Death Movie Reviews


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Family movie reviews for "Death" sorted by average review score:

Ends of the Earth: Death Valley
Released in DVD by Image Entertainment (15 February, 2000)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: Ends of the Earth and Peter Coyote
Average review score:

Comprehensive overview of a fascinating place
This tape has just about all you might want to know about Death Valley--Geology, Geography, History, Climatology, History, and Scenery. It addition, it has some stunning views of the Valley. The original was filmed in High Definition, and it shows in the crisp imagery of this work. Also, the DVD medium perfectly suits the location--with its stability of color even for the bright, strong reds and golds of the location.

In short, this comemoration of one of our newest National Park properties is a pleasure to own!


Fists of Fire/Swords of Death
Released in DVD by Bci Eclipse Llc (28 May, 2002)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:

'Classic Kung Fu Collection
This every Martial Arts movie fan's ultimat collection, every movie on here is good, including 'The Street Fighter movies. If you like Martil Arts films this is for you.


A Letter from Death Row
Released in DVD by Madacy Entertainment (30 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Directors: Bret Michaels and Marvin Baker
Average review score:

Good story
I haven't seen this actual DVD, but a DVD I special ordered from Hong Kong a while back. It took me forever to find it, but I had to because I rented it when it was out and thought it was great.

Just to warn you, there is some terrible acting in this movie. However, the story is so intruiging that it makes up for it. It's too bad that most mainstream movies out there today follow the same "Hollywood" template and don't make movies like this.

Check it out if you can!


Love After Death
Released in DVD by Wellspring Media, In (17 December, 2002)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Charles Matthau
The great Walter Matthau (The Fortune Cookie, The Bad News Bears, The Odd Couple) gives one of his last performances in Life After Death. Matthau plays Frank, whose wife dies after more than 40 years of marriage. Frank feels lonely, despite the affection and support of his swinging bachelor son Robert (John Stamos). Suddenly romance blossoms for both men: Frank meets Florence (Carol Burnett) at a Hawaiian-themed seniors party, while Robert meets Susan (Teri Polo) on the job. But while Frank is quick to contemplate settling down, Robert is not only leery of commitment for himself, he's not so sure his father should be jumping into a new relationship either. The script of Life After Death is commonplace, but also sincere--and in the hands of old pros like Matthau and Burnett, it plays splendidly. Stamos and Polo have a nice chemistry that gives their scenes some zip. --Bret Fetzer
Average review score:

Matthau and Burnett Rule!!
Walter Matthau(One of his last films)and Carol Burnett rule in this great movie!!It's highly recommended!!Walter Matthau,we all dearly love and miss you!!!


Love Is Colder Than Death
Released in DVD by Wellspring Media, In (10 June, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
The first feature in the frantic career of Rainer Werner Fassbinder is, like Godard's debut Breathless, a nod to the traditional gangster movie. This time, however, the tough-guy attitudes are imparted to a trio of typical Fassbinder losers, slouching about in the drab underworld of Munich. They are played by Alain Delon lookalike Ulli Lommel (who poses in a trenchcoat and film noir fedora), Fassbinder himself, and the director's blond goddess Hanna Schygulla. The film works hard to subvert conventional notions of movie storytelling, with lots of loooong pauses and stylized gestures--and as such, feels more like a trial run than a full-blown Fassbinder meisterwork. But everywhere, in the insolent opening shot or the final thrilling cut from car interior to bleak landscape, you can sense the utter confidence that burbled out of this gifted German: he was only 23, and he was going places in a hurry. --Robert Horton
Average review score:

Fassbinder's prodigious debut film
This is Fassbinder's prodigious debut film, a revisionist film noir of stark visual style, seething but repressed emotions, and sardonic humor. Even as it draws on his extensive work in theatre, Love is Colder Than Death (1969) points to the 40 incredibly diverse films to come, in several of its themes, stylistic techniques, and psychological insights. But this is no mere warm-up for later triumphs (and tribulations); it seems more resonant with each subsequent viewing.

It opens at a crime syndicate, where - in between brutal interviews with the bosses - small-time Munich pimp Franz Walsch (played by Fassbinder) strikes up a friendship with Bruno (Ulli Lommel), another recruit. Relishing his independence, Franz refuses to join the mob. He returns to his prostitute girlfriend Joanna (Hanna Schygulla, one of Fassbinder's greatest actresses). Bruno tracks Franz down for enigmatic reasons: Is it because he already feels drawn to Franz (their unexpressed homoerotic bond is key to the film), or has he been sent by the syndicate - or both? The three go on a small wave of shoplifting and murder. But when Bruno begins planning a bank robbery, Joanna's distrust and jealousy of him cause her to make some arrangements of her own.

Shot in harsh black and white by cinematographer Dietrich Lohmann, Fassbinder designed this film (with Lommel) and edited it, using his frequent pseudonym of none other than Franz Walsch. From the first scene, he establishes the tense visual style (characters trapped by large expanses of blank wall), deliberate pacing, and almost hypnotic performances. These elements work perfectly to express this almost uncanny vision of a world of repressed longing, frustration and, inevitably, violence.

About this picture Fassbinder once said, in a comment which also looks ahead to his later works, "My film isn't supposed to let feelings people already have be neutralized or soaked up; instead, the film should create new feelings.... I'm concerned with having the audience ... examine its own innermost feelings." And he does. For instance, he infuses even simple elements with many thematic and emotional layers, making them complex, even contradictory, yet almost always involving. Take the plot, which I summarized above. On the one hand, it could hardly be more simple. Yet although it is classically constructed (exposition, rising action, climax), it holds many genuine, and purposeful, mysteries of character, not only for the three leads, but minor roles too.

And in terms of cinema history, Fassbinder turns the crime film on its ear. Although he created a visually stunning "traditional" film noir in Gods of the Plague (the sequel to this film), here he eschews all familiar stylistic cues. Instead of ominous shadows, everything is hit with icy-cold light; there is nowhere to hide. Instead of the baroque, sometimes dizzying, design of such 1950s masterpieces as Aldrich's Kiss Me Deadly and Welles's Touch of Evil, Fassbinder puts us in a world of intense flatness, with rarely more than two or three planes of action. Ironically, the only places with depth of space are the centers of consumerism - the department store and supermarket - which hilariously provide no impediments to the trio pilfering everything they want.

But most of the film's space is of crushing blankness, from the sequence of Bruno's night drive along Munich's creepy, almost-deserted streets (accompanied only by Peer Raben's haunting score) to, especially, Franz's oppresively bare apartment, where much of the film is set. Fassbinder here brilliantly (and economically, since he had only a US $27,500 budget) uses this visual blankness to convey not only his characters' social status, but their emotional states too. In a strange yet brilliantly insightful way, all of those bare walls - echoing the characters' emptiness and pain - made me care about them even more. I deeply responded to their vulnerability, which was unique for each character yet also a common quality. Though they never talk about their frustrated desires and dreams - and of course that silence adds to the film's power - we see that these are terribly wounded people, with no idea of how to heal themselves. So they act out through robbing and killing - using generic criminal identities provided by Hollywood - even as these victims of society victimize each other, and of course themselves. Fassbinder does not excuse these characters, but he does bring them to life.

I think this film succeeds not only sociologically but artistically, capturing - through narrative, performance, and design - the blank poetry of oppression, and repression. Of course, with his debut Fassbinder also wanted to astonish the world; so he must have been delighted with the near-riot this film caused at the 1969 Berlin Film Festival. Today it still feels fresh, strange, and resonant in its chillingly casual violence and unspoken, sometimes heartbreaking, passion.


Napalm Death: The DVD
Released in DVD by Earache (11 December, 2001)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Average review score:

Suffer The Person Who ViewsThis DVD!!!
Napalm Death. Probably one of the worst ways of dying. Petroleum jelly soaks into your skin, cooking and frying you from the inside, not to mention no one can hear you over the blasphemous screams because your lungs have been totally sucked out through your mouth and landed on the ground...not a pretty picture I must say. Nor is this band and it's material on the DVD. Napalm Death is also one of the most extreme forms of music. For almost 15 years now, these brusome brummies from Birmingham, England have paved a path only few other bands could follow and were it with pride while others are totally wrapped-up, loathing in their self-image (You hear me all you Nu-Metal fans???). This DVD contains a crap-load of footage, promo videos and even some little interview materail for all ofyou who want ed to actually hear Barney Greenway whenever he's not growling/screaming his head off!!! As for the videos, here's my review:

"Mass Appeal" and "The World Keeps Turning" are 2 brutal slabs of basically concert/fan footage during touring. Nothing really special but great for thrashin'!

"Suffer The Chldren"...ahh, such a classic in many ND fan's ears. This is basically a pretty good music video, tour/fan footage mixed with eerie images of Roman Catholic churches make it somewhat of a concept video. Very good and very fast!

"Plauge Rages" is by far the best promo video on the Napalm Death DVD. It's more of an actual music video than the later ones I just mentioned. A lot of footage that looks like he cross between an apocalyptic wasteland and mutants tearing at eachother. Very suave!

"Greed Killing"...the "hit" song. This is probably their most mainstream song yet it still carries the energy that Napalm Death hs always had from the beginning. Very well produced and very crystal-clear. More of a Sci-Fi element to the video, but other than that, it still does not beat the "Plague Rages" video.

"Breed To Breath" is the most graphic video on this DVD for it's content. Basically the kind of stuff you would see on the old Faces Of Death seires, or any kind of shockumentary that is obsessed with anthing morbid. Something interesting about this is that this is the UNCUT!, yes, uncut version of the video before it went into the editing process so it would be "friendly" on mind-enslaving, corporate MTV (Don't you just hate censorship?)

Now the pinnacle of this DVD is that is shows very are footage of the classic Napalm Death line-up that included Lee Dorian(Of Cathedral) on vocals, Bill Steer(Carcass...RIP) on guitars, and the blast-beat master himself, Mick Harris. The2 songs included are "Scum" and "You Suffer"...this is history that was in the making people!

Well, I'v think I've sad my 2 cents about this DVD. Overal, this is beyond killer. If you are a Napalm Death fan and haven't gotten the chance to purchase it, WHAT ARE YOU SITTING HERE READIG MY REVIEW FOR? ORDER THS BAD ....!!!! And to all you who are still "skeptical" about such a band such as Napalm Death to make any kind of "real" music for your ears.....prepae for a horrible death!!!

NAPALM DEATH OWNS YOUR SOULS!!!


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!


Picasso: Magic Sex Death
Released in DVD by Bfs Entertainment/Mu (30 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: John Richardson
Average review score:

ON-LINE PICASSO PROJECT
In addition to a wonderful film by John Richardson, the DVD-ROM contains a PICASSO TIMELINE (754 pages of text) edited from the ON-LINE PICASSO PROJECT, an on-line catalogue raisonné of Pablo Picasso's entire artistic production. The ON-LINE PICASSO PROJECT, directed by DR. ENRIQUE MALLEN (Texas A&M University), currently catalogues nearly 7,000 artworks. New artworks are added on a regular basis. Users may visit the ON-LINE PICASSO PROJECT [online.]


Wisconsin Death Trip
Released in DVD by Home Vision Entertainment (14 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: James Marsh
Average review score:

Lyrical journey
This great film will stamp an indelible image into your psyche. I saw this at a cinema last year and it has stayed in my mind ever since. A more hauntingly beautiful film has not bettered this faux documentary about the lives our ancestors lived...and how things really have not changed.


Death Becomes Her
Released in DVD by Universal Studios (20 January, 1998)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Robert Zemeckis
Starring: Meryl Streep, Bruce Willis, and Goldie Hawn
If Robert Zemeckis's mega-hit Forrest Gump was too sweet for your taste, you may enjoy the undiluted bitterness of his previous movie, a cynical black comedy that was ahead of its time. Death Becomes Her, an outlandish parable about America's obsession with youth and vanity, exposes the corrosive side of Zemeckis's comic sensibility, the sort of scathing satirical edge he gleefully flourished in his overlooked 1980 Used Cars, which has developed a cult following. Meryl Streep has a ball as the deliciously vicious Madeline Ashton, a flamboyantly mannered actress who makes Bette Davis's formidable Margo Channing in All About Eve look like a wallflower. Goldie Hawn is also in razor-sharp comedic form as Madeline's long-time "best friend," Helen. Sensing a bargain she just can't resist, Madeline steals Helen's meek, plastic-surgeon husband Ernest (Bruce Willis) for her own convenience, and the two women become sworn enemies. But the real complications arise when the two are introduced to a secret anti-aging formula by a mysterious and exotic woman (Isabella Rossellini, delightfully ridiculous) that not only smoothes away wrinkles but actually guarantees immortality. As their undying bodies are twisted and mutilated by violent attacks on each other, both women grow increasingly dependent on Ernest for cosmetic repair. The pioneering digital effects inflicted on Streep and Hawn are as grotesque as they are imaginative and hilarious. Like James Cameron (The Abyss, Titanic), Zemeckis loves a technical challenge, and the new visual tools developed for this movie made his later work (in Forrest Gump and Contact) possible. The digital video disc includes a short feature on the movie's production. --Jim Emerson
Average review score:

A very dark, and hilarious comedy
Meryl Streep plays Madeline Ashton, an actress who is obsessed with keeping herself looking young and beautiful. Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn), is a plain looking author with a brilliant surgeon, Dr. Ernest Menville (Bruce Willis), for a fiance. Madeline and Helen have hated each other for years, but things become even worse when Madeline steals Ernest from Helen and they get married. Years later, Madeline is even more obsessed with keeping her youth, willing to do ANYTHING to keep from aging physically. On the other hand, Helen is obsessed to get revenge on Madeline for stealing her fiance. But it seems that there is one thing in common between the two rivals, in that both seem to know the same woman, Lisle Von Rhoman (Isabella Rossellini). Lisle, who has the power to give the two woman something the world has been searching for centuries... the secret of youth. But Madeline and Helen will learn that the 'secret of youth' has a high price, and that their 'lives' will never be the same again.

As the title of my review says, "Death Becomes Her" is a very dark yet hilariously funny movie. Directed by genius Robert Zemeckis (director of the Back to the Future trilogy, "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", "Contact", and "Forrest Gump"), he gives the movie such an underlying sense of psychological suspense that it's really hard what category to put this movie under.

Is it a comedy?: Yes, "Death Becomes Her" could be called a comedy. But it has a very twisted sort of humor, you'll have to be someone who enjoys all forms of comedy to really enjoy and understand the humor. There is both laugh-out-loud slapstick humor, then there's the dry type of humor which takes a few seconds to really getting you chuckling. But more than anything, the satire and irony of the story is so well imbedded into the plot that there's really no specific part you can pinpoint as the funniest part of the movie. When the movie finished, my parents and I stopped the movie, there was a brief pause, THEN we started howling with laughter! It's the truth, really! No, it wasn't because it was so awful or stupid (some parts were) but because it's not until AFTER the movie that the satire of the film really hits you.

Is it horror?: Yes, there are some parts which you could describe the movie as being under the horror genre. There's the whole 'haunted, creepy, gothic mansion' scene, and one of the themes of the movie is about 'death'.

Is it a drama?: Strangely enough, there is a sense of drama in the story. The story touches upon the topics of death and the dream of wanting to 'live forever and retain your youth'. This is very well expressed through the main actresses and actor of the movie. I mean, what will your choice been when given a chance to be able to live forever? The suspense towards the end when one of the characters must decide is well executed.

But more than anything, it's not just the story of the movie that really gets you, it's the fact that the actors do such an outstanding job with their characters. Meryl Streep is simply fantastic and she handles the dark side of her character very well. Goldie Hawn is also fantastic, can you imagine her as a fat, depressed, and ugly woman? Well, watch this movie to see her handle the role with ease. And Bruce Willis, you would never imagine seeing him in this kind of movie, but he is just GREAT! He plays the character plagued by two very 'obsessed' woman very well, and he's 'kind of' the 'hero' of the film.

As others have also mentioned, the effects of the movie are brilliantly put to the screen. I can't give away much of the story, but check out how they accomplish getting Meryl Streep's character to 'get up and about' after being pushed a flight of stairs and having her neck broken. Weird...

Anyway, though a brilliant film, I strongly suggest that people would borrow before getting this movie to add to their collection. Some people might not be able to appreciate or understand the movie enough to enjoy it's twisted look at 'life after death'.

Goofy But Funny
This movie is pretty goofy and far-fetched. But it's very funny. It's about a woman who goes insane after she loses another man to the same hot-shot broadway star woman. About 14 years later she gets an amazing makeover from a mystical potion and tracks down the woman. But she has taken the potion too. The potion restores youth and beauty and makes their bodies invincable to death. Causing them to live forever. Their violent and deadly cat-fights do no good to enflict pain in each other. This movie contains lots of dark humor, drama, and suspense. It reminds me of "She-Devil", "Fatal Attraction", and "The War Of The Roses". All in one.

Dark, Clever, FUN
I saw this movie when I was about 10 and I have enjoyed it ever since! I enjoyed it because it was the first time I had seen a movie like that, and it wasn't my last! The way it looked and the mood of it made it quite funny, as if it were a guilty pleasure! The story unfolds interestingly, by people coming out of a play and saying that the lead sucked! Then we come to know that everyone hates her! Except for a plastic surgen. And we also find out that Madilon wants to stay youthful for the rest of her life! ANd so the stroy unflds and Madilon and Bruice Willis get married and Goldie Hawn holds a grudge and becomes over weight. And she has a dinner party for her new book, and invites Madilon and Bruice and she is beautiful and all that rot. SO Madiolon is all mystified and it is just a really good movie but the unique twist is that no matter what happens to them after they drink this potion, they can never get hurt! Very unique! I enjoyed it then and I enjoy it now. It still makes me laugh and I love that a movie I liked when I was 10 can still be funny! That shows signs of a good comedy!


Related Subjects: Society Anthologies Ash_Scattering Caskets Cemeteries Consumer_Information Europe Funeral_Customs North_America Oceania Online_Dedications Planning Public_Memorials Suicide Suppliers_of_Monuments Urns
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