Rating: Summary: Good Movie Review: This movie is good because Peggy finds herself 18 again.I rented this movie back in 1987 last year Tom and Joanna and I went to California and bought this movie at Sam Goody for 2.99.Joanna is my ten year old daughter.She picked it out Joanna turned ten on September 1,1998 Joanna Tom and I watch it a lot.
Rating: Summary: Love it Review: This was the first movie I ever saw with Nicolas Cage i it and I fell in love. The movie is great. I love stories about people goign back in time. This movie is a wonderful to say several young acters and actresses in what is probably some of their first films.
Rating: Summary: Love it Review: This was the first movie I ever saw with Nicolas Cage i it and I fell in love. The movie is great. I love stories about people goign back in time. This movie is a wonderful to say several young acters and actresses in what is probably some of their first films.
Rating: Summary: Not worth a second look..... Review: When DVD production started to really take off, no one knew just how it would change the way you look at movies. In many cases, you can have a good movie, but if it's on a bad DVD, it can ruin the movie for the watching person. Such has been the case with Colombia/Tri-Star DVDs. This was a pretty good movie, but I saw the DVD of it, and it ruined the film. There are no bonus features and the film print is rather poor. I have now bought ten movies that were made by Colombia/Tri-Star DVD video, and only three of the movies had a good DVD made on them. The rest have been a waste of money and this regretfully is another of them.
Rating: Summary: Why this movie is great Review: William Butler Yeats: When You Are Old When you are old and grey and full of sleep, And nodding by the fire, take down this book, And slowly read, and dream of the soft look Your eyes had once, and of their shadows deep; How many loved your moments of glad grace, And loved your beauty with love false or true, But one man loved the pilgrim Soul in you, And loved the sorrows of your changing face; And bending down beside the glowing bars, Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled And paced upon the mountains overhead And hid his face amid a crowd of stars. That comes from a scene where Peggy Sue (Kathleen Turner) is talking to a poet Michael Fitzsimmons (Kevin J. O'Connor) while she is visiting her high school years. The scene is one of my favorite movie scenes ever and I feel that the movie itself is a timeless piece of cinema. Look out for performances from Jim Carrey, Nicholas Cage, Hellen Hunt, and a young Sofia Copola (director of Lost in Translation, Virgin Suicides) as Peggy's bratty kid sister (is there another kind?) Great musical score. And this is the one flick guranteed to make me tear up everytime.
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