Multi-faceted filmmaker Mark Duplass discusses the movies he wishes more people knew about with hosts Josh Olson and Joe Dante.
Show Notes: Movies Referenced In This Episode
Duck Butter (2018)
The Puffy Chair (2005)
Prince Of Broadway (2008)
Tangerine (2015)
The Florida Project (2017) – Dennis Cozzalio’s review
Red Rocket (2021)
Starlet (2012)
Take Out (2004)
Mack & Rita (Tbd)
Old Joy (2006)
First Cow (2020)
Wendy And Lucy (2008) – Dennis Cozzalio’s favorite movie of 2020
Henry Fool (1997)
Trust (1990)
Amateur (1994)
Medicine For Melancholy (2008)
Shang-Chi (2021)
Your Sister’s Sister (2011)
My Effortless Brilliance (2008)
What the Funny (2008)
Humpday (2009)
True Adolescents (2009)
Man Push Cart (2005)
The White Tiger (2021)
Baghead (2008)
The Do-Deca-Pentathlon (2012)
Language Lessons (2021)
Stevie (2002)
Hoop Dreams (1994)
American Movie (1999)
What Happened Was… (1994) – Ti West’s trailer commentary
Manhunter (1986) – Josh Olson’s trailer commentary
My Dinner With Andre (1981)
Creep (2014)
Grown-Ups (1980)
Abigail’s Party (1977)
Nuts In May (1976)
Secrets And Lies (1996) – Glenn Erickson’s Criterion Blu-ray review
Naked (1993)
Parallel Mothers (2021)
The Freebie (2010)
East Of Eden (1955) – Larry Cohen’s trailer commentary
Strange...
Show Notes: Movies Referenced In This Episode
Duck Butter (2018)
The Puffy Chair (2005)
Prince Of Broadway (2008)
Tangerine (2015)
The Florida Project (2017) – Dennis Cozzalio’s review
Red Rocket (2021)
Starlet (2012)
Take Out (2004)
Mack & Rita (Tbd)
Old Joy (2006)
First Cow (2020)
Wendy And Lucy (2008) – Dennis Cozzalio’s favorite movie of 2020
Henry Fool (1997)
Trust (1990)
Amateur (1994)
Medicine For Melancholy (2008)
Shang-Chi (2021)
Your Sister’s Sister (2011)
My Effortless Brilliance (2008)
What the Funny (2008)
Humpday (2009)
True Adolescents (2009)
Man Push Cart (2005)
The White Tiger (2021)
Baghead (2008)
The Do-Deca-Pentathlon (2012)
Language Lessons (2021)
Stevie (2002)
Hoop Dreams (1994)
American Movie (1999)
What Happened Was… (1994) – Ti West’s trailer commentary
Manhunter (1986) – Josh Olson’s trailer commentary
My Dinner With Andre (1981)
Creep (2014)
Grown-Ups (1980)
Abigail’s Party (1977)
Nuts In May (1976)
Secrets And Lies (1996) – Glenn Erickson’s Criterion Blu-ray review
Naked (1993)
Parallel Mothers (2021)
The Freebie (2010)
East Of Eden (1955) – Larry Cohen’s trailer commentary
Strange...
- 12/21/2021
- by Kris Millsap
- Trailers from Hell
As the annual Sundance Film Festival begins again this week, legendary actor/director Tom Noonan takes us back 27 years to a very different Sundance, where his film What Happened Was… won the Grand Jury Prize. It’s the ultimate “actor’s film,” just two people, Noonan and the incredible Karen Sillas, in one room, real time, on a first date like no other. He talks about the circumstances that led him to Sillas, the extensive rehearsal process they had, the production, and the ups and downs of its ultimately triumphant reception. Plus Noonan tells the story of the first big lesson that […]
The post Back to One, Episode 139: Tom Noonan first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Back to One, Episode 139: Tom Noonan first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 1/27/2021
- by Peter Rinaldi
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
As the annual Sundance Film Festival begins again this week, legendary actor/director Tom Noonan takes us back 27 years to a very different Sundance, where his film What Happened Was… won the Grand Jury Prize. It’s the ultimate “actor’s film,” just two people, Noonan and the incredible Karen Sillas, in one room, real time, on a first date like no other. He talks about the circumstances that led him to Sillas, the extensive rehearsal process they had, the production, and the ups and downs of its ultimately triumphant reception. Plus Noonan tells the story of the first big lesson that […]
The post Back to One, Episode 139: Tom Noonan first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Back to One, Episode 139: Tom Noonan first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 1/27/2021
- by Peter Rinaldi
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
What Happened Was… is a lost classic of many stripes—the single-set movie, the bad-first-date comedy, the ’90s American indie, the multi-hyphenate passion project. Meager in scale and vast in implication, writer-director-star Tom Noonan’s 1994 Sundance winner is coming back at just the right moment: when we’re trapped inside and facing our worst fears.
Once only available in horrid-looking Sd, it’s been given a 4K restoration arriving next week from Oscilloscope. Thus a trailer that captures the film’s distinct sense of dread while showing off this new sheen’s revitalization—as a longtime fan it’s hard to believe the film could ever look this good.
Watch it below and check back next week for our interview with Noonan:
Winner of the Grand Jury Prize and the Screenwriting Award at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival, What Happened Was… is Tom Noonan’s directorial debut; a darkly humorous take on dating dread.
Once only available in horrid-looking Sd, it’s been given a 4K restoration arriving next week from Oscilloscope. Thus a trailer that captures the film’s distinct sense of dread while showing off this new sheen’s revitalization—as a longtime fan it’s hard to believe the film could ever look this good.
Watch it below and check back next week for our interview with Noonan:
Winner of the Grand Jury Prize and the Screenwriting Award at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival, What Happened Was… is Tom Noonan’s directorial debut; a darkly humorous take on dating dread.
- 1/23/2021
- by Leonard Pearce
- The Film Stage
Being a carer is tough. Even those who do it professionally and receive a wage are obliged, in most parts of the world, to scrape by on low incomes with low social status. Often people take it because it's the only work they can get. Kate (Karen Sillas) has led a troubled life, experiencing problems with alcohol and family breakdown, but she does, at least, enjoy her work, and she seems to be good at it. She bonds quickly with new patient Laura (Kristen Renton) who has a mobility impairment caused by the spinal damage referred to in the title and now compounded by a shoulder injury. But she's not good at following rules and when Laura starts flirting with her, boundaries quickly become blurred.
Suzanne Guacci's multi-layered drama is a bit of a mixed bag. There's an unfortunate shortage of chemistry between the leads which means that the film's rushed.
Suzanne Guacci's multi-layered drama is a bit of a mixed bag. There's an unfortunate shortage of chemistry between the leads which means that the film's rushed.
- 8/28/2020
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
"Incomplete... I still have some feeling." Aspire Inc. has released an official trailer for an indie drama titled T11 Incomplete, which has premiered at a few film festivals earlier this year. It's next premiering at the Outfest LA Film Festival this month. A visiting home health aide and recovering alcoholic, strives to rebuild her broken life, only to have it fall apart once again when she falls in love with her young, paraplegic patient then betrays her trust. Made with many cast and crew members with disability, including director Suzanne Guacci, the film "sensitively explores the unlikely romance between a carer and her patient." A surprisingly lovely and unique story. Starring Karen Sillas, Kristen Renton, Zachary Booth, Colin Bates, Katy Sullivan, Gregory M Brown, and Yvonne Jung. Emphasizing the importance of representation in film. Here's the official trailer (+ poster) for Suzanne Guacci's T11 Incomplete, direct from YouTube: Home care...
- 8/26/2020
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Welcome to the latest installment of our summer trip through "The Sopranos" season 1. When I revisited early seasons of "The Wire," as well as the whole run of "Deadwood," I did separate versions of each review for newcomers and veterans, but over time realized that the newcomers weren't commenting much, if at all, and that it therefore made sense to simply do one review. Any significant spoilers for episodes beyond the one being reviewed will be contained in a separate section at the end of the review; so long as you avoid that, and the comments, you should be fine. Thoughts on the eleventh episode, “Nobody Knows Anything," coming up just as soon it's 1954 inside this house... "This is our friend we're talking about here." -Tony After "A Hit Is A Hit" put most of the bigger season 1 stories on pause, "Nobody Knows Anything" presses play on one of the...
- 8/19/2015
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
SXSW 2015 Film Review
complete coverage of the SXSW Film Festival 2015
The Overnight
Director/Screenwriter: Patrick Brice
Two families meet at the park and set up a playdate that has unexpected outcomes for all. Cast: Adam Scott, Jason Schwartzman, Taylor Schilling, Judith Godrèche. (film synopsis from sxsw.com)
Overall
It’s hilarious. The boundaries of bromance, marriage, friendship and even penis comedy are pushed to a very funny limit with this film. It’s great to see Schilling doing great work outside of “Orange is the New Black.”
Final Score: 8/10
Manglehorn
Director: David Gordon Green, Screenwriter: Paul Logan
Reclusive small town locksmith, A.J. Manglehorn, who has never recovered from his losing his true love embarks on a new tenuous relationship with a local woman he meets at the bank. Cast: Al Pacino, Holly Hunter, Harmony Korine, Chris Messina. (U.S. Premiere)
(film synopsis from sxsw.com)
Overall
You probably...
complete coverage of the SXSW Film Festival 2015
The Overnight
Director/Screenwriter: Patrick Brice
Two families meet at the park and set up a playdate that has unexpected outcomes for all. Cast: Adam Scott, Jason Schwartzman, Taylor Schilling, Judith Godrèche. (film synopsis from sxsw.com)
Overall
It’s hilarious. The boundaries of bromance, marriage, friendship and even penis comedy are pushed to a very funny limit with this film. It’s great to see Schilling doing great work outside of “Orange is the New Black.”
Final Score: 8/10
Manglehorn
Director: David Gordon Green, Screenwriter: Paul Logan
Reclusive small town locksmith, A.J. Manglehorn, who has never recovered from his losing his true love embarks on a new tenuous relationship with a local woman he meets at the bank. Cast: Al Pacino, Holly Hunter, Harmony Korine, Chris Messina. (U.S. Premiere)
(film synopsis from sxsw.com)
Overall
You probably...
- 3/19/2015
- by Jeff Bayer
- The Scorecard Review
Recently, CBS released the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" episode 16 of season 15. The episode is entitled, "The Last Ride," and it turns out that we're going to see the team get involved with a murder case that features fancy rides and a chrome-covered victim, and more. In the new, 16th episode press release: The CSI team will investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a Chrome-Covered victim. Press release number 2: The CSI team is going to investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a chrome-covered victim. Guest stars features: Alimi Ballard (Detective Kevin Crawford), James Aldridge (Coroner Asst. Jimmy), Blair Bomar (Ava Montrose), Wil Traval (Carlo Derosa), Travis Schuldt (Aron Derosa), Matthew Glave (Ken Bixler), Karen Sillas (Ruth Montrose), Tracy Fraim (Duncan Reidel), Vito D'Ambrosio (Alfonz Derosa) and Benjamin Plessala (Young Aron Derosa). The episode was written by Gavin Harris,...
- 1/25/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
The Toronto International Film Festival today announced an early selection of galas and premieres for this September’s instalment. Among the most exciting world premieres is that of Hal Hartley’s Ned Rifle. Hartley’s feature career first kicked off with The Unbelievable Truth debuting at Tiff in 1989, and such great films as Trust, Simple Men and Amateur followed from there.
Funded through Kickstarter, Ned Rifle is the final part of a trilogy inadvertently started with Henry Fool in 1997 and then continued with Fay Grim in 2006. Liam Aiken, who was a child when he appeared in Henry Fool, takes the lead role this time round, with fellow trilogy stars Parker Posey, Thomas Jay Ryan and James Urbaniak all returning. Hartley regulars Martin Donovan, Bill Sage, Karen Sillas and Robert John Burke also appear, while Aubrey Plaza joins the Hartley company in what looks to be a very prominent role.
Ahead...
Funded through Kickstarter, Ned Rifle is the final part of a trilogy inadvertently started with Henry Fool in 1997 and then continued with Fay Grim in 2006. Liam Aiken, who was a child when he appeared in Henry Fool, takes the lead role this time round, with fellow trilogy stars Parker Posey, Thomas Jay Ryan and James Urbaniak all returning. Hartley regulars Martin Donovan, Bill Sage, Karen Sillas and Robert John Burke also appear, while Aubrey Plaza joins the Hartley company in what looks to be a very prominent role.
Ahead...
- 7/22/2014
- by Josh Slater-Williams
- SoundOnSight
Aubrey Plaza has scored the lead female role in Hal Hartley's long-planned dark comedy "Ned Rifle". Filming begins April in New York City ahead of a Fall release.
Plaza will play Susan, the long lost flame of Henry Fool in the third and final chapter of Hartley's trilogy following 1997's "Henry Fool" and 2007's "Fay Grim".
Thomas Jay Ryan, Parker Posey, Liam Aiken and James Urbaniak will reprise their roles from the earlier films. Martin Donovan, Karen Sillas, Robert John Burke and William Sage also star.
Source: Variety...
Plaza will play Susan, the long lost flame of Henry Fool in the third and final chapter of Hartley's trilogy following 1997's "Henry Fool" and 2007's "Fay Grim".
Thomas Jay Ryan, Parker Posey, Liam Aiken and James Urbaniak will reprise their roles from the earlier films. Martin Donovan, Karen Sillas, Robert John Burke and William Sage also star.
Source: Variety...
- 3/14/2014
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
★★★★☆ "There's nothing but trouble and desire" repeats one individual in Simple Men (1992). Occurring at the midpoint of the film, it's an accurate précis of Hal Hartley's fourth feature; like his preceding films, it's about the pursuit of romance against certain obstacles, but there's a sense of innocence lost in Simple Men, an air of resignation and melancholy hanging in the air. The pace is tighter than his earlier work, but the dialogue feels pricklier, jagged to the point of cynicism. It was a transitional film for Hartley, ushering in the aesthetic maturity and world-weary scepticism he would later perfect in Amateur (1994).
After being double-crossed by his girlfriend during a heist, Bill (Robert Burke) is determined to seduce then dump the next woman he sees. Meanwhile, his brother Dennis (Bill Sage) is on a mission to find their lost father, a revolutionary who has been in hiding for twenty years.
After being double-crossed by his girlfriend during a heist, Bill (Robert Burke) is determined to seduce then dump the next woman he sees. Meanwhile, his brother Dennis (Bill Sage) is on a mission to find their lost father, a revolutionary who has been in hiding for twenty years.
- 6/12/2013
- by CineVue UK
- CineVue
"[T]he shadow of Alfred Hitchcock would loom heavily over the works of the young critics who took up cameras and formed the French New Wave," writes Fernando F Croce in Slant. "Whether direct or circuitous, traces of Hitch can be felt in Godard's insistence on filmic technique visibly and violently manifesting itself, Chabrol's fascination with human duality and repressed beastliness, Rohmer's Catholic examinations of private moralities, and even Rivette's view of a world precariously suspended over various trap doors. Curiously, the upstart who related most ardently to the older auteur was also the one with the least in common stylistically and spiritually: François Truffaut, whose freewheeling camera and affection for hypersensitive characters put him at the opposite side of the spectrum from the implacable visual exactitude and jaundiced worldview which characterized the Master of Suspense…. Think of Truffaut's The Bride Wore Black [1968] as the lumpiest fruit borne out of that union,...
- 11/4/2011
- MUBI
For a long time, the remake that wouldn't die in NBC development was "The Rockford Files," but for the moment that really seems dead. Instead, the classic that NBC currently insists on trying to remake is "Prime Suspect," the memorable '90s British cop drama starring Helen Mirren as steely, cynical investigator Jane Tennison. Attempts have been made in the past to transplant it to the Us, but the closest we ever got was CBS' short-lived "Under Suspicion," in which Karen Sillas played a very Tennison-esque cop. But after starting and stopping development on this latest version, NBC has finally greenlit a...
- 2/4/2011
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
For anyone that's seen Tom Noonan's "What Happened Was," it would be certainly understandable why the actor/writer/director, who so effortlessly played the misanthropic paralegal on a first date with one of his co-workers, would be a little suspicious of an evening celebrating the film in Los Angeles over the long weekend.
"I thought I would make it and it would go away and it kept coming back," said Noonan of the 1994 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner. "And I'm glad."
The screening of "What Happened Was" at Cinefamily was a rare treat regardless, since the dark, low-budget comedy has never been released on DVD. But Noonan flew in from New York to be a part of the repertory theater's "That Guy!" series, which offered a similar tribute to Bruce Dern a day later and will continue on this month with fetes for character actors such as "Blood Simple...
"I thought I would make it and it would go away and it kept coming back," said Noonan of the 1994 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner. "And I'm glad."
The screening of "What Happened Was" at Cinefamily was a rare treat regardless, since the dark, low-budget comedy has never been released on DVD. But Noonan flew in from New York to be a part of the repertory theater's "That Guy!" series, which offered a similar tribute to Bruce Dern a day later and will continue on this month with fetes for character actors such as "Blood Simple...
- 1/18/2011
- by Stephen Saito
- ifc.com
Here’s a list of some of the new DVD and Blu-ray releases this week we’re particularly interested in. Plus, some old favorites (and not so favorites) coming out this week for the first time on Blu-ray.
Movies
Race to Witch Mountain ~ Dwayne Johnson, Carla Gugino, AnnaSophia Robb, and Alexander Ludwig (DVD and Blu-ray)
The Soloist ~ Robert Downey, Jr., Jamie Foxx, Catherine Keener, and Stephen Root (DVD and Blu-ray)
Obsessed ~ Beyoncé Knowles, Idris Elba, Ali Larter, and Jerry O’Connell (DVD and Blu-ray)
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 ~ Tommy Lee Jones, Brian Dowling, Vic Gatto, and Frank Champi (DVD and Blu-ray)
My Cousin Vinny ~ Joe Pesci, Ralph Macchio and Marisa Tomei (Blu-ray)
Mutant Chronicles ~ Thomas Jane, Ron Perlman, and John Malkovich (DVD and Blu-ray)
The Tigger Movie ~ John Hurt, Ken Sansom, Kath Soucie, and John Fiedler (DVD and Blu-ray)
Ulysses ~ Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Franco Interlenghi, and Daniel Ivernel (DVD)
Fragments ~ Marshall Allman,...
Movies
Race to Witch Mountain ~ Dwayne Johnson, Carla Gugino, AnnaSophia Robb, and Alexander Ludwig (DVD and Blu-ray)
The Soloist ~ Robert Downey, Jr., Jamie Foxx, Catherine Keener, and Stephen Root (DVD and Blu-ray)
Obsessed ~ Beyoncé Knowles, Idris Elba, Ali Larter, and Jerry O’Connell (DVD and Blu-ray)
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 ~ Tommy Lee Jones, Brian Dowling, Vic Gatto, and Frank Champi (DVD and Blu-ray)
My Cousin Vinny ~ Joe Pesci, Ralph Macchio and Marisa Tomei (Blu-ray)
Mutant Chronicles ~ Thomas Jane, Ron Perlman, and John Malkovich (DVD and Blu-ray)
The Tigger Movie ~ John Hurt, Ken Sansom, Kath Soucie, and John Fiedler (DVD and Blu-ray)
Ulysses ~ Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Franco Interlenghi, and Daniel Ivernel (DVD)
Fragments ~ Marshall Allman,...
- 8/4/2009
- by Joe Gillis
- The Flickcast
PARK CITY, Utah -- Two lonely co-workers grapple with conversation over dinner in ''What Happened Was, '' an unsettling and penetrating glimpse into everyday, big-city isolation. The Grand Jury Prize winner in the dramatic competition here at the Sundance Film Festival, this stark and moving film will appeal, admittedly, to only a specialized audience. While it should win plaudits as an art-house offering, its most hospitable venue may be as a PBS selection.
Taking place entirely in a single-unit Manhattan apartment, ''What Happened Was'' is a stirringly written depiction of middle-aged loneliness. Jackie (Karen Sillas) has invited her bright, but decidedly distanced co-worker Michael (Tom Noonan) to share Friday night dinner. She's school-girl nervous, gulping wine beforehand. He arrives with a bottle of wine, tentatively suggesting that she save it for a better occasion.
Initial conversational overtures, despite their friendship in the law office, are stilted and awkward. Michael, somewhat pompously, lets her find out about a mysterious expose he is writing of the firm, while she burdens him with her own writing, a jarringly violent children's story.
Despite their eagerness to connect -- hers more than his -- they are intellectual and emotional opposites. Jackie is outgoing, crude and unschooled, while Michael is introverted, epicene and educated. As the candles dim, writer-director Noonan brings out his characters' inner fears and doubts. The date-night facade is brought down and each character unveils intimate and sad insights, seeing truths in themselves they've never before let come to light.
While ''What Happened Was'' certainly would flourish as a stage play, filmmaker Noonan's cinematic shadings -- tight close-ups, angled shots, constricting compositions -- clue us to the character's inner psyches and torments much more forcefully and insightfully than the more limited aesthetics of the stage would offer.
Special praise to cinematographer Joe DeSalvo for the muted blue hues and the searing shafts of white light that personify Michael and Jackie's isolation and anxiety. Sound designer Rick Stevenson's rich smear of urban noises also clues us to the discordant surroundings that further diminish and threaten these two solitary people.
As the two lonely co-workers, Noonan and Sillas convey the deepest pains of big-city isolation. Noonan's awkward, coiled aloofness and Sillas' nervous, unraveled overtures are true indicators of the depths of their solitary pain.
WHAT HAPPENED WAS
A Good Machine Production of a Genre Film
A Film by Tom Noonan
Producers Robin O'Hara, Scott Macaulay
Screenwriter/director Tom Noonan
Executive producers Ted Hope, James Schamus
Director of photography Joe DeSalvo
Production designer Dan Ouelette
Sound designer Rick Stevenson
Color/Stereo
Michael Tom Noonan
Jackie Karen Sillas
Running time -- 90 minutes
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
Taking place entirely in a single-unit Manhattan apartment, ''What Happened Was'' is a stirringly written depiction of middle-aged loneliness. Jackie (Karen Sillas) has invited her bright, but decidedly distanced co-worker Michael (Tom Noonan) to share Friday night dinner. She's school-girl nervous, gulping wine beforehand. He arrives with a bottle of wine, tentatively suggesting that she save it for a better occasion.
Initial conversational overtures, despite their friendship in the law office, are stilted and awkward. Michael, somewhat pompously, lets her find out about a mysterious expose he is writing of the firm, while she burdens him with her own writing, a jarringly violent children's story.
Despite their eagerness to connect -- hers more than his -- they are intellectual and emotional opposites. Jackie is outgoing, crude and unschooled, while Michael is introverted, epicene and educated. As the candles dim, writer-director Noonan brings out his characters' inner fears and doubts. The date-night facade is brought down and each character unveils intimate and sad insights, seeing truths in themselves they've never before let come to light.
While ''What Happened Was'' certainly would flourish as a stage play, filmmaker Noonan's cinematic shadings -- tight close-ups, angled shots, constricting compositions -- clue us to the character's inner psyches and torments much more forcefully and insightfully than the more limited aesthetics of the stage would offer.
Special praise to cinematographer Joe DeSalvo for the muted blue hues and the searing shafts of white light that personify Michael and Jackie's isolation and anxiety. Sound designer Rick Stevenson's rich smear of urban noises also clues us to the discordant surroundings that further diminish and threaten these two solitary people.
As the two lonely co-workers, Noonan and Sillas convey the deepest pains of big-city isolation. Noonan's awkward, coiled aloofness and Sillas' nervous, unraveled overtures are true indicators of the depths of their solitary pain.
WHAT HAPPENED WAS
A Good Machine Production of a Genre Film
A Film by Tom Noonan
Producers Robin O'Hara, Scott Macaulay
Screenwriter/director Tom Noonan
Executive producers Ted Hope, James Schamus
Director of photography Joe DeSalvo
Production designer Dan Ouelette
Sound designer Rick Stevenson
Color/Stereo
Michael Tom Noonan
Jackie Karen Sillas
Running time -- 90 minutes
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
- 1/31/1994
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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