The Caveman's Valentine |  | Director: Kasi Lemmons Actors: Samuel L. Jackson, Colm Feore, Ann Magnuson, Damir Andrei, Aunjanue Ellis Studio: Universal Studios Category: DVD
List Price: $9.99 Buy Used: $1.85 as of 2/9/2010 22:44 EST details You Save: $8.14 (81%)
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Seller: abundatrade Rating: 43 reviews Sales Rank: 65449
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), French (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 106 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: MCAD21376D ISBN: 0783259484 UPC: 025192137624 EAN: 9780783259482 ASIN: B00005JCA8
Theatrical Release Date: 2001 Release Date: July 17, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Samuel L. Jackson gives a virtuoso performance in this intensely visual suspense film. Jackson stars as Romulus Ledbetter, a brilliant musician whose mental demons have driven him onto the streets. When Ledbetter finds a murdered man outside the cave he calls home one morning, he is compelled to find the real killer. While interesting enough to hold the viewer's attention, the mystery of The Caveman's Valentine is a distant third to Jackson's performance and the film's sumptuous visuals. The film is gorgeously shot, and lights and abstract images are effectively used to show Romulus's beautiful but tormented inner world. While the plot does take a silly leap of logic or two, Romulus's illness and the strain it puts on his family are sensitively and realistically handled. His all-too-real run-ins with his policewoman daughter are nicely contrasted with his visions of his ex-wife, who serves as a combination of Greek chorus and muse. If one is willing to suspend a little disbelief here and there, this picture is well worth a look. --Ali Davis
Product Description Detached from the world misunderstood juilliard-trained genius romulus ledbetter finds a frozen corpse outside his manhattan cave. Determined to solve this heinous homicide he risks the remaining shreds of his sanity for the sake of justice. Can a man who no one believes prove a crime? Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 08/24/2004 Starring: Samuel L. Jackson Run time: 106 minutes Rating: R Director: Kasi Lemmons
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 43
Sammy at his best February 5, 2010 D. Cantland (Philadelphia, PA) Not the typical role for Samuel L Jackson. Really enjoyed the departure from his more expected roles. Good film. VERY surprised more haven't heard of it.
Heartburned April 23, 2009 Amanda Richards (Georgetown, Guyana) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Romulus Ledbetter: "Swarms of moth-seraphs howl in my skull. Lies vex them."
Short Attention Span Summary (SASS):
1. Paranoid schizophrenic Romulus Ledbetter (Samuel L. Jackson) lives in a cave in New York's Inwood Park.
2. He believes that the root of all evil dwells at the top of the Chrysler Building, emitting rays that control the world.
3. He has a host of moth-like angels swarming in his head.
4. The dead body frozen in a tree outside his cave is no hallucination
5. Gripping but highly improbable plot follows, as Ledbetter searches for answers.
This is one of Jackson's finest performances, in an over-looked murder/fantasy movie that lacks a great plot, but makes up for it with great acting and vivid imagery.
If you can ignore the impossible and unlikely bits, this is a good rental for fans of the unusual.
Amanda Richards, April 23, 2009
Caveman's Valentine April 19, 2009 Carol 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Previously, I viewed this movie on cable and thought it was brilliant. There was nothing else to do but to order a copy for my video library.
My favorite movie of all time that nobody has ever heard of. November 23, 2008 Jason Moore (Phoenix, AZ) I originally saw this movie on the Independent film channel. It is a masterpiece that no one I know has ever even heard of. It doesn't have many special effects or big explosions. but the story is amazing and the plot line will blow your mind. buy this movie. its well worth the price. especially if u buy it used. it's like $6.
The Enhanced Vision of so-called "Crazy" People May 1, 2008 F. Grinage 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
"The Caveman's Valentine" like other movies of this genre ("The Fisher King" and "Powder") speaks to humanity's collective unconscious more powerfully than any of us can ever know, or even admit to if we did know. We are all so focused on this one lifetime, this one living space we call the world, our reality. But I believe there are those who remember other lifetimes lived in other dimensions and worlds in the universe; places, even earths, far older than this one. All too often, those memories, necessarily, return, shocking and so overwhelming the systems of those who do remember, that their exhumed, authentic sanity is catapulted into overdrive and the result is a brilliantly strange, supremely talented individual who can no longer co-exist with the delusional condition we call "civilization" because its very nature and the bylaws of that nature are a collective, unequivocal denial of what the Caveman (or Cavewoman) lives with everyday. This is because, by comparison, the tenets of the "regulated" insanity of our so-called "civilization" won't allow him to believe what he feels, dreams, or sees in myriad visions.
Society's cavemen and cavewomen are enormously frightening because they tap into our own "blocked" memories, and to try to believe them, even a little bit, is too much. So, we immediately label them "insane" because we hope that to do so will keep us from ever having to face what I think is a reality common to all of us, a place of secrets, and perhaps a shame that is older than time. For, why else would we, since the beginning of known time, torture ourselves with so much betrayal, violence, and suffering?
So, the Caveman's "insanity" grows not from some chemical secretion or refusal to deal with reality, but from the overwhelming power of the denial of an extraordinary, but true reality, which, to our shuttered minds is the stuff of lore and forbidden fantasy; a real-life fantasy which is impossible to prove to a world where the history of our souls and their creation has become the warp and woof of religion and legend, finding no real outlet except in the babblings of the "insane" or the "possessed." You may ask: What is the entire unabridged story? Well, for now, we've hidden that in the depths of our unconscious, where it lies "forgotten," until someone like the Caveman pokes a teasing finger and scares us into almost remembering. The story shall, I fear, remain "forgotten," until we can somehow resolve the often horrible contradictions of our pasts, and forgive ourselves both collectively and individually. Then perhaps, insanity will simply cease to exist. We will go home to the Caveman, the prodigals, whose acceptance of him, and his of us, finally brings the wholeness we have sought, and have shedded more than blood to find.
"The Caveman's Valentine" is not for everybody. But for those of us who believe in far more than we can actually see, this movie is a validation of that part of us, of those shadowy dreams and nightmares we wake from, frightened, not of their strangeness, but of their familiarity; not of their impossibility, but of their undeniable validity.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 43
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