Diane Lane Movie:

Streets of Fire HD DVD



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Diane Lane Movie:
Streets of Fire HD DVD



Movie
Streets of Fire [HD DVD]
Streets of Fire [HD DVD]
List Price: $19.98Label: Universal Studios

Salesrank: 21427

Released: July 24, 2007
Our Price: $1.59
Used Price: $3.79
MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: HD DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • Starring:

  • Diane Lane
  • Willem Dafoe
  • Bill Paxton
  • Michael Pare
  • Rick Moranis
  • Editorial Review:
    Walter Hill's updated (1984), highly stylized take on biker movies still looks like a determinedly eccentric project that happens to work at times, but not at others. Michael Paré plays a biker who agrees to rescue his ex-girlfriend (a rocker played by Diane Lane) from kidnappers (led by Willem Dafoe). The ensuing battle against a nocturnal background of industrial blight, chrome, and loud music is like some fever dream of a Springsteen fan who listened to the song "Born to Run" far too often. The audacity of the film carries it a long way even after it becomes clear that Hill's experiment is crumbling under its own weight. Dafoe, who looked even spookier back then than he does now, is memorable, as are Amy Madigan and Rick Moranis. Music is by Ry Cooder, with an appearance by the Blasters. The DVD release has a widescreen presentation, optional French soundtrack, optional Spanish subtitles. --Tom Keogh

    Streets of Fire [HD DVD] Reviews:
    Amazon DVD 5 Star Review
    2009-12-19 - I purchased this DVD to bring back a little of the 80's. It came as requested and quickly. This vendor I have used in the past and will continue to use in the future.

    Truly One-of-a-Kind 4 Star Review
    2009-12-02 - If you came of age in the late 1970s - early 1980s, this movie belongs in your collection. Corny? Yes. But good luck trying to forget Streets of Fire, even if you don't really care for it at first. Streets of Fire and The Warriors both have this trippy, surrealistic vibe that has never quite been duplicated. A must for Diane Lane fans: she was very young and sexy in this flick.

    I haven't seen this film in 20 years. I can't wait to get reacquainted!

    Can't use it 5 Star Review
    2009-11-17 - I purchased this thinking that my Blu-Ray player would be able to read it, but it couldn't. I love this movie and now have an HD disc that I can't use. It's not the seller's fault, the item is perfect.

    (3.5 STARS): "A Rock'N'Roll Fable" Back in 1984 4 Star Review
    2009-07-26 - "Street of Fire" is a Walter Hill / Joel Silver film that was a commercial flop back in 1984 but has gained a cult status since then. In this "Rock'n'Roll Fable" a popular rock singer Ellen (played by Diane Lane) is kidnapped by motorcycle gang "The Bombers." Ellen happens to be ex-girlfriend of a "mercenary" Tom Cordy (Michael Paré) who is back in town and sets out to rescue her. You may say the story is too silly. Yes, I know, but perhaps that is the point.

    Actually this Western-like story is told in the fashion of 50s-ish B-films shown at drive-in theaters. See a switchblade-wielding kid and how he is treated by our always reliable hero and you know what I mean. Dialogues and one-lines are often terribly corny, but they are all intentional. The film's climax of course has a "duel" between Tom Cordy and the villain "Raven" (Willem Dafoe with a strange haircut), a one-on-one fight using unique choice of weapons. And don't forget Link Wray's classic song "Rumble."

    Diane Lane (after two Francis Ford Coppola-directed films "The Outsides" and "Rumble Fish" both based on S.E. Hinton novels) plays the kidnapped rock star, but her role is comparatively small and unmemorable. It is Amy Madigan (to be Oscar nominated next year for her turn in "Twice in a Lifetime") who steals the show as "McCoy" who would make a much stronger fighter than Michael Paré's hero. Bow-tied Rick Moranis also appears as Ellen's manager. Don't miss Bill Paxton as bartender and Elizabeth Daily, whose role "baby Doll" suddenly shows up, and disappears.

    Like Jack Hill's cult film "Switchblade Sisters," this is basically a kind of fantasy with a preposterous story and larger than life characters that exist only in cinema, and as to "Street of Fire" it is precisely made that way. We didn't get it back then when it was released, but maybe some of us do now in the post-Tarantino era. Also, as is often the case with these cult films (and Tarantino films), the soundtrack music by Ry Cooder is great.

    terrible 1 Star Review
    2009-05-30 - the product does not work on the three different players I tried it on! I am sending it back! What a disappointment!










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