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Movie Reviews of FoxesMovie Review: A cautionary tale Summary: 3 Stars
This film is something of a cautionary tale about the dangers of drug use, but underneath it, it also presents a very cynical view of humanity in general. Following the lives of four teenage girls in Los Angeles, circa 1979, it consists of episodes tied together by the thinnest of plot lines. Everything appears trashy, ugly and venal. The city is run down and dilapidated. The teenagers lead barren lives that alternate between mindless drunken brawls and bouts of despair. The adults are scarcely better, empty, dysfunctional, older but little wiser. All the characters are intellectually shallow. Still, there are some powerful moments. The dream-like soft-focus introduction contrasts the softness of the girl's bodies with the harshness of the environment they live in. Cherie Currie, herself a rock singer in real life, is completely believable as a drug-addicted delinquent who is sexually attracted to drug-pushing thugs. The one uplifting element is Jodie Foster's performance as the only person who remains caring and compassionate in a chaotic world.
Movie Review: Jodie Foster Movie Summary: 3 Stars
Was good and interesting. Jodie Foster is young and in this movie you can see why she did so well for herself...Good Quality
Movie Review: Please come back here so I can beat you up! Summary: 2 Stars
Foxes is a coming of age drama about four teenage girls growing up in the San Fernando Valley near Los Angeles. It attempts to be a gritty behind the scenes look at the sex, drugs, and rock and roll of teenagers in the late 70's, but it comes off more akin to another force feeding of aerosol cheese by director Adrian Lyne. Jodie Foster is like the den mother of the Foxes in question, and while she is always interesting in whatever role she is playing, this is a tremendous waste of her talents. She tries to manage the situations and solve all the problems of her three friends, but it is beyond her capability. While she seeks to control the personal lives of her friends, who they date, and so forth, what of her own love life?
The closest she comes to a love interest of her own is Brad, who is almost like a mascot for the Foxes. He is too cute and short to be taken seriously by Annie (Cherie Currie from the all girl rock group The Runaways). He is also too cute to be taken seriously by the audience. The whole time he is onscreen you are thinking, Happy Days, Joanie Loves Chachi, and Charles in Charge. Mostly though you are thinking, what is Chachi doing in this movie that purports to be a gritty behind the scenes look at the secret lives of teenage girls?
Cherie Currie, as the stoner girl that Jeannie (Jodie Foster) is always trying to rescue, either from bad boys who get her drugged up for date rape, or from her psycho cop father, is a disappointment as an actress. You'd think that a rock star from the legendary rock band The Runaways would have some stage presence, but sadly she is totally lacking in charisma. It is so hard to be sympathetic for such a shallow, stupid, and doomed character. They should have picked Joan Jett, if they needed someone from The Runaways so badly. Even Lita Ford, judging by her subsequent musical career, would have been a better choice.
Another bad choice: Angel, the rock band, really added little to the film. Were they supposed to show the total lack of creativity and inspiration the youth of 1980 had to draw on? If so, maybe it was a great choice. I don't remember Angel at all, and judging by what I saw in Foxes, I am grateful for the memory lapse. Speaking of bad musical choices, though, they chose a couple of songs that were totally inappropriate, just really bland pop music that didn't seem to have anything whatsover to do with anything that was even happening in the film. It was as if they owed some songwriter a favor. Was it The Beckmeier Brothers? There were some tunes by Angel that were lame, and lots of stuff by Giorgio Moroder. The only song that worked at all, and then only for a bit of late 70's nostalgia, was "More Than a Feeling" by Boston.
Finally, they slap in a totally gratuitous car/skateboard chase, and a totally contrived ending. This was a very ill conceived project. The only reason to watch it is if you are totally obsessed with Jodie Foster, like Hinckley, or if you just want to confirm what a rotten director Adrian Lyne is, has been, and will always be. Foxes is one of his early efforts and also one of his worst. A far better use of your time would be to watch Valley Girl, which doesn't aspire to be any more than a light hearted comedy, but is vastly more entertaining; and has a great soundtrack featuring The Plimsouls (who perform a song live), Josie Cotton, The Psychedelic Furs, Sparks, and Modern English. Plus, you get Nicolas Cage as a Hollywood (the actual city, not as in Tinsel Town) punk rocker.
FILMS DIRECTED BY ADRIAN LYNNE
Fatal Attraction (Special Collector's Edition) (1987)
9 1/2 Weeks (1986)
Flashdance (1983)
FILMS AND ROLES OF JODIE FOSTER
Nell (1994) .... Nell Kellty has been raised in isolation and speaks in a language all her own. Kind of a huge chance for an actor, a chance that it will come off totally ridiculous. Mixed reviews, some saying Foster was brilliant, and others saying, yes, totally ridiculous.
The Silence of the Lambs (Widescreen Special Edition) (1991) .... Jodie Foster won the Oscar for playing FBI Agent Clarice Starling.
The Accused (1988) .... Another Oscar for Jodie for her role as Sarah Tobias , rape victim made to feel as if she was the accused.
Carny (1980) .... Jodie plays Donna, who joins the carnival along with Gary Busey as a clown and Robbie Robertson from The Band as the carnival boss.
Bugsy Malone [Region 3] (1976) .... Jodie Foster plays Tallulah, and Scott Baio is Bugsy Malone!
Taxi Driver (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) (1976) .... The role of Iris Steensma, teenage hooker, who is rescued by taxi driver Travis Bickle, played by Robert DeNiro, really got Jodie Foster noticed. Unfortunately, from John Hinckley, Jr.
Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974) .... Jodie Foster plays Audrey, a young tomboy, in what will be seen as foreshadowing if the Jodie Foster bio pic ever gets made.
Movie Review: Was it ever good? I think not. Summary: 1 Stars
Trials and tribulations of Jodie Foster and her 3 twenty-something year old high school friends...Jodie gives a fair performance, but the others were substantially less than average. Sally Kellerman as Jodie's mom was pretty good. Laura Dern ("Jurassic Park") was interesting in her small scenes. Randy Quaid as one girl's boyfriend was mediocre (see "The Last Detail" for his excellent role in a good movie.) Due to music and cultural references, plus the clothes and hair styles, the movie is pretty dated, but that is not a contributing factor to its badness. False dialogue and some typical cliches are factors, however. The partying scenes are also unconvincing, as everyone smokes joints like cigarettes, drinks a lot, and never appears intoxicated. Director Adrian Lyne has made some good movies ("Jacob's Ladder", "Lolita"). Unfortunately, this is not one of them. Scott Baio escapes bullies on his skateboard. Need I say more?
Movie Review: Puberty Was Nirvana Compared To This Movie Summary: 1 Stars
There's nothing more annoying than a teen movie that gets it all wrong. I was seventeen when this flick came out and had teenage sisters at the time. These aren't teenagers but adults mouthing what some studio hack thinks is teenspeak. Calling John Hughes!!! What's even more annoying is they get the music wrong. Angel!!! What did they do hold cattle call for every mediocre hair-metal band signed to Casablanca records? "On the Radio" as an anthem for a generation? In my school it was "Stairway to Heaven" and "Freebird". Joan Jett should have kicked Cherie Currie's behind for being associated with this dreck. Jodie Foster isn't annoying here just wooden. Disney put better use to her acting chops. Pretty pathetic when the most appealing character is the one played by Scott "Chachi" Baio. Makes me long for "Little Darlings".
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