Jamie Lee Curtis Movie:

Not Quite Hollywood



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Jamie Lee Curtis Movie:
Not Quite Hollywood



Movie
Not Quite Hollywood
Not Quite Hollywood
List Price: $26.98Label: Magnolia Home Entertainment

Salesrank: 11973

Released: October 6, 2009
Our Price: $12.98
Used Price: $6.47
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • Starring:

  • Jamie Lee Curtis
  • Cassandra Delaney
  • Rebecca Gilling
  • Gregory Harrison
  • Stacy Keach
  • Editorial Review:
    Free-wheeling sex romps! Blood-soaked terror tales! High-octane extravaganzas! Welcome to NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD, the wild, wonderful story of 'OZPLOITATION'
    films. Join QUENTIN TARANTINO, JAMIE LEE CURTIS, DENNIS HOPPER and many others as they take you on an irreverent journey through the 70 s and 80 s, an era when Australian cinema got its gear off and showed the world a full-frontal explosion of sex, violence, horror and foot-to-the floor action.

    Not Quite Hollywood Reviews:
    Great Ozploitation overview 4 Star Review
    2009-12-09 - 4.3 stars

    I didn't know much about all the blokes who made the 70s Aussie grindhouse films, until I saw this flick. It's overloaded with info and clips and interviews with the principals and many fans. Tarantino and Curtis are quite entertaining, and the overall tone is appropriately loving but non-worshipful.

    The extras feature a whole bunch of endings from some of these films, and they are often hilarious and just plain classic.

    Any film fan will find this doc engrossing and entertaining; any b-movie fan will be in heaven.

    42nd Street-Australian style 5 Star Review
    2009-11-09 - I have all the 42ND STREET FOREVER series of DVDs. I go ape over trailer DVDs & documentaries of low budget films. This DVD fils the bill perfectly.

    Think Of It As A Director's Commentary For An Era 5 Star Review
    2009-10-23 - Having had the privilege of growing up in a small town that had an operating drive-in during my youth, I can say that I've seen more than my fair share of exploitation films. While not an expert on the subject, I think anyone who's seen a few gets the basic formula: the motion picture is made on the fly -- quickly and with easy money -- with the sole intent of putting as much schlock and shock fit to fill the screen that's possibly imaginable ... and NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD serves as the ultimate "director's commentary" to the continent of Austrailia's contribution to the great exploitation films of the 1970's and (mostly) early 1980's. Direct-to-video markets pretty much killed this unheralded era of international cinema, though every now and then, genre films make limited comebacks (think SAW and any of its myriad variations and derivatives).

    NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD plays out as a loving embrace to these films, these actors, and the directors who made these down-and-dirty films possible. It's documentary format is loose and fun -- much like the stories it celebrates -- but it's all handled with the tremendous grace, admiration, and professionalism that this oft-overlooked influence so richly deserves. The documentary is packed with plenty of familiar faces -- indeed, Quentin Taratino contributed much of the behind-the-scenes influence to get the film made -- and nowhere else will you find such a plethora of tales told with such gusto. Indeed, once it's all over, the viewer feels sad that most of the films are relegated to the backshelves of the ol' video store; I did a quick search of several titles detailed at length here, and I couldn't find a single one of the available on DVD. Hopefully, some of these gritty classics will see the light of day again as more and more viewers turn to the past as today's megaplexes continue to churn out one CGI-laden effects-fest after another. These films relied as much on the ingenuity of the filmmakers as it did the audiences. One can only hope for such respect from next weekend's major blockbuster.

    That's not to say that all of the films celebrated within NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD deserve the moniker of 'art.' It's only to say that the documentary makes and takes its stripes as well as the creative folks who produced these gems in the past. There's something for everyone here -- horror, vice, greed, action -- and, if nothing else, NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD will make you think twice about (in a positive way) about picking up some unadvertised direct-to-DVD production in hopes that you're about to discover the next Lucas, Spielberg, Scorsese, or De Palma ... and maybe you just will ...

    Don't even think about it! 1 Star Review
    2009-10-07 - What were they thinking? Don't you even think about it! Unquestionable the worst documentary I have ever seen!

    EXPLOITATION FROM DOWN UNDER 5 Star Review
    2009-10-07 - Most people think of two movies when they think of films from Australia. The most popular was CROCODILE DUNDEE, a film which a friend of mine from Australia says most folks there would like to forget. The other is MAD MAX.

    This low budget exploitation films kick started the career of Mel Gibson as well as a slew of apocalyptic visions on film that involved car chases in rusted out, souped up, turbo charged vehicles. A world where marauding packs of gun toting savages ruled the streets until the hero came along.

    But there was more to films coming from Australia than these. And the recent release NOT QUITE HOLLYWOOD celebrates those films as well as informs viewers of gems they might have missed. Comprised of clips and interviews, this well rounded documentary gives us examples of everything from sexploitation films to the already mentioned road chase flicks.

    The DVD begins in the seventies when the restraints of censorship were somewhat lifted and there was an influx of films that were bawdy but harmless in the long run. Think back to films like CANDY STRIPE NURSES and STUDENT TEACHERS and you get the picture. Films that were the mainstay for many drive-ins across this country were sprouting up in Australia with a decidedly Aussie flavor.

    But the rest of the world began to pick up on these gems as well. Exploitation films had arrived and were re-dubbed ozploitation. Films like ALVIN PURPLE that told the tale of a young man who women found irresistible, who all wanted to bed, started as far back as 1973. The film was so successful that it spawned a sequel. And many more films featuring over exposed men and women followed.

    But it wasn't just sex that sold. There were monsters and gore films as well. The suspense film ROAD GAMES starring Stacy Keach and Jamie Lee Curtis kept viewers on the edge of their seat. RAZORBACK had a ferocious oversized boar attacking people. And PATRICK featured a catatonic patient whose psychic abilities were such that he could kill without moving from his bed of blinking.

    Then there are the action films, most notably those of director Brian Trenchard-Smith. Starting with MAN FROM HONG KONG and later turning out DEAD END DRIVE-IN, Trenchard-Smith gave full blown, blast off the screen action films that had cars blowing up, martial arts battles galore and over the top action. But he wasn't alone. STONE from Sandy Harbutt gave us a new take on the biker film with a decidedly Aussie style.

    The films discussed here are not to be lost and won't be due in part to those they have influenced. Tarantino for one. The director/writers of SAW for another. Or the terror filled film WOLF CREEK that scared so many just a few years back. All are made by film makers who grew up on these films.

    This documentary mentions them all and features interviews with Jamie Lee Curtis, Stacy Keach, director Richard Franklin, Dennis Hopper, Barry Humphries, director George Miller, director Russell Mulcahy, Trenchard-Smith and more. It also has film buff Quentin Tarantino giving his take on the genre and why these films are treasures to be found and not forgotten. Each one gives their tales of the early days of the rise of Australian film making, the good the bad and the ugly. Tales of no budget, no release form, no safety minded film makers who just wanted to make something their own.

    While major releases are hyped and propped up with mega ad campaigns, small exploitation films have always relied on word of mouth to get people to see them. Some do so on DVD (video when they first started), some develop cult followings and some are discovered when documentaries are made about the genre that say "hey, you might have missed this one".

    The days of the drive-in theater are waning, but not quite dead. But the films that were made for them, the movies that used topics as old as the first story tellers expressed, are still around and available on DVD. This movie praises those early film makers for what they were able to achieve. It's also a guide book for films to seek out. And more than anything, it offers a fun look at the early days of an industry that started with an Aussie outlook that the world eventually adopted and enjoyed.











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