Megan Mullally Movie:

Under the Biltmore Clock



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Megan Mullally Movie:
Under the Biltmore Clock



Movie
Under the Biltmore Clock
Under the Biltmore Clock
List Price: $19.95Label: Monterey Video

Salesrank: 96542

Released: August 22, 2006
Our Price: $11.22
Used Price: $10.98
MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Sean Young
  • Lenny von Dohlen
  • Barnard Hughes
  • Mark Hulsey
  • Wayne Kneeland
  • Editorial Review:
    It's 1920 and romance is in bloom at the Biltmore Hotel under its famous clock. For Myra Harper, age 21, it's time to stop "playing around" and find a husband, and the unsuspecting, handsome, shy and quite wealthy Knowlton Whitney is the perfect target.

    Romance, it seems, will work quite well with Myra and Knowlton. For they fall in love and it's time to meet his outrageously eccentric family and the bizarre characters who inhabit Whitney mansion! Suddenly Myra is caught on a comic roller coaster of events trying to save her romance.

    Sean Young takes a spin through this delightful PBS adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's charming "Myra Meets His Family".

    Awards:
    Best Literary Adaptation of 1985, Honorable Mention - TV Guide
    Los Angeles Int'l Film Festival
    USA Film Festival (Dallas)
    Sonoma Valley Film Festival

    Written By: adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's charming "Myra Meets His Family" by Ilene Cooper and Neal Miller

    Starring: Sean Young, Lenny Von Dohlen and Barnard Hughes

    Directed By: Neal Miller Special Info:
    Part of the American Playhouse on Video Collection
    Seen on PBS

    Under the Biltmore Clock Reviews:
    Yes, Sean Young can act 4 Star Review
    2008-07-01 - I know, I know--I was surprised. But act she does, splendidly nailing the slight desperation of the flapper heroine of this piece,and the saving grace of pride that makes you love her character in the end.

    This is the best kind of wonderful surprise of a movie, one where you don't expect anything special from it. A PBS adaptation of an F. Scott Fitzgerald story? How boring is THAT going to be? And it starts off staid and unremarkable, and gets better and better as it goes until you realize you've been had, and this is one that's going to stick in the memory a long, long time.

    It's also wonderful in that all of its plot and surprises spring directly from the characters. Everything gets wilder and wilder, and everything makes perfect sense in retrospect.

    I'm only giving it four stars, because I haven't seen the DVD yet---I'm rating the movie itself. I'll be back with an evaluation of the transfer.

    Excellent production of a Scott Fitzgerald story 5 Star Review
    2008-02-23 - I had never heard of this story by Scott Fitzgerald although I read all his novels, some several times. So, when I found this on the shelf at the library I was intrigued, checked it out and I was not disappointed when I saw it.

    The jazz era is interesting and colorful in itself--the costumes and settings are fun to look at. This cast is excellent. Sean Young is very convincing as the beautiful, self-assured young flapper who goes after the rich but shy Knowleton Whitney, who is wonderfully played by Lenny Von Dohlen. There's an amusing group of characters who inhabit the Whitney estate in Westchester County, NY.

    The story takes you on some surprising turns as you watch the progress of this romance. The ending is terrific---no, I won't spoil it for you. I recommend this film especially to anyone who likes Scott-Fitzgerald but I think anyone would enjoy it.

    Sean Young *is* the Fitzgerald Girl 4 Star Review
    2001-01-25 - Sean Young is perfectly cast as an F. Scott Fitgerald heroine in this good PBS adaptation of one of his short stories. She captures the brittle charm, beauty, and underlying vulnerability of the Jazz Age girls he wrote about. She would have made a great Daisy Buchanan. This isn't one of Fitzgerald's best stories, but it very much captures his distinctive style, mood, and favorite subjects--money, fashion, and their ephemeral power.










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