Steve Martin Movie:

L.A. Story 15th Anniversary Edition



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Steve Martin Movie:
L.A. Story 15th Anniversary Edition



Movie
L.A. Story (15th Anniversary Edition)
L.A. Story (15th Anniversary Edition)
List Price: $14.98Label: Lions Gate

Salesrank: 6784

Released: June 13, 2006
Our Price: $7.04
Used Price: $6.78
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Steve Martin
  • Victoria Tennant
  • Richard E. Grant
  • Sarah Jessica Parker
  • Marilu Henner
  • Editorial Review:
    AN L.A. WEATHERMAN, WHO HATES HIS JOB AND IS STUCK IN A BORING RELATIONSHIP, HAS HIS LIFE TURNED UPSIDE DOWN WHEN HERECEIVES A MYSTERIOUS MESSAGE FROM A FREEWAY SIGN.

    Description of L.A. Story (15th Anniversary Edition):
    Steve Martin wrote this film as a meditation on both love and Los Angeles (and then-wife Victoria Tennant). He plays a L.A. TV weatherman who finds himself conflicted about what to do with his life, both professionally and personally. As he works his way through a couple of relationships (including a very funny one with a frisky Sarah Jessica Parker, who talks him into colonic therapy), he discovers a L.A. freeway sign that gives him romantic advice. It helps him realize what he knows intuitively: that the British woman he is attracted to (Tennant) is the one he should pursue. A big cast (and lots of cameos) have fun with this witty (if slight) material and director Mick Jackson adds visual pizzazz. --Marshall Fine

    L.A. Story (15th Anniversary Edition) Reviews:
    RENT IT FIRST! 3 Star Review
    2009-10-20 - I wouldn't watch it again. This is a very so-so movie. All the gushing reviews here had me expecting otherwise and I usually dig Steve Martin, but this movie is tepid at best. The romantic chemistry is pretty nil. The comedy.. well, I laughed once or twice. It's half drama, half fantasy/absurd. For drama, Shopgirl is a lot better. For comedy, there are much better Steve Martin movies. So what does this picture offer? Well, some tongue-in-cheek jabs at life in L.A., which I could appreciate having lived there for a while. It ends on a positive (and predictable) note. But mostly, I was waiting for it to end. A seriously lukewarm affair. Rent before investing is all I can say. Or please buy mine.

    O Pointy Birds, O Pointy Pointy... 5 Star Review
    2009-01-02 - What can I say that hasn't already been said before? I was mesmerized by this film when I first saw it in theatres back in 1991. To me, L.A. Story is the quintessential fairy-tale/romantic comedy of Los Angeles. The city itself plays a central part in this story. New York and San Francisco are wonderful places in their own right, but Steve Martin sums up that certain something about L.A. that makes it the wonderfully peculiar, romantic, dreamy, quirky, and iconic city that it is.

    This film also has some of the most memorable film quotes (they certainly rank among my favorites):

    Harris: Let us just say I was deeply unhappy, but I didn't know it because I was so happy all the time.

    Harris: I'll have a half double decaffeinated half-caf, with a twist of lemon. (I thought this was a joke... until I started seeing people order oddball drinks like this at Starbucks stores which were beginning to crop up all over Southern California in the early 1990s.)

    Harris: Why is it that we don't always recognize the moment when love begins but we always know when it ends?

    Harris: Forget for this moment the smog and the cars and the restaurant and the skating and remember only this. A kiss may not be the truth, but it is what we wish were true.

    Harris: SanDeE*, your... your breasts feel weird.
    SanDeE*: Oh, that's 'cause they're real.

    Sara: Why didn't you tell me you had just broke up with someone?
    Harris: How do you know I just broke up with someone?
    Sara: Because when men just break up with someone, they always run around with someone much too young for them.
    Harris: She's not so young. She'll be 27 in four years.

    Sara: What did you have in mind?
    Harris: Well, I was thinking of taking you on a cultural tour of L.A.
    Sara: That's the first fifteen minutes, then what?
    Harris: All right, a cynic. First stop is six blocks from here.
    Sara: Why don't we walk?
    Harris: Walk? A walk in L.A.?

    Harris: Sitting there at that moment I thought of something else Shakespeare said. He said, "Hey... life is pretty stupid; with lots of hubbub to keep you busy, but really not amounting to much." Of course I'm paraphrasing: "Life is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

    Harris: So there I was jabbering at her about my new job as a serious newsman - about anything at all - but all I could think was wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful and yet again, wonderful.

    Harris: Ordinarily, I don't like to be around interesting people because it means I have to be interesting too.
    Sara: Are you saying I'm interesting?
    Harris: All I'm saying is that, when I'm around you, I find myself showing off, which is the idiot's version of being interesting.

    Harris: There comes a time in a person's life when it's now or never. It's now or never. Let me read to you from this book of poems: "O pointy birds, o pointy pointy. Anoint..."

    What Would Daddy Do? 5 Star Review
    2008-12-14 - If one wanted to do a mural for the town you grew up in, the town you experienced life within, the tow you call "home", how would it happen? Would paint and a blank canvass be the conventional and only method? Steve Martin, comedian at large, thinks not. In 1991 he wrote and starred in a Hollywood vehicle that shows his love for that western part of America - specifically the town he resides - Los Angeles. Continuing my quest through LA (which began with "LA Confidential" and continues with "LA Takedown" and "LA Without a Map"), Martin's film was a welcomed trip into the honesty of comedy, the ability to create smart jokes for audiences, and finally, be able to pull emotion from a story which involves a riddled electronic billboard. With characters centered in depth, comedy that sparks from the absurd and transforms into chaotic, and finally that underlying sense of fantasy - Martin proves again (beginning with "Roxanne") that he is more than just a zany comic, but an endearing member of Hollywood with true talent hidden behind the "Pink Panther" façade.

    Why does "LA Story" work and remain an unsung hero within the era of 90s cinema? This is one of those films that when walking through the video store, or randomly thumbing through the television stations, may just pass you by. It is a subtle box with Steve Martin merely wearing skates in what seems to be a mid-dance pose. It isn't a grabbing photo, but then again, this isn't a grabbing film. This is subtle, smooth, and relaxing - "LA Story" is a film that requires numerous viewings, not because it is a deep story, but because of the scope of what Martin is trying to say. If the phrase "How Daddy is Doing" doesn't mean anything to do, than you need to reexamine this film. Everything fits in this movie. The actors are superb, playing into the world of absurd coupled with common, the acting is direct and whimsical, and the music enhances the experience. This is the perfect film for rainy days, spring afternoons, cold winters, or just about any other moment of life. There are jokes that will make you laugh out loud and others that will make you think. This is a film about falling in love - and it works.

    As I write this review, I cannot wait to watch this movie again. This is a film I watched in the mid-90s and continue to watch, recommend, buy, and dedicate to friends and family - which is a rarity in today's standards.

    Grade: ***** out of *****


    LA Story DELETED SCENES John Lithgow 5 Star Review
    2008-07-11 - LA Story is a delight to watch. just wondering if this version has deleted scenes as a special feature. There is a deleted scene with John Lithgow as a producer of a musical play meeting with Steve Martin at an outdoor cafe that is so funny. The language used was a ratings barrier that would have limited the audience at the time.

    In a class of its own 5 Star Review
    2008-06-22 - I've just re-watched L.A. Story. It's one of my favorite movies ever. It's a nice love story, it's quirky, it's hilarious, it's seminal, and it's brilliantly filmed and cut.










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