Affiliate Members Movie Reviews

The visual challenges of Turandot are formidable, and they are met spectacularly in this production, filmed on location in the Forbidden City, where the story takes place. Turandot is a princess to die for. Dozens of foreign princes have literally lost their heads after seeking her hand in marriage and failing to solve three riddles. Ideally, a Turandot should have the voice of Birgit Nilsson, she should have the looks and acting skills of Teresa Stratas in her prime, and it's nice if she at least appears Chinese. Soprano Giovanna Casolla scores a B-plus on these requirements, and that's about the best we can expect. Among other principals, tenor Sergej Larin sings well, looks right, and doesn't really try to act (probably a wise decision). Soprano Barbara Frittoli is superb and the supporting cast is generally good. But what makes this production unique is the setting; you are there in ancient Peking, with its real buildings, flags, armor and uniforms, costumes, and statues of dragons and other legendary monsters.
This is one of the first operas intended for original release on DVD; others were initially issued in more limited formats and have kept their original limitations in the new format. The wider range of options on DVD is significant. Those who will settle for audio-only recordings, which cost about the same and offer much less, should try either of Birgit Nilsson's CD editions (with Björling or Corelli) or Joan Sutherland's. Both of these great divas are, alas, visually inappropriate, offering another argument for this striking visual re-creation. --Joe McLellan.

Wonderful sets, poor acting.
One Of A KindThe main cast, unfortunately, is hard to stand out in such a grand production and on such a huge stage, well maybe with Barbara Frittoli's Liu as an exception. She sings beautifully and wholeheartedly, and she acts. Sergej Larin has a brilliant voice, but his "Nessun dorma" lacks the intensity if compared to Pavarotti's. Turandot is portrayed by Italian soprano Ciovanna Casolla, who sings the character quite well, but hard to fit in the image of a Chinese princess. The three ministers, each of them holding a prop that's kind of confusing: a woman's handkerchief, a calabash (used as wine bottle in old China), and a Chinese abacus, are good to listen but not really nice to watch.
Although relatively highly priced, this DVD has loads of bonus material, including a nice quality PCM audio track of the entire production. After all, this is all about Puccini's music, and Zubin Mehta and the Orchestra & Chorus of Maggio Musicale Fiorentino have made it all the more worthwhile.
Piece of Opera History

Drowning by Numbers
Interesting, but not for everyoneVERDICT: Peter Greenaway is certainly one of the more decadent filmmakers and he spares no expense in getting even the smallest of things to work. More concerned with 'art' than narrative, Greenaway always comes up with very interesting characters and somehow creates films that seem to defy critique (because of this, he is not for everyone.) His masterpiece, The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, And Her Lover, is a better place to start if you haven't seen any of his films, but Drowning by Numbers isn't bad either ( I found it to be more entertaining than Cook/Thief/Wife/Lover.)
This film is shot and designed beautifully with meticulous sets that take the viewer someplace else -- where this 'someplace else' is exactly, I can't really say. The film is also quite funny (the closer you pay attention, the more humorous it is.) On top of this is a great score by composer Michael Nyman.
If you are a Greenaway fan, pick this one up. If you haven't seen any Greenaway films you probably shouldn't buy this; rent it first instead (or perhaps Cook/Thief/Wife/Lover.) But Greenaway is someone every serious cinephile should explore, and if you come out a fan, your exploration will be worthwhile and Greenaway's vision hard to equal.
In the Game of Life..."Drowning By Numbers" is a complex film about three women all named Cissie who each decide--for a variety of reasons--to drown their husbands. One husband is unfaithful; another is cruel, inattentive, and sexually inadequate, and the third is a boring physical and intellectual inferior. Death may seem an extreme solution to these husbandly inadequacies, but this is, after all, a Greenaway film, and that means you can expect excess, death and destructive passion.
Each woman is aided and abetted in her crime by Madgett (Bernard Hill) the local coroner--a chocolate pudding-addicted dyspeptic who does "favours" (turns a blind eye to murder) in the vain hope that the women will reward him with sexual favours.
Smut (Jason Edwards) is Madgett's son, and he too is obsessed with death. He numbers the road kill he finds daily with different coloured paints--yellow on Tuesdays, and red on Saturdays, for example, and he lets off fireworks as a sort of celebration of death. Madgett and Smut even go as far as researching deaths caused by cricket balls--with Smut playing the famous cricketeers killed. Madgett marks the "wounds" in each case with tape and then photographs Smut as they recreate each cricketing death, and Madgett solemnly announces that "games are dangerous." Smut is in love with the daughter of the local prostitute who jumps rope and counts the stars.
Smut and Madgett are also both obsessed with games, and Smut acts as a voice-over explaining the rules of various games--Dead Man's Catch, Hangman's Cricket, Dawn Card Castles, Flights of Fancy or Reverse Strip Jump. Games are played in the film by various characters. Numbers also play a large role in this film, and they appear throughout the film, sometimes the characters or objects are marked with numbers--not in every scene-- until the end which brings us to one hundred.
Another of Greenway's favourite themes--the supernatural power of women--is not neglected in this film. The women often seem to appear in rooms without actually entering them, and of course, in this film, men are dispensable and superfluous. Also women use the force of nature to gain their desires--specifically in this film, the Cissies use water as a means of power and destruction of their enemies.
Greenway is considered a somewhat controversial and experimental British Renaissance film director, and he makes the most complex, and the most beautiful films I have ever seen--displacedhuman--Amazon reviewer


Great Animal Images

Definitely NOT a comedy but...
Probably the worst Travolta movie ever made
Just saw it on TV for the first timeSo the story was as advertised, amusing, not great; and it was great to see big time celebreties visit town. Especially Ed O'neill. Those of us who lived in Harrisburg for a long time will get the inside jokes, and geographic references. My wife yelled at me, when I was over-commenting, finding bloopers, and trying to pick out the local scenery, most of which had buildings remodeled, and again shot outside of Harrisburg in the suburbs. So some of the local bloopers showed Russ trying to drive the truck down Route 22 and Devonshire Road (in Downtown Colonial Park, where I live), and it wrecked. Was he trying to get to I-81 or I-83? Not the way to get to Colorado from Harrisburg. Eighteen wheelers don't go down Devonshire Road (winding and hilly and two-laned)too well, and Rt. 22 at that intersection is a 6-lane divided highway. There is actually an auto dealer at that corner, but was not used in the filming.
Like I said us locals caught some of the inside jokes (like the Perry County School Teacher who locked the student in the broom closet, and the mobster from Linglestown), which made the movie more enjoyable than the critics gave it credit for.
For those who don't know although there is no channel 6 in Harrisburg, there is (sort of) well, was really WTPA-TV. WTPA-Radio is still on the air. New owners years ago changed the call letters to WHTM, and is actually channel 27. Keeping that in mind, Al Bundy, er, Dick Simmons comments on real-life then WTPA now WHTM weatherman Chuck Rhoades, who has a breif cameo in the movie, and on whom Travolta's character is loosely based (Actually Bill Murray's wheaterman in Groundhog Day is closer to the real Chuck Rhoades, a thirty year fixture on local TV). To me, Chuck is the big star in the movie, even though he is eeen from a distance for a few seconds. Chuck's best acting job to date. And he wasn't acting! That clip is from 1988 when the movie was set, when Harrisburg had one of its biggest heatwaves ever. Anothe Harrisburg weatherman, Don Rooney has a cameo scene at the TV station.
When the movie was filmed out here, it was the biggest deal to hit Harrisburg , since the Three Mile Island accident. Yes, Harrisburg is really like that-- and Denny's is the Classiest Bistro in Town, at least the one in Hampden Township (US Rte. 11--where JT is seen jaywalking to the Evergreen (actually Hampden) Diner.
All in all an enjoyable movie for us in Harrisburg.


what is sandra bullock trying to prove......................think about it, as far as anybody knows, Bullock in real life is a 37 or 38 single woman, without children, and hey, not bad looking, (she does get a lot mileage with those big brown eyes),
and running her own production company. I don't see the positive role models for young women in Bullock's roles.
How stupid was the script for Miss Congeniality? And again, out to prove that the boys are wrong. Sure, she kicks some male butt in the movies, shows herself exceptionally brainy, but carries huge amounts of emotional baggage. And there is always the confrontational scene when she is given the low-down on
why she is such an annoyance. She rebounds and wins the day.
Yaawwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn, Sandra.
The best I've seen in awhileThe overly psychological aspects of the film are what make it such an excellent presentation. From two suburban boys of varying personalities, to investigators in the same predicament, Murder by Numbers is chillingly entrancing. It offers an escape to a sinister world of corruption, greed, and selfishness, with bits of action intertwined. The movie will keep you awake, and you'll be grateful, for you'll be able to pick out the many hidden nuances peppered through-out the two hours.
Deliciously wicked...acting. The movie's awesome too.As for Sandra Bullock's portrayl of emotionally damaged Cassie Mayweather - I thought she did an excellent job. Sandra is America's Sweetheart, and yet she plays Cassie so perfectly - with her subtle humor and aggressive personality. One of the reasons the movie is so well done is because it can at once make you chuckle, cringe, gasp, or cheer, and make you feel a thousand other emotions you won't be able to put your finger on. The people who gave this movie bad reviews did not look into the movie deep enough, and could not appreciate the psychological elements that give the movie its power. The only complaint I can make is that there are not enough extras. I was hoping for at least deleted scenes, but no. Oh well, this review is for the movie only anyway.


what is sandra bullock trying to prove......................think about it, as far as anybody knows, Bullock in real life is a 37 or 38 single woman, without children, and hey, not bad looking, (she does get a lot mileage with those big brown eyes),
and running her own production company. I don't see the positive role models for young women in Bullock's roles.
How stupid was the script for Miss Congeniality? And again, out to prove that the boys are wrong. Sure, she kicks some male butt in the movies, shows herself exceptionally brainy, but carries huge amounts of emotional baggage. And there is always the confrontational scene when she is given the low-down on
why she is such an annoyance. She rebounds and wins the day.
Yaawwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn, Sandra.
The best I've seen in awhileThe overly psychological aspects of the film are what make it such an excellent presentation. From two suburban boys of varying personalities, to investigators in the same predicament, Murder by Numbers is chillingly entrancing. It offers an escape to a sinister world of corruption, greed, and selfishness, with bits of action intertwined. The movie will keep you awake, and you'll be grateful, for you'll be able to pick out the many hidden nuances peppered through-out the two hours.
Deliciously wicked...acting. The movie's awesome too.As for Sandra Bullock's portrayl of emotionally damaged Cassie Mayweather - I thought she did an excellent job. Sandra is America's Sweetheart, and yet she plays Cassie so perfectly - with her subtle humor and aggressive personality. One of the reasons the movie is so well done is because it can at once make you chuckle, cringe, gasp, or cheer, and make you feel a thousand other emotions you won't be able to put your finger on. The people who gave this movie bad reviews did not look into the movie deep enough, and could not appreciate the psychological elements that give the movie its power. The only complaint I can make is that there are not enough extras. I was hoping for at least deleted scenes, but no. Oh well, this review is for the movie only anyway.


Don't bother
Poor graphics and no continuity
Better than the alphabet jungle..

