but extending to others. In a film pitting Anglos and Hispanics, and all the Hispanics save one (Rita Morena) portrayed by Caucasian performers, you automatically have half the actors miscast. I love Natalie Wood, but she is as wrong for this role as it is possible for a performer to be. She looks like a white girl with make up smudged on to make her look darker, never like someone who could pass for Puerto Rican. On top of this, she was not a singer, though she was at least adequate as a dancer. Marni Nixon was one of the great voiceover artists of her generation, but I still think the film would have been dramatically improved by casting an Hispanic actress who could sing in the lead role. Richard Beymer is adequate in his role, but, again, they could have cast someone who could actually sing. Russ Tamblyn's voice was also dubbed, but he was such a spectacular dancer that he could only have been replaced with a loss to the film as a whole. George Chakiris was spectacular as Bernardo, but, again, it would have been nice to have seen a Puerto Rican in the role. This is all, I know, wishful thinking conducted in the early 21st century, when ethnics would have been cast in the proper roles, but in 1961, no studios would have taken the chance of casting Hispanics in sympathetic Hispanic roles. Today, when watching WEST SIDE STORY, the inappropriate casting of people of the wrong ethnicity in central roles stands out like a sore thumb, and the persistent dubbing is grating.
Nonetheless, WEST SIDE STORY remains one of the great triumphs of the film musical. It is entertaining, funny, exciting, and extraordinarily well photographed. It is also one of the few times where popular entertainment seems to be blurring the line between it and serious art. The casting decisions lessen the overall impact of the film, but do not keep it from being a success.
Interestingly, two of the main actors from the film would later appear, though separately, in TWIN PEAKS, with Richard Beymer (Tony) playing the scheming Benjamin Horne and Russ Tamblyn (Riff) the exceedingly bizarre Dr. Jacoby, the latter looking very much like a somewhat older, bearded version of himself (with bizarre eyeglasses, I think with one red and one yellow lens), while the former is barely recognizable. Being a huge fan of both the film and the series, they thus have become oddly linked in my mind.


"We rob banks!"Clyde Barrow (Beatty) rescues Bonnie Parker (Dunaway) from her uneventful life back home and promptly plunges her into a life of crime. In a country where despair has become a way of life thanks to the Depression, the bank robbers become heroes to the common folk who have been victimized by the instruments of capitalism. Relying on their wits and a touch of good fortune, the young lovers evade the law while basking in their newfound fame but their luck eventually runs out and they meet their end in a hail of bullets.
"Bonnie and Clyde" is infamous for introducing a new level of graphic violence to cinema by way of its final shoot-out. However, that one aspect of the film tends to overshadow its other accomplishments. The moral ambiguity running throughout the film distinctly separated it from the "white-hats-and-black-hats" characterizations of past Hollywood heroes and villains. This problematic approach to morality was a byproduct of the upheaval society itself was undergoing in the late-Sixties as it was discovering how difficult it was to distinguish between the good guys and the bad guys in the real world. The film also went to great pains to appear as realistic as possible. Difficult themes in film were often satirized or exaggerated to soften its impact on the audience, but Penn created such an authentic feel to "Bonnie and Clyde" that the line between fantasy and reality became uncomfortably blurred. Throw in solid supporting work by Estelle Parsons, Gene Hackman, Michael J. Pollard, and Gene Wilder to complement the film's other aforementioned accomplishments and what you have is milestone work whose impact on the medium has been far-reaching.
Wasn't there a song about this?Warren Beaty does a great job as Clyde, and Faye Dunaway was perfect, and she's really hot. (I recently saw her in the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair. She's still hot.) Gene Hackman was a purely lovable charecter, and Estelle Parsons, while she did a great job, needs to shut up. Her charecter is an annoying hag. Oh yeah, Michael J. Pollard was excellent as well too. He's very underrated, and I hope to find some more of his movies.
All the main actors got their big break on this movie. Warren Beaty later did Mccabe and Mrs. Miller, Faye Dunaway later did two excellent movies, Chinatown and Network, Michael J. Pollard did Melvin and Howard, Dick Tracy, and The Wild Angels, Gene Hackman did French Connection, Scarecrow, The Conversation, etc., Estelle Parsons later did Rachael, Rachael and I Never Sang For My Father, and of course, Gene Wilder did a lot of great Mel Brooks movies. So, they all got their first fame on this movie.
Speaking of the movie, it's really good, but it's not on the same level as some other movies I've reviewed. It's got humor, drama, social commentary, and a great bloody ending, that's true, but I just didn't like it as much as other gangster movies. (Mean Streets, of course, is the best gangster movie ever, and the best movie of all time.) I give the movie kudos for revolutionizing cinema, but I didn't really think the story was original. Then again, I've seen the ripoffs of this movie, so maybe that's why I thought it was just a good movie. It's not on my top 10, but it's still quite good. Nice ending. (note the sarcasm)
A landmark film from the 60sSuch violence and bloodletting hadn't been seen on screen before, but there was art behind it, not mindless gore. A film classic as soon as it was released, the movie takes place during the Great Depression with the impossibly young Faye Dunnaway as Bonnie and Warren Beatty as Clyde (handsome, swashbuckling, ? impotent), the brains behind the gang. Also along for the ride, so to speak, are Gene Hackman as Clyde's brother, his wife Blanche (played by Estelle Parsons) who is skittish as a squirrel on a freeway and really should have stayed home baking rhubarb crisp, and, best of all, almost stealing every scene in which he appears, Michael J. Pollard as CW Moss.
If by some chance you haven't seen it before, see it now. If you've already seen it, even if you've seen it several times, see it again. It doesn't get stale.


Should be a classicWhat's not to like: zip. Buy this one for your collection.
JOHN CARPENTER and JEFF BRIDGES ...for recount...
"Starman" is STAR QUALITY

Oscar-winner movie
The Soldier's Wife"Anatomy of a Murder" is one of his best: perfect, spot-on casting, eloquent screenplay, truthful performances, and gorgeous black and white photography. Jimmy Stewart, who seemed to be able to realistically portray anyone from any era and social status, plays a small town lawyer hired to defend a soldier, Ben Gazarra for murdering a man accused of raping his wife, Lee Remick. Gazzara and Remick are first rate but it is a non-actor, real judge Joseph N. Welch who almost steals the movie away from all three principals, which only proves that Preminger was a smart cookie...a smart cookie, indeed.
One Of Jimmy's Best! And Lee Remick Cinches The Deal!There's a great supporting cast in force here as well, including Geoge C. Scott, Ben Gazzara, Arthur O'Connell, Eve Arden (hilarious, as always, in the role of Stewart's secretary), Murray Hamilton, Orson Bean, and the always-fetching Lee Remick (whose alluring quality is undeniable in this motion picture).
Keep an eye open for Howard McNear (Floyd the Barber in "The Andy Griffith Show") as a witness. It's quite humorous--and maybe even a tad bit unsettling even--to hear Floyd Lawson on the witness stand, speaking of sexual matters. Mayberry-ites would gasp in shock & horror I imagine. LOL.
Clocking in at a very lengthy 160 minutes, the film never drags. It moves at a snappy-enough pace to keep our interest the whole way, with a nice combination of scenes both inside and outside the courtroom.
There's an outstanding Duke Ellington score to propel the action, and as a bonus on the DVD edition, there's a perfectly-fantastic Photo Gallery section of stills from the film, underscored by Ellington's music from the movie. This is the best and classiest "Photo Gallery" extra you're likely to encounter on any DVD product as of this date.
Picture quality on the DVD looks just fine here. Aspect ratio is 1.33:1 (Full Frame), which I know irks the "Widescreen Only" crowd. However, from all the info I can gather, the 1.33 ratio IS indeed the Original Aspect Ratio for this film. So, it's OK by me, if this is the case.
If "Anatomy Of A Murder" is not currently in your DVD collection, you should probably be taken to court by lawyer Stewart for overlooking this fine motion picture experience. Get it now -- before Jimmy comes after you with a subpoena. :)
Bette Davis and Joan Crawford were both facing waning careers when they were cast in this movie, but outstanding performances from both jump-started those careers and propelled the women back into the hearts of the public. Bette Davis is especially superb as the selfish and sadistic Jane, both compelling and believable in her portrayal of the onetime child star who has degenerated into a repulsive and vulgar reflection of her former self. Also notable is the appearance of actor Victor Buono, who here makes his film debut in the supporting role of a young, out-of-work pianist attempting to mooch a few dollars off of spinster Jane. Davis and Buono each received Oscar nominations for their performances.
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? is sharp, compelling--and scary! The Warner DVD is short on extras, and the digital transfer could have used a little clean-up on the scratches and wear artifacts, but it is still well worth the reasonable price and will make a fine addition to the collection of any horror fan.