DVD Talk review of 'Good Night & Good Luck'
#1
Cool New Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 48
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
DVD Talk review of 'Good Night & Good Luck'
I read DVD Savant's DVD review of Good Night & Good Luck at http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/read.php?ID=20613 and... I don't understand how a movie can get four stars straight across the board and only get Recommended. Seems a bit off.
#3
Cool New Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 48
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Originally Posted by DonnachaOne
I've seen movies get just as good remarks and get a "rent it". Why? Because it's not for everyone, or maybe you can only watch it once or twice.
#4
DVD Talk Reviewer
Each reviewer has their own scale for ratings and advice, and "four stars straight across the board" (not to mention the "Recommended" rating itself) is fairly typical for Savant's reviews. I might've given it slightly higher marks, but that's just me---Savant's seen so many freakin' movies that it probably takes a lot more to impress him.
#5
DVD Talk Gold Edition
Join Date: Sep 2000
Posts: 2,429
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I really liked this movie, and I certainly recommend it.
But I have a bone to pick, so let me assume rant mode... ready.... OK!
Thinking back to the thoroughly unwarranted, unearned and endless self-congratulations that Hollywood heaped upon itself at its last occasion for farce - the Academy Awards show - I wonder whether anyone remembers that "the blacklist" was itself a Hollywood creation enforced by the studio bosses?
True, the blacklist was only one chapter (if not merely a footnote) in the whole tragic enterprise of McCarthy, Cohn, and all the cornpone Nazis who supported them, but it's as though the institution of Hollywood has somehow forgotten its willing participation. Sure, it was a scary time, and thankfully we had a few good Americans with both balls and intellect whose defiance made a difference (a certain Mr. Murrow comes to mind), and I haven't forgotten Kirk Douglas' semi-courageous decision with respect to a semi-successful sword-and-sandals spectacular (though after most of the dust had settled). But there seems to be a peddling of the notion that Hollywood was part of that defiant resistance, proudly speaking truth to power. I caught a whiff of this ahistorical malarkey not only at the recent Oscars, but also the one a few years ago when everyone sat on their hands when Elia Kazan was honored... as though the unfortunate stain on his life and career was somehow greater or more destructive of individual lives than the giant trail of slime left by tinseltown itself.
So, if we're now naming names of those in the entertainment industry who went along to get along (Mr. Kazan... check), then that whole fucking craphole of compromised standards and bland conformity that is and ever was "Hollywood" should reside at the very top of the list.
But I have a bone to pick, so let me assume rant mode... ready.... OK!
Thinking back to the thoroughly unwarranted, unearned and endless self-congratulations that Hollywood heaped upon itself at its last occasion for farce - the Academy Awards show - I wonder whether anyone remembers that "the blacklist" was itself a Hollywood creation enforced by the studio bosses?
True, the blacklist was only one chapter (if not merely a footnote) in the whole tragic enterprise of McCarthy, Cohn, and all the cornpone Nazis who supported them, but it's as though the institution of Hollywood has somehow forgotten its willing participation. Sure, it was a scary time, and thankfully we had a few good Americans with both balls and intellect whose defiance made a difference (a certain Mr. Murrow comes to mind), and I haven't forgotten Kirk Douglas' semi-courageous decision with respect to a semi-successful sword-and-sandals spectacular (though after most of the dust had settled). But there seems to be a peddling of the notion that Hollywood was part of that defiant resistance, proudly speaking truth to power. I caught a whiff of this ahistorical malarkey not only at the recent Oscars, but also the one a few years ago when everyone sat on their hands when Elia Kazan was honored... as though the unfortunate stain on his life and career was somehow greater or more destructive of individual lives than the giant trail of slime left by tinseltown itself.
So, if we're now naming names of those in the entertainment industry who went along to get along (Mr. Kazan... check), then that whole fucking craphole of compromised standards and bland conformity that is and ever was "Hollywood" should reside at the very top of the list.