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Movie Reviews of Blue SkyMovie Review: Unconditional love Summary: 3 StarsJessica Lange's character is a glamourous mentally fragile woman living a fantasy of what she had hoped her life would be. Tommy Lee Jones'character plays her faithful husband and is so obviously passionately in love with her with no conditions. With divorce on the uprise, it is a story of "for better or worse, richer or poorer". He shows her unconditional love that I am sure would be inconceivable for most men or women. The children, although greatly affected by her antics also remain faithful to her and the family. I gave it a 3-star rating only because time is so precious that we do have to pick and choose what we spend time doing or watching, but the moral of the story I would give a 5-star rating.
Movie Review: Blue Sky Summary: 4 StarsThis is a terrific movie regarding military life in the '60s. Jessica Lange truly deserved her Oscar and Tommy Lee is excellent and of course Powers Booth shows his narily side which he protrays so well in so many movies. I can't even tell you how many times I have seen this movie and I will watch it again and again.
Movie Review: Perfect Summary: 5 StarsThe shipment was on time and the product was brand new and sealed in plastic.
Movie Review: Great Movie in Great Condition Summary: 5 StarsMost of us have seen the movie, a great drama with great acting. The DVD is a super clean transfer. Not any features to speak of but well worth the money invested. Very clean for a movie made so many years ago.
manny
Movie Review: Tennessee Williams meets Oliver Stone Summary: 3 StarsThis movie is bizarre and out of whack, because it tries to fit a fascinating, Tennessee Williams-style character study into a tired, cliched paranoid conspiracy story. But the movie is worth watching for its first half, when the focus is on the sexy, needy and dysfunctional marriage between the stolid, ambitious military engineer played by Tommy Lee Jones, and his attention-getting, Marilyn Monroe-like wife, played by Jessica Lange.
Both Jones and Lange are excellent. Their characters have many responsibilities: their children, their reputations at the military base, the protection of the Free World. But the actors convince you that they would throw all of that over, temporarily, for each others' hot love. But once you understand that, the filmmakers insert these great characters into a predictable, hackneyed plot that draws on "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," "Silkwood" and the entirity of Oliver Stone's career.
The hinge for all this is a very unwise sexual encounter between Lange's character and Jones' Evil Boss. The Evil Boss, played by Powers Boothe, is a real Snidely Whiplash. From the first moment you see him, you know he's just a dastardly fellow without a conscience. Boo! Hiss! By having sex with this Bad Man, and then believing another obvious lie he tells her, Lange unwittingly aids in the coverup of a nuclear accident, which she then must go to preposterous lengths to expose in order to save her husband from having his mind stolen from him by the Evil Boss.
Some have wondered why this movie sat on the shelf for several years before being released, given that it won Lange an Academy Award. The answer's obvious; the plot is an embarrassing joke. But we should be glad it got released. Lange's performance is stunning, and Jones' is not far behind her. It's hard work to suspend disbelief through this story's many dumb moments (do you really think a lifelong army brat would pull the pin on a grenade and then casually toss it to her boyfriend?), but it's worth trying to, just to appreciate Jones and Lange's acting.
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