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Rating: Summary: Dafoe and Hines do the Two-Step Review: "Off-Limits" is a lush, lurid pot-boiler set in the smoldering sun of Saigon in '68. Dafoe and Hines, cops on the streets pack a gun where their conscience should be. Hookers butchered in blood, Dafoe leers at nuns, and Keith David shows up for a "Platoon" reunion; Fred Ward and Scott Glenn have a "Right Stuff" one of their own. Viet Cong get chucked out of planes, officers run amuck, and all dances to the beat of "Sly and the Family Stone". What more could you possibly ask for? "Off-Limits" is the twinkly smut dreams are made of. Christopher Crowe, God bless your soul!
Rating: Summary: The Way It Was! Review: An excellent potrayal of Army CID ops in Saigon during the latter half of the war. Two great actors!
Rating: Summary: War, crime and beautiful asian girls: a good cocktail Review: One year after "Platoon", Willem Dafoe and Keith David do it again. This time Dafoe, as McGriff, stars with Gregory Hines ("The Cotton Club", "White Nights") as Perkins, and they investigate about a series of murders targeting young asian prostitutes in Saigon, in the middle of the Viet-nam war. Soon, the suspect n° 1 is to be an American soldier...The story is quite tough but the viewer can appreciate the very pretty girls of Saigon and the exotic background, despite the war atmosphere. There's also some religion involved: if McGriff and Perkins finally find the murderer, it's thanks to a white nun played by pretty Amanda Pays, who was in touch with some of the victims. The mixing of all this is a minor success, the movie is well written, filmed, photographed and played - there's also Scott Glenn in the cast, perfect and funny as a nut officer, and Fred Ward is impressive. In addition, the soundtrack is excellent and very exciting, with many soul and funky hits from that period. What more can we ask?
Rating: Summary: Off Limits, the road to Hell leads to Saigon 1968.... Review: We certainly know how to miss out on the really good films don't we? I'm amazed at what becomes a blockbuster and what flounders into obscurity. We pile praises on films like "Titanic" and "The Passion of Jesus Christ" but we ignore the really good quality films that come out, and go for the glitz and the glamour. Oh the peculiarity of the movie going human race is all I can say! Off Limits (I saw it under the title of Saigon) was a film that really should have been a hit, it was that good. Gregory Hines gave a solid performance as a Albaby Perkins a Military Policeman based in Saigon in the late 1960s, along with the smouldering William Defoe as his partner Buck McGriff. Keeping the peace, having fun and doing their job is part of the game but when Saigon Prostitutes start turning up dead, they find themselves involved in a high ranking scandal that could just get them killed. This film is not just a thriller, romance, murder mystery, or war movie, it is in my humble opinion a psychological masterpiece and it was done on a budget! We are treated to a romance that can never be between William Defoe's character McGriff and the beautiful nun Sister Nicole played by the English Rose actress Amanda Pays along with an understated performance by the actor Raymond O'Connor. He portrays to perfection the haunted Sgt. Flowers, a man who would rather risk his life every day in the most dangerous war torn place on earth, because it is far safer than being in Saigon with the knowledge he has of the murders that Defoe and Hines are investigating. You have a plethora of quality actors in this film, from Fred Ward, to David Keith, to Scott Glenn. There are some great as well as grotesque moments in this film, such as the mad Colonel who does his prisoner interrogation in a chopper; his tactic to get information from his them is to throw them out of the chopper one by one. There is a shocking conclusion to this scene but I won't give it away and spoil it for you but look out for it, it is quite mind blowing! Another quality moment is when McGriff finds his partner, playing basketball, all singed and battered after a violent attempt on their lives, we are treated to the fear and tension these men are constantly under, with no one to turn too because they are trying to expose a horrifying secret that just might go right to the top of the military flagpole. This is an intelligent film; full of the horror of war and what it can do to you psyche as well as your physical being. It is also a murder mystery with one hell of a twist in the tale and even though I know who "dunnit" I have watched it on several occasions simply because it so good! An underrated, under appreciated film that should stand along side the likes of, "Platoon," and "Full Metal Jacket."
Rating: Summary: Off Limits, the road to Hell leads to Saigon 1968.... Review: We certainly know how to miss out on the really good films don't we? I'm amazed at what becomes a blockbuster and what flounders into obscurity. We pile praises on films like "Titanic" and "The Passion of Jesus Christ" but we ignore the really good quality films that come out, and go for the glitz and the glamour. Oh the peculiarity of the movie going human race is all I can say! Off Limits (I saw it under the title of Saigon) was a film that really should have been a hit, it was that good. Gregory Hines gave a solid performance as a Albaby Perkins a Military Policeman based in Saigon in the late 1960s, along with the smouldering William Defoe as his partner Buck McGriff. Keeping the peace, having fun and doing their job is part of the game but when Saigon Prostitutes start turning up dead, they find themselves involved in a high ranking scandal that could just get them killed. This film is not just a thriller, romance, murder mystery, or war movie, it is in my humble opinion a psychological masterpiece and it was done on a budget! We are treated to a romance that can never be between William Defoe's character McGriff and the beautiful nun Sister Nicole played by the English Rose actress Amanda Pays along with an understated performance by the actor Raymond O'Connor. He portrays to perfection the haunted Sgt. Flowers, a man who would rather risk his life every day in the most dangerous war torn place on earth, because it is far safer than being in Saigon with the knowledge he has of the murders that Defoe and Hines are investigating. You have a plethora of quality actors in this film, from Fred Ward, to David Keith, to Scott Glenn. There are some great as well as grotesque moments in this film, such as the mad Colonel who does his prisoner interrogation in a chopper; his tactic to get information from his them is to throw them out of the chopper one by one. There is a shocking conclusion to this scene but I won't give it away and spoil it for you but look out for it, it is quite mind blowing! Another quality moment is when McGriff finds his partner, playing basketball, all singed and battered after a violent attempt on their lives, we are treated to the fear and tension these men are constantly under, with no one to turn too because they are trying to expose a horrifying secret that just might go right to the top of the military flagpole. This is an intelligent film; full of the horror of war and what it can do to you psyche as well as your physical being. It is also a murder mystery with one hell of a twist in the tale and even though I know who "dunnit" I have watched it on several occasions simply because it so good! An underrated, under appreciated film that should stand along side the likes of, "Platoon," and "Full Metal Jacket."
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