Average customer rating:
|
Class / Youngblood
Starring:
Rob Lowe ,
Cynthia Gibb ,
Patrick Swayze ,
Ed Lauter , and
Jim Youngs
Director:
Peter Markle , and
Lewis John Carlino
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)
ProductGroup: DVD
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Pretty in Pink (Special Collector's Edition)
ASIN: B0000714CF
Release Date: 2003-01-07 |
Customer Reviews:
'Youngblood and Class'.......2004-03-30
Teenage angst was a popular theme for directors during the nineteen eighties, with films such as 'St. Elmo's Fire', 'The Outsiders', and 'The Breakfast Club' dominating our video rental stores and television screens. Cinemagoers had been introduced to a fresh bunch of actors, known predominantly through media circles as 'the brat pack'. Rob Lowe, the star of 'Class' and 'Youngblood', was one of these new and talented young actors.
'Class' tells the story of two Ivy League students participating in the kind of irresponsible antics associated with adolescence: late night trips to the nearby girls' school, using fake ID in order to buy alcohol, and smoking after 'lights out'. Foxfield is a fun place to be.
But the film has its dark side. Skip (Rob Lowe, 'Oxford Blues', 'The Outsiders'), is the self-confident joker, whose intention is to get into Harvard with as little effort - and as much fun - as possible. Although his parents are disgustingly wealthy, they are unhappy. Skip is aware of this, but nevertheless hides his fears and concerns behind an ostentatious exterior. Jonathan (Andrew McCarthy, 'Catholic Boys', 'Less than Zero', 'Pretty in Pink')finds Skip's overbearing personality hard to deal with at times. He is awkard and clumsy, lacking the charm and confidence exuded by his handsome roommate. Things change for Jonathan when he takes a trip to New York, but the change is transitory, and the tone of the movie rapidly adopts a melancholy atmosphere from that point onwards.
There are some memorable moments in 'Class', most notably the fight between Skip and Jonathan. The director has juxtaposed the humor and seriousness skilfully, and has succeeded in producing an entertaining and enjoyable teen film. Also stars Jaqueline Bissett, Cliff Robertson, John Cusack, Alan Ruck, and Casey Seimasko.
'Youngblood' sees Rob Lowe teaming up with Patrick Swayze ('The Outsiders', 'Red Dawn') for this ice hockey film that oozes testosterone. It is the story of a talented young ice hockey player who is offered a chance to play the sport professionally. But possessing a stubborn and highly strung character, can he succeed? If he fails, he will end up back on the family farm, somewhere out in the boondocks. 'Youngblood' offers action, drama, and romance. And Hockey. Also stars Ed Lauter, Cynthia Gibb, and Keanu Reeves.
This DVD is a worthwhile investment, as both films compensate for the limited extras.
Average customer rating:
- Have I seen this story line before?
- "I knew he wasn't one of us!"
- Average film
- artful and true
- A good film with a good storyline
|
AKA
Starring:
George Asprey ,
Geoff Bell ,
Stephen Boxer ,
Reginald S. Bundy , and
Lindsey Coulson
Manufacturer: Sundance Channel Home Entertainment
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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ASIN: B00080ZH6Y
Release Date: 2005-04-01 |
Amazon.com
AKA has been favorably compared to The Talented Mr. Ripley, and for good reason. A fascinating drama about a young, working-class man's fraudulent claim to aristocracy and subsequent rise among the rich and privileged, AKA has a touch of the thriller about it. Matthew Leitch plays 18-year-old Dean, a handsome, beleaguered fellow abused in every conceivable way by a monstrous father and thwarted in his desire for higher education and a lucrative career. Sheltered and polished by a high-society arts matron, Lady Gryffon (Diana Quick), Dean eventually lands on his feet in Paris, gaining entrance to elite circles by pretending to be Lady Gryffon's son and getting caught between the desire of two men. The smart script by writer-director Duncan Roy plays on the paradox of an ambiguous hero whose attractiveness to the rich and jaded is his emotional authenticity and natural frankness. Leitch's performance is mesmerizing, both cryptic and eerily honest. --Tom Keogh
Customer Reviews:
Have I seen this story line before?.......2006-02-08
This is a really gay version of "The Talented Mr Ripley", I liked it and would watch it again.
"I knew he wasn't one of us!".......2005-10-02
AKA is an interesting film about an interesting story, but I found the movie to be a little overrated. Yes - it's well acted, and considering the subject matter, it's a little over-long, and the sound is so muffled that it's often hard to hear the dialogue. Directed by Duncan Roy, AKA does succeed, however, as a type of modern-version of Vanity Fair turned completely on its head.
Based on a true story and set in England and France in the late 1970s is all about a young man of humble origins who makes his way into an aristocracy that may be not what it once was, yet still adheres as severely as ever to class distinctions. Dean Page (Matthew Leitch) is truly trapped, beset by a stepfather (Geoff Bell) who sexually abuses him and a loving mother Georgie (Lindsey Coulson) so intimidated by her husband that she won't even sign the papers that would allow her son the escape and opportunity a free government college education would provide.
Georgie works as waitress in a posh London restaurant, and tells Dean about all the aristocratic women that as he meets, in particular Lady Francine Gryffoyn (Diana Quick), whom she serves day in and day out. Dean is so enamored by the images of Lady Gryffoyn and in constant fear of his father that he runs away from home and applies for a job with Lady Francine at her art gallery.
Dean is just handsome, reserved, and diffident enough to catch milady's fancy. Beneath an often-nasty veneer, Lady Francine, a divorcée, is a vulnerable woman who snorts coke at gallery openings and knows her peers hate her because she must work for a living
All seems well for Dean until he runs up against Lady Francine's son, Alexander (Blake Ritson), an insufferable snob who jealous of his mother's attentions to him. Dean, however, has briefly crossed paths with a charismatic young American, Benjamin Halim (Peter Youngblood Hills), who tells him that Paris is the place to be.
In Paris, our young disaffected hero poses as David Gryffoyn and uses stolen credit cards to get by and maintain his now wealthy lifestyle. He also meets Benjamin's boyfriend David Glendenning (George Asprey), a rich and handsome British aristocrat who is instantly taken with him. Has he hobnobs with the filthy and decadent rich; he becomes carried away by his assumed identity, while also becoming potentially caught in a dicey triangle with David and Benjamin.
Amidst a sharply observed swath of decadence, involving mostly a lot of drugs, drinking and kinky sex, Roy suggests that with Dean caught between so jagged a rock and so hard a place at the outset of his story, perhaps he had nothing to lose by his imposture even if it is hardly likely to last.
AKA often veers radically from the totally engrossing to the silly. Some of the dialogue is laughable and totally unrealistic, particularly in one scene when Georgie, in an attempt to find her son, visits Lady Gryffoyn in her gallery, and is rebuffed with the comment "don't you people have the Social Services for this sort of thing." One might also wonder whether the English Aristocracy are really as decadent and as useless as this films makes them out to be.
Having said this, AKA is still mostly watchable thanks to the understated performances of both Matthew Leitch and Peter Youngblood Hills. And it is a testament to Leitch's sympathetic portrayal of Dean that we somehow hope that he will get away with this charade unscathed. Roy acutely weaves his social, psychological, and emotional observations into the narrative making AKA a mostly amusing, poignant, and insightful exploration into the enigmas of the British class system.
Indeed, the far more aware and experienced Benjamin, in all his insecurities and changeability, holds up for Dean a mirror that Dean naturally resists peering into at all costs. But it is a mirror that Dean has to look into if he wants to save his soul, find the redemption that he is looking for, and ultimately rediscover his true identity. Mike Leonard September 05.
Average film.......2005-07-11
This british movie is a "queer version" of "Mr Ripley", which is not a bad starting point. However there are too many flaws to say this is a good movie. Some actors are probably not professional, especially some bi-characters are extremely bad, overacting and very ennoying. The story is though interesting enough to be worth seeing. There are so many bad gay movies out there, so this one is far from the worse....
artful and true.......2005-01-19
AKA is writer/director Duncan Roy's thought-provoking memoir of his own youth. He escaped from a brutal, sexually abusive working-class household by assuming the identity of a young aristocrat and became famous - or notorious - in the process.
Mr. Roy's movie is brilliantly written, directed, and cast. Matthew Leitch is perfect as Dean, the handsome, sweet, innocently seductive young man who desperately wants a better or, to be more precise, another life. His intelligence, looks, charm, and manner make people want to believe he is who he says. All the actors are notable and entertaining. Two are exceptional: Diana Quick as the prickly patrician Lady Gryffoyn, whose son Dean impersonates; and George Asprey as the striking, urbane, aristocratic who takes Dean under his wing.
Aside from the fascinating story, imaginative photography done solely with available light, and perfect musical support, AKA is a scathing portrayal of the English class system, where aristocrats rely on certain cues (accent, name, manners, schooling, demeanor) to identify one another and preserve their exclusivity. Dean lives as 'one of them' successfully and happily for over a year. After which he says, quite truthfully if Mr. Roy's portrait of Alexander Gryffoyn is in any way accurate, that he was a better Lord Gryffoyn than the real one could ever be. Mr. Roy depicts a working class equally complicit in maintaining 'place' and limited social mobility.
After watching the single screen version, the three-screen triptych version, as it was released theatrically, is a wonderful complement which adds dimension to the story. Mr. Roy's commentary is illuminating politically and enlightening cinematically. This is a very personal work of art. The entire ensemble is outstanding, but the talent and beauty of Matthew Leitch bring it all together.
A good film with a good storyline.......2004-10-30
Based on a true story of Dean Page. The production quality and audio was good. The acting was good and the main players, believable. The story is of Dean who hates his middle class life and sexually abusive Father. Dean wants to be a nobleman so he steals the identity of a nobleman and assumes his life. Sadly Dean can not afford the cost of being rich and not only limits out his credit card but commits credit fraud to keep up the lie. The only negitive thing about the entire film was Dean's English accent is so heavy that on occation it's hard to understand what he said. The film is a good investment. It has a few racey intimate scene's and one frontal nude shot, although quick it may be best for those over 18. Those who have suffered sexual abuse by an authority figure may be very effected by the film.
Average customer rating:
- Have I seen this story line before?
- "I knew he wasn't one of us!"
- Average film
- artful and true
- A good film with a good storyline
|
AKA
Starring:
Matthew Leitch ,
Diana Quick ,
George Asprey ,
Lindsey Coulson , and
Blake Ritson
Director:
Duncan Roy
Manufacturer: Sundance Channel Home Entertainment
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Drama
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Period Piece
| Drama
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Class Differences
| By Theme
| Drama
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Psychological Drama
| By Theme
| Drama
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| British Cinema
| By Country
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| British Cinema
| By Country
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Boxer, Stephen
| ( B )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Nighy, Bill
| ( N )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Quick, Diana
| ( Q )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Ritson, Blake
| ( R )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
All Sundance Titles
| Sundance Channel Home Entertainment
| Studio Specials
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| British Cinema
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
General
| British Cinema
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
( A )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
-
Summer Storm
-
Third Man Out
-
The 24th Day
-
Mysterious Skin (Deluxe Unrated Director's Edition)
-
Brokeback Mountain (Widescreen Edition)
ASIN: B00026L91G
Release Date: 2004-09-14 |
Amazon.com
AKA has been favorably compared to The Talented Mr. Ripley, and for good reason. A fascinating drama about a young, working-class man's fraudulent claim to aristocracy and subsequent rise among the rich and privileged, AKA has a touch of the thriller about it. Matthew Leitch plays 18-year-old Dean, a handsome, beleaguered fellow abused in every conceivable way by a monstrous father and thwarted in his desire for higher education and a lucrative career. Sheltered and polished by a high-society arts matron, Lady Gryffon (Diana Quick), Dean eventually lands on his feet in Paris, gaining entrance to elite circles by pretending to be Lady Gryffon's son and getting caught between the desire of two men. The smart script by writer-director Duncan Roy plays on the paradox of an ambiguous hero whose attractiveness to the rich and jaded is his emotional authenticity and natural frankness. Leitch's performance is mesmerizing, both cryptic and eerily honest. --Tom Keogh
Description
Dean (Leitch) is trapped in a working class suburb with an abusive father and a doormat mother whose job at a tony London restaurant allows her to regale her son with stories of her famous customers. Dean runs away from home and gets a job at a posh gallery run by Lady Gryffoyn (Quick), who his mother had often waited on. Soon, Dean insinuates himself into the world of the sex, cocaine, and disco upper class set by presenting himself as lady Gryffoyn's son, funding his deceit with credit card fraud. But Dean eventually learns that reinventing oneself comes at a price.
Customer Reviews:
Have I seen this story line before?.......2006-02-08
This is a really gay version of "The Talented Mr Ripley", I liked it and would watch it again.
"I knew he wasn't one of us!".......2005-10-02
AKA is an interesting film about an interesting story, but I found the movie to be a little overrated. Yes - it's well acted, and considering the subject matter, it's a little over-long, and the sound is so muffled that it's often hard to hear the dialogue. Directed by Duncan Roy, AKA does succeed, however, as a type of modern-version of Vanity Fair turned completely on its head.
Based on a true story and set in England and France in the late 1970s is all about a young man of humble origins who makes his way into an aristocracy that may be not what it once was, yet still adheres as severely as ever to class distinctions. Dean Page (Matthew Leitch) is truly trapped, beset by a stepfather (Geoff Bell) who sexually abuses him and a loving mother Georgie (Lindsey Coulson) so intimidated by her husband that she won't even sign the papers that would allow her son the escape and opportunity a free government college education would provide.
Georgie works as waitress in a posh London restaurant, and tells Dean about all the aristocratic women that as he meets, in particular Lady Francine Gryffoyn (Diana Quick), whom she serves day in and day out. Dean is so enamored by the images of Lady Gryffoyn and in constant fear of his father that he runs away from home and applies for a job with Lady Francine at her art gallery.
Dean is just handsome, reserved, and diffident enough to catch milady's fancy. Beneath an often-nasty veneer, Lady Francine, a divorcée, is a vulnerable woman who snorts coke at gallery openings and knows her peers hate her because she must work for a living
All seems well for Dean until he runs up against Lady Francine's son, Alexander (Blake Ritson), an insufferable snob who jealous of his mother's attentions to him. Dean, however, has briefly crossed paths with a charismatic young American, Benjamin Halim (Peter Youngblood Hills), who tells him that Paris is the place to be.
In Paris, our young disaffected hero poses as David Gryffoyn and uses stolen credit cards to get by and maintain his now wealthy lifestyle. He also meets Benjamin's boyfriend David Glendenning (George Asprey), a rich and handsome British aristocrat who is instantly taken with him. Has he hobnobs with the filthy and decadent rich; he becomes carried away by his assumed identity, while also becoming potentially caught in a dicey triangle with David and Benjamin.
Amidst a sharply observed swath of decadence, involving mostly a lot of drugs, drinking and kinky sex, Roy suggests that with Dean caught between so jagged a rock and so hard a place at the outset of his story, perhaps he had nothing to lose by his imposture even if it is hardly likely to last.
AKA often veers radically from the totally engrossing to the silly. Some of the dialogue is laughable and totally unrealistic, particularly in one scene when Georgie, in an attempt to find her son, visits Lady Gryffoyn in her gallery, and is rebuffed with the comment "don't you people have the Social Services for this sort of thing." One might also wonder whether the English Aristocracy are really as decadent and as useless as this films makes them out to be.
Having said this, AKA is still mostly watchable thanks to the understated performances of both Matthew Leitch and Peter Youngblood Hills. And it is a testament to Leitch's sympathetic portrayal of Dean that we somehow hope that he will get away with this charade unscathed. Roy acutely weaves his social, psychological, and emotional observations into the narrative making AKA a mostly amusing, poignant, and insightful exploration into the enigmas of the British class system.
Indeed, the far more aware and experienced Benjamin, in all his insecurities and changeability, holds up for Dean a mirror that Dean naturally resists peering into at all costs. But it is a mirror that Dean has to look into if he wants to save his soul, find the redemption that he is looking for, and ultimately rediscover his true identity. Mike Leonard September 05.
Average film.......2005-07-11
This british movie is a "queer version" of "Mr Ripley", which is not a bad starting point. However there are too many flaws to say this is a good movie. Some actors are probably not professional, especially some bi-characters are extremely bad, overacting and very ennoying. The story is though interesting enough to be worth seeing. There are so many bad gay movies out there, so this one is far from the worse....
artful and true.......2005-01-19
AKA is writer/director Duncan Roy's thought-provoking memoir of his own youth. He escaped from a brutal, sexually abusive working-class household by assuming the identity of a young aristocrat and became famous - or notorious - in the process.
Mr. Roy's movie is brilliantly written, directed, and cast. Matthew Leitch is perfect as Dean, the handsome, sweet, innocently seductive young man who desperately wants a better or, to be more precise, another life. His intelligence, looks, charm, and manner make people want to believe he is who he says. All the actors are notable and entertaining. Two are exceptional: Diana Quick as the prickly patrician Lady Gryffoyn, whose son Dean impersonates; and George Asprey as the striking, urbane, aristocratic who takes Dean under his wing.
Aside from the fascinating story, imaginative photography done solely with available light, and perfect musical support, AKA is a scathing portrayal of the English class system, where aristocrats rely on certain cues (accent, name, manners, schooling, demeanor) to identify one another and preserve their exclusivity. Dean lives as 'one of them' successfully and happily for over a year. After which he says, quite truthfully if Mr. Roy's portrait of Alexander Gryffoyn is in any way accurate, that he was a better Lord Gryffoyn than the real one could ever be. Mr. Roy depicts a working class equally complicit in maintaining 'place' and limited social mobility.
After watching the single screen version, the three-screen triptych version, as it was released theatrically, is a wonderful complement which adds dimension to the story. Mr. Roy's commentary is illuminating politically and enlightening cinematically. This is a very personal work of art. The entire ensemble is outstanding, but the talent and beauty of Matthew Leitch bring it all together.
A good film with a good storyline.......2004-10-30
Based on a true story of Dean Page. The production quality and audio was good. The acting was good and the main players, believable. The story is of Dean who hates his middle class life and sexually abusive Father. Dean wants to be a nobleman so he steals the identity of a nobleman and assumes his life. Sadly Dean can not afford the cost of being rich and not only limits out his credit card but commits credit fraud to keep up the lie. The only negitive thing about the entire film was Dean's English accent is so heavy that on occation it's hard to understand what he said. The film is a good investment. It has a few racey intimate scene's and one frontal nude shot, although quick it may be best for those over 18. Those who have suffered sexual abuse by an authority figure may be very effected by the film.
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