Academic Papers Movie Reviews


Related Subjects: Science Economic_Sociology
Family movie reviews for "Academic Papers" sorted by average review score:

The Rachel Papers
Released in DVD by MGM/UA Video (05 August, 2003)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Damian Harris
Starring: Dexter Fletcher and Ione Skye
Average review score:

OK, I admit the real reason I first saw this movie...
... ten years ago was because I heard from a friend that Ione Skye had a pair of nude scenes in it. However, I found myself completely taken in by the movie...One scene in particular was priceless. Rachel has just climbed into a taxi and closed the door but left open the window. Just as Charles works up the nerve to try to kiss her through the window and leans foreward, the cab pulls away. The look on his face is pitiful. But when you see her smile back, it's just magical...Oh by the way, Ione Skye DOES take off her clothes repeatedly, so guys who normally shun this sort of movie have a valid reason to watch it, too!

Movies never are as good as the books...
A very good movie, not quite up to the standard of the book it is based on (and follows rather closely).

The book was written from the point of view of the main character, but it has two voices. One was Charles Highway's inner meanderings and pronouncements, the other (still by Charles) was the unadorned, unanalysed description of the things that happened to him. And generally there is a glaring difference between the two - they don't match up. In the view of the first voice, Charles is a wise and funny schemer. But the events related in the second voice show him to be inept, unlucky, and chronically unsure of himself. The ending was similarly riven. You can't tell if things ended-up the way they did by choice or design. Perhaps the author didn't know.

So anyway, the movie has to deal with that dichotomy, and it does it by pretty much ignoring the second voice. Charles comes across as boastful and shallow, for the most part, and a lot less likeable. The film also has to drop a lot of his hilarious caustic monolgues, so it's less funny than the book, too. That being said, there's enough left to allow fans of the book to fill in the blanks, and it doesn't attempt to force in a standard Hollywood ending. Plus the three main actors and the supporting cast were very good - Jonathon Pryce as Charles' deranged uncle is so good that it's hard to keep your eyes on Ione Skye in the few scenes they have together.

The Rachel Papers
Perhaps not on par with the novel but more accessible. Although brilliant and highly original, I think Martin Amis' first book contains some obscure passages and insider English schoolboy jokes. Also, the 1970's setting of the book has been replaced by the 1980's in the movie.

Ione Skye and Dexter Fletcher portray the growing relationship between Rachel & Charles rather well. James Spader fills in nicely as DeForest, the rival boyfriend. The college scene with Michael Gambon as Doctor Knowd is particularly humorous.

A good study in adolescence.


Got Papers?
Released in DVD by New Form, Inc. (15 July, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: Levi Nunez
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Got Papers?
Released in DVD by Laguna Productions, Inc. (20 May, 2003)
MPAA Rating:
Director: Jose Reyes Bencomo
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Pentagon Papers
Released in DVD by Paramount Home Video (17 February, 2004)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Rod Holcomb
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Pickwick Papers
Released in DVD by Liberty Intl Publish (18 September, 2001)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Brian Lighthill
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Science Economic_Sociology