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    Bulworth

    Bulworth
    Actors: Warren Beatty, Halle Berre, Sean Astin, Kirk Baltz, Ernie Lee Banks
    Studio: 20th Century Fox
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $9.98
    Buy Used: $1.28
    You Save: $8.70 (87%)



    New (47) Used (49) from $1.28

    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 163 reviews
    Sales Rank: 27953

    Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd, Letterboxed, Widescreen, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
    Rating: R (Restricted)
    Region: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
    DVD Layers: 2
    DVD Sides: 1
    Picture Format: Letterbox
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 108 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6

    MPN: D4110398D
    ISBN: 6305297142
    UPC: 086162103988
    EAN: 9786305297147
    ASIN: 6305297142

    Theatrical Release Date: May 15, 1998
    Release Date: March 16, 1999
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Believing his career is over senator bulworth takes out an enormous insurance policy-and a contract on his own life. Suddenly the senator is the surprise political favorite and falls hopelessly in love with nina a beautiful young activist. Now he must find the hit man thats out to kill him. Studio: Tcfhe Release Date: 10/10/2006 Starring: Warren Beatty Oliver Platt Run time: 108 minutes Rating: R Director: Warren Beatty

    Amazon.com essential video
    Jay Bulworth is your typical senator going through a nervous breakdown. The empty speeches, lies, money, and pressure have led him to plan his own assassination on a weekend trip home to California just before the election. However, a cord snaps in him and like Jim Carrey's rambling lawyer in Liar, Liar, Bulworth can only tell the truth. This new freedom turns Bulworth on and he spews the ugly truth about politics: he tells mass media they are as corrupt as insurance companies; lambastes a black church for not having leaders; and riles the Jewish power elite of Hollywood. He enters South Central running away from advisors (including a bemused Oliver Platt) and mixing it up with a potential new girlfriend (Halle Berry) and a local boss (Don Cheadle). He offends across the board, even developing an inherent knack to rap his speeches. And the public loves it. The weekend becomes a clarifying point for Bulworth: he finds a reason to live.

    Beatty's rude and relevant comedy is a one-joke movie, but the joke is pretty good. It's a courageous film that is always sharp even though it loses narrative focus. Beatty's hilarious raps are so inspired they deserve repeated viewings. As usual, Beatty surrounds himself with a great crew, Ennio Morricone's music and Vittorio Storaro's cinematography being especially noteworthy. Beatty and Storaro even have the audacity to imitate two very famous photographs in the film's final seconds. The script by Beatty and Jeremy Pikser won the L.A. Film Critics award and was nominated for an Oscar. --Doug Thomas


    Customer Reviews:   Read 158 more reviews...

    3 out of 5 stars Very smart and funny but also very frustrating   February 2, 2009
    Richard Ross
    Weeks away from his imminent re election Jay Billington Bulworth (Warren Beatty) hires an assassin to take him out. He has lost his faith in politics and can't bring himself to appear before his supporters and spout the same old speeches full of lies. Knowing that his time is limited Bulworth feels invincible and starts telling his version of the truth at his last few campaign stops. First up for the Senator is an all black church. He gets up to the pulpit reads the first sentence from his prepared speech and then goes hilariously off the script. What he says is both hilarious and shocking. One of the women in the crowd the beautiful Nina (Halle Berry) can't believe what she's hearing and waits for the Senator as he's leaving. Her and her two friends want to be campaign volunteers. His top advisor (a hilarious Oliver Platt) hesitantly gets their information and by the time Bulworth arrives at his next stop they are already working as valets. His next meeting is with Hollywood insiders and that ends by the Senator chastising them for wanting so much money and making so much crap. He also calls them a bunch of Jews. Bulworth is having the time of his life but his aides are besides themselves. They go into serious crisis control and begin issuing statements about the Senator's poor mental health. Bulworth spots Nina and offers her and her friends a ride. Nina decides to take the Senator to a hip hop club. After they go through the metal detectors Nina takes off leaving Bulworth to wander around on his own. He smokes a joint, gets mistaken for George Hamilton by a bartender, and starts rapping. From this point on Beatty raps all of Bulworth's speeches. After Nina gets back her and Bulworth dance into the early morning hours when he realizes that he has to give a speech at a lunch. When a rumpled Bulworth shows up at the banquet and delivers a tirade about big oil, health insurance, and the media in a rap that he made up on the spot everyone thinks he's lost it. The raps are clever and often funny but the joke gets old quick. Beatty is brave to go all out for this role complete with hop hop clothes knowing that some people will find it an embarrassing move by an old white guy. This is the film's biggest problem. It is an uneven mix of political satire and a man's immersion into black culture that feels awkward and potentially offensive whenever the jokes don't pan out. Beatty throws a very questionable character into the mix as well. He is a homeless black man that magically appears at all of the Senator's campaign stops and mutters some gibberish to Bulworth. He's hilarious don't get me wrong but why is he here? The last act of the film is more of the same. Nina takes Bulworth to South Central where she hides him with her family. In South Central his eyes are opened to kids as young as 13 walking the streets with guns and selling drugs. Bulworth learns that they work for a neighborhood dealer named L.D. (Don Cheadle). When Bulworth confronts him he explains to the Senator that he is doing these kids a public service since no one else would take a chance on them and give them a job. He laments the lack of education in public schools and how they are underfunded and says that that is why so many kids are choosing an easy life of crime. Bulworth takes these words to heart as they appear in his next rap on his final campaign stop an interview on live T.V.. Valid points are being brought up throughout the film although the message is lost in their questionable delivery. The other distracting problem is the identity of the hit man. At several points we see a gloved hand spiking drinks or loosening balcony railings. When the real hit man is identified it doesn't add up. The ending is a major disappointment and an easy way out. Beatty even has the audacity to stage it like a political assassination of the 60's. This film has a lot that works however. Beatty and Berry have a terrific chemistry between them. This is in evidence during their hot dance in the club. Oliver Platt is so entertaining as Bulworth's top adviser who is losing his mind. Fed up and unable to cope he starts snorting coke and lashing out at the press and anyone else who questions the Senator's behavior. According to IMDB West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin and writer/director James Toback (a very close Beatty friend) did a lot of uncredited rewrites to the script which was Oscar nominated. Bulworth is a great movie that just leaves a few too many loose ends and that let's the gimmick go on a little too long.


    4 out of 5 stars Bulworth - worth the price now even more than then   December 13, 2008
    mondayjava (CA United States)
    So, ever heard of someone who gets in trouble for saying the unpopular thing? What would happen if a politician told part of the truth many people did not want to hear? Outrageous satire of what may or may not be true in politics (you decide), but it's more true in 2008 than in the year this film was made!


    1 out of 5 stars gutter language = gutter movie   October 31, 2008
    S. Green (gonzales, LA)
    1 out of 3 found this review helpful


    I rented this when it was new. Liked it very much except for the language. It's about as bad as it gets. I've heard and used it all but the constant use of the 'MF' word ruined it. Liked it so well I would have bought it if the language wasn't so stupid.



    1 out of 5 stars Warren Baetty = prick   October 23, 2008
    J. Paul (hell MI usa)
    0 out of 8 found this review helpful

    Yes back in 2000 I rented this garbage it wasted an hour and half and 18 minutes of my life the only decent film was Dick Tracey anyway a very talentless prick.


    5 out of 5 stars Great Movie   October 3, 2008
    A. Day (SoCal, Biyotch)
    This is a great movie. I remember watching it many years ago and when I wanted to see it again and couldn't find it at blockbuster, I decided to buy it. The one thing that surpised about this movie, when watching it many years later, is how applicable all the policitcal issues are today, from the invasion Iraq to the profit driven health care system. Makes you wonder what progress we've had, if any at all...


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