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Movie Reviews of Ric Flair & The Four Horsemen (2 Discs)Movie Review: Whoooooo! Summary: 5 StarsA very enjoyable dvd set. Great matches; excellent interviews and commentary. Unfortunately, it also serves as a reminder of how much more entertaining wrestling used to be--back in the pre-steroid days when guys didn't shave their chests or their armpits.
Movie Review: Mixed reaction... Summary: 3 StarsI loved the documentary, having grown up in the NWA/WCW Horsemen era (all incarnations). My favorite "stable" was the original: Ole, Arn, Tully, and Ric. Seeing more of Ole on the mic would have been nice, but the full story of the Horsemen is told well. The choice of matches on Disc 2, however, is horrible.
It's also sad to be reminded of how the suits at WCW never really understood the fan appeal of the Horsemen. It's inexplicable. If you didn't already know about him, watch the documentary and see Eric Bischoff at his megalomaniacal, dissembling best.
Movie Review: THE FOUR HORSEMEN. ENUFF SAID!! Summary: 5 StarsDAMN THIS WAS GOOD. I MUST HAVE SEEN IT 100X ALREADY. I REMEMBER WHEN I WAS ONLY 10 YRS OLD WHEN THEY FORMED. RIC FLAIR,AA,BARRY.LEX AND TULLY. BARRY AND TULLY WAS MY FAVORITE.THEY WERE THE BEST OUT OF THE OTHERS. THE EGO.LIFESTYLE, THE TALENT, MUSCLE THEY WERE THR GROUP. I THINK IT SHOULD BE FORMED AGAIN WITH RIC FLAIR AS THE MANAGER.GO GET IT WRESTLING FANS BECAUSE ITS A MUST. PEACE
Movie Review: Paul Roma burns the Horsemen's stale doughboys! Summary: 5 StarsA "historical" documentary on this Horsemen DVD seems as endless as Ric Flair's career. Flair and his fellow creaky wrestling comrades, Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard, engage in self congratulatory stories about their questionable antics from another century that occurred both inside and outside the ring. The DVD gives top billing to Flair who, most notoriously today, wrestles at an advanced age and attracts a mocking response from modern audiences when he appears at arenas in his sequined house robes (suitable attire for an old man) accented by an entrance theme from a stale science fiction movie. Flair, Anderson, and Blanchard are just as Has-Been as the "2001" anthem. Finally, a Horseman of much younger vintage and with more true ring athleticism, Paul Roma, rescues the DVD and infuses it with life. Roma stands his ground in the documentary against charges that he was not a team player from molding doughboys Flair and Anderson and their sycophant Triple H. Roma rescued the Horsemen from antiquity in the Nineties and brought both class and renewed audience support to the decaying team. Evidently he did not subscribe to the Horsemen's frat boy rules of conduct, so now they try to punish him with their cheap shots in the documentary. Triple H chimes in as the self proclaimed wrestling "historian" who conveniently forgets that Paul Roma was a solo powerhouse in the ring plus a member of championship tag teams The Young Stallions, Power and Glory, and Pretty Wonderful. During his portion of the interview, Roma responds to the cheap shots with his own observations about his former colleagues that are more accurate and have the targeted power of one of his patented wrestling high kicks. Bravo Roma! The full star rating from this Amazon customer is exclusively for you. You survived the Horsemen with your credibility and integrity intact. The same can not be said for Flair and Anderson.
Movie Review: Great DVD!!! Summary: 4 StarsThe main doc. on the dvd is awesome. I recommend this dvd to any wrestling fan, old or young. Also, look for hidden things on the menus, I've found 2 or 3 on the first disc.
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