Deadfall |  | Director: Christopher Coppola Actors: Michael Biehn, Nicolas Cage, J. Kenneth Campbell, Michael Constantine, Micky Dolenz Studio: Trimark Home Video Category: DVD
Buy New: $39.56 as of 3/21/2010 08:48 EDT details
New (2) Used (7) Collectible (1) from $2.50
Seller: inetvideo Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 107621
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 98 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 031398730323 EAN: 0031398730323 ASIN: B00062IYRS
Theatrical Release Date: 1993 Release Date: August 31, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
this movie is great very underrted July 18, 2009 Lisa M. Norris 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
i think the people who crapped on this movie suck.ofcourse, this isnt the greatest movie, but its highly entertaining. first off, nick cages performance is the best ive ever seen him do. he plays a complete psychopath so well, its a shame his head blew up and he plays all gay same old roles now .just buy this movie ,if for anything nick cages performance.VIVA LA FRANCE BABY review by john norris
Deadfall April 16, 2009 Myra Elaine Jones (Oroville,WA USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I really don't know how to rate this movie as I did not receive it. The seller was no longer in operation and my money was fully refunded.
My Review January 12, 2009 Patricia L. Toler (MD USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The movie wasn't what I expected. Nicholas Cage's performance was less than spectacular and the performance given by James Coburn wasn't up to his usual standard. Michael Biehn's performance, in my personal opinion, was the only one that was up to par. Personally I think Michael Biehn is a highly underappreciated actor who deserves to be recognized for his work as well as his work ethics.
Talented and excellent script, music, acting, thrill, suspense January 14, 2008 Pork Chop (Lisbon, Portugal) 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
DEADFALL (1993), packs a whallop of a punch in terms of
entertainment, from truely talented aspects, with an infinite
number of elements that keeps spectators interested from start to
finish.
First, some may readily underestimate Michael Biehn's acting
performance. This is unfair, considering the special combination he
makes up with Sarah Trigger in this picture, the natural feel to the
acting imparted to viewers, the edge, the excitement, if not the
youth of both showing when filmed. Biehn doesn't overplay his role,
and skillfully stays within the bounds of his purpose in the film,
with much success. As for Trigger, at the time, a very youthful
actress, portrays herself as a shy, timid young woman caught in an
underworld, in which she's turned into a pro, like all other
cohorts, in a variety of make-believe scenarios, targeting marks to
score cash.
Secondly, the audio of this movie is quite reminscent of Bartok's
string quartets, or of Stravinsky's violin opuses, and as such,
enhances skillfully the tense situations, bringing beauty and
elegance to a picture that, from its very subject, at first glace is
somewhat brutal from the ethics of the behavior shown, or lack
thereof.
Third, Nick Cage plays the best role I've ever seen for him, as a
psychotic collector of underworld debts, and participant in the
house of mirrors schemes thought up for getting cash. His demeanor
is perfect for the story's locations chosen, namely, peep show,
strip bar, and the consequences of booze, pills, coke, as rage,
confusion, desperation, dark alley stabbings, throat slashings.
Fourth, Peter Fonda introduces some glamour and American mystique to
the picture, reminding everyone this is a Hollywood A-list
production, albeit a brief appearance.
Fifth, James Coburn skillfully plays a veteran pro in these
underworld activities, and brings credibility and sincerity to the
picture, which was required in a role that shows him as a survivor
in the milieu, not by accident, but by a honed technique.
The first downpoint is the initial pigeon drop that viewers will see
coming from 1 mile away, but ... it doesn't take away from the
story. genre. Biehn's character joins another ring, total strangers
to him, but within hours, like a trained actor in the theatre, is
ready to deliver a world class performance in the underworld and
complete his role and assignment, in setting up the mark, getting
the cash. Some are 24/7 in this milieu.
Another weakness is the lack of wide-screen, which would have
benefitted the movie in the first third of the movie, that slowly
builds suspense.
I should underline the acquired taste of this movie genre, similar
to boxing in terms of brutality yet spectacle. The gratuitous nudity
of Trigger and peep shows may raise eyebrows among some.
Biehn in the end, questions whether he belongs in this world, where
greed, money, house of mirrors, the marks are victims and lack of
ethics is tolerable in the long-term, the absence of remorse among
those taking part, dog eat dog at its most revealing.
In conclusion, the script, music, acting, thrill, suspense are
excellent, taking viewers in this imaginary world for 90 mins
flawlessly.
Coppola's kid flatlines already dead career with horrid crime caper April 5, 2007 Brian T (Canada) 2 out of 10 found this review helpful
You'd think a cast of pro actors (Michael Biehn, Nicholas Cage, Sarah Trigger, Peter Fonda, James Coburn, Mickey Dolenz, Clarence Williams III, Charlie Sheen, Rene Estevez and PHANTASM heavy Angus Scrimm), and a famous daddy to guide him, Christopher Coppola (son of Francis and director of the better-forgotten 1985 opus DRACULA'S WIDOW) would have no trouble pulling off a neat little GRIFTERS-style caper flick. Instead, he pulls only inconsistent performances out of many in the cast (Cage is cosmically unrestrained) and proves himself a questionably talented heir. Just dreadful.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
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