Neil Young Video:

Love at Large



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Neil Young Video:
Love at Large



Video
Love at Large
Love at Large
List Price: $14.98Label: MGM (Video & DVD)

Salesrank: 58438

Released: January 13, 2004
Our Price: $2.85
Used Price: $2.28
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • Dubbed
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Editorial Review:
    OscarÂ(r) nominees* Tom Berenger (Platoon) and Anne Archer (Fatal Attraction)team with an all-star cast, including Elizabeth Perkins (He Said, She Said), Ted Levine (Ali, Monk ), Ann Magnuson (Panic Room), Kate Capshaw (Love Affair) and songwriterNeil Young, in this giddy, quirky and wonderful-to-watch movie (Judith Crist) that delves into more than just the mysteries of love! Harry Dobbs (Berenger) takes his job as a private detective seriously. Hired by a mysterious seductress (Archer) to follow her boyfriend, Harry soon discovers thatthe man he's following is not so much the marrying kind as he is the murdering kind! And it'll takethe help of another sleuth (Perkins)hired to keep an eye on Harryto capture this dangerous lothario and steal Harry's heart in the process! *Berenger: Supporting Actor, Platoon (1986);Archer: Supporting Actress, Fatal Attraction (1987)

    Love at Large Reviews:
    Pleased As Punch 5 Star Review
    2009-10-27 - I received the product in a timely manner and in the conditon for which it was advertised. I would purchase from Amazon again.

    Poking Fun At Film Noir 4 Star Review
    2009-03-16 - If you're a fan of film noir, you should like this 1990 takeoff of those 1940s films with Anne Archer as an exaggerated femme-fatale in distress and private detective Tom Berenger paid to spy on her husband.

    It turns out to be a comedy, however, as Berenger tails the wrong guy but finds things interesting as they are. Then Berenger's girlfriend gets nervous and hires a female detective (Elizabeth Perkins) to spy on him, so everyone is watching everyone!

    Although there isn't a lot of action, the film never drags and is a good combination of suspense, humor and drama/action. Also nice is the soundtrack, a "Midnight Run" sound with good blues guitar and trumpet plus a Leonard Cohen song to start the film. Good colors add to everything.

    On the negative side, I didn't care for the ending regarding Archer, nor understand why she did what she did. Also, everyone in the film is a bit too sleazy. The other fault likes not in the movie but in the DVD which had a very weak transfer. Overall, fun for a couple of looks.

    The gravel voiced detective 4 Star Review
    2009-02-23 - This movie reminds one very much of a 40's film:
    the gravel voiced detective who gets his case all sideways,
    but finds his own kind of true anyway.
    The cast and script are both very good.
    I really enjoyed this movie and except for being a little slow at times,
    the movie delivers the goods.

    Very good cast in so-so film 3 Star Review
    2005-02-07 - Notwithstanding the occasional chuckles that pop up now and again in Love at Large, this is not a great movie. In fact, the filmmaker (writer-director) Alan Rudolph must have sat down and thought, "Gee, how can I make a movie that people will just love to chomp popcorn to?"

    So that's what he did. This is not really a bad movie. It just ain't very good. Take a solid cast--Ann Magnuson, Anne Archer, Tom Berenger, Ted Levine, Kate Capshaw, Elizabeth Perkins, and rock god Neil Young--and stick them in a story that is meant to evoke classic film noir but doesn't raise the stakes very high at all for anyone in any situation, and you have the reason for the three stars here.

    The acting is fine, no problem. Everyone acquits herself/himself very well indeed. But the story is just kind of there. If you're gonna have film noir, ya gotta have some intensity and it just ain't here, folks. If you DON'T have intensity, you gotta have some real laughs, and there's not enough of em to replace the intensity. So what you DO have is a really watered down film noir that just kind of ambles along good naturedly until the end when it says, Be seein' ya, and then it's over and you can go back to your knitting or whatever.

    Too bad. If the story had been punchier OR the laughs had been more frequent and zingier, this coulda been a contender. For a much better film noir from Alan Rudolph, check out Mortal Thoughts with Demi Moore and Bruce Willis. This features some of the best performances from both of them, and is a powerful piece of cinema, written by the great William Reilly.

    Love at Large is a kind of half-hearted homage (three H's in a row, how bout that?) to film noir that never really gets off the ground. Good acting, weak script.

    Brilliant Effort by Alan Rudolph and Superb Cast 5 Star Review
    2003-08-19 - Alan Rudolph takes a mystery and turns it inside out, with the help of great acting. Tom Berenger as the crusty, savvy detective. Elizabeth Perkins as the hapless but lovestruck detective wannabe. Ann Archer at her radiant and amusing best. And Neil Young (yes, THAT Neil Young) in a delightful cameo role as a heavy who gets what he deserves. A small film it may be, but the script is excellent, the photography impressive, the familiar theme of mistaken identity is well played, so this is in many ways Rudolph's best film.










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