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The Emerald Forest |
List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $13.46 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: A lecher's paradise Review: This movie takes place in the Amazon jungles. It involves a tribe of mostly naked "Indian" women. These are not giant Amazon beauties. These are petite, but very cute women. It is unrealistic. Native women running nude in the jungle, wearing only paint, do not look that good...so, invitingly smooth and tight. These are not indiginous or native women. These are actresses who have appeared in other movies.
Other than that, this is a pretty good movie. The jungle scenes are gorgeous. These scenes, along with nubian little bodies really transport you to another world...a world of wet dreams.
There is also a very good action story here, with the hero searching for his lost son. There are cannibals and destruction of the rain forest.
But, don't believe that garbage about this being a study of different cultures, of civilization meeting native Americans. It is just a very good action story, with some sex thrown in, using the destruction of the rain forest as a backdrop. It is very mesmerizing and involving. But, it is not very realistic.
The only real problem I have with the movie is that there are some contrived plot twists that you could see were coming. For instance, one character is conveniently killed off as an easy way out of one of the complicated plot lines. It's been done to death on Bananza and other TV series. I think it would have been better to allow this character to live and see how the hero would deal with the situation.
Rating: Summary: An important and beautiful picture Review: Your many reviewers have said it all quite well: the quintessential eco-drama of civilization, so-called, in typical conflict with cultures more attuned to nature. Touching and poignant; compare to Greystoke: the Legend of Tarzan. My favorite memorable quote from EF is the native chief explaining the limits of his powers to the father of the long-lost son: "The chief who doesn't tell his followers what they want to hear doesn't stay chief very long."
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