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Take Me Home: The John Denver Story (2000) (TV) Directed by Jerry London





(Review originally written at 3 December 2007)

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

Some movies are just as bad as their covers. This is one of those examples.

Chad Lowe was an horrible pick for the main title role. He looks and acts like a strange mix of Austin Powers and Rick Moranis. A lethal combination! Often I expected him to blur out the lines; 'Oh Behave!' Guess he got his advise from his older brother Rob Lowe who starred in the Austin Power movies. On top of that all, Chad Lowe just isn't a very good actor at all.

So what did I learned about John Denver from watching this movie. That he was an huge nerd and couldn't trim his sideburns. Seriously, it sounds nitpicky but I was constantly distracted by Chad Lowe's incredible badly trimmed sideburns. In all seriousness, I didn't learned to much about the person John Denver. Just how he lived his life, all packed into a 90 minutes short TV movie. You can also wonder what makes John Denver's life so special to dedicate a biopic to. If he had not died in 1997, now way this biopic would had been made! He was just a very ordinary man, living a very ordinary life, who just happened to be a famous singer as well. Most of us went through the very same thing John went trough as well. Nothing in this movie makes Denver distinct himself from just the ordinary man, just his talent for singing and writing but the movie doesn't concentrate enough on those aspects.

The storytelling within this movie is incredibly bad and lacking. For instance, first scene, John and his wife are at the brick of a divorce, next scene; John and his wife go on a vacation to make it up, next scene John and his wife have a child! This is not how you make a movie! Toward the ending this gets even worse. The one scene John meets his second wife, the next scene they are married and have a child and the scene following that they're divorced. This literally all happens in a time span of 2 minutes within the movie. How are we supposed to care for the characters and the movie its drama and emotions if the movie doesn't even give us the room to absorb it and let it all sink in. The movie goes boom, boom, boom, from the next scene to the other, without a proper sense of storytelling or development.

This movie really doesn't do enough justice to the artist John Denver.

3/10

Category 6: Day of Destruction (2004) (TV) Directed by Dick Lowry





(Review originally written at 26 September 2007)

I'll admit that having heard all these negative things about this 2 part movie, that it wasn't all that bad. It certainly wasn't as bad as I had expected but it also really wasn't too much good either.

The movie is filled with many stupid silly plot-lines. They are so all formulaic that none of them offers any surprises. On top of that, the dialog in the movie is absolutely horrible. At times it even manages to become laughable. This is the sort of typical dramatic disaster movie that features many characters in it, of which none really ever work out as an interesting or engaging one.

This movie isn't about natural disasters, this is about people and their personal problems. Now is that anything new or interesting? I mean, I've I wanted to follow a story like this I would watch a soap opera in stead. It's the sort of mistake "Deep Impact" and disaster movies in general often make. The movie at times tries to put in morale in about the environment and global warming and such but all those things come across as forced and look silly because of that in the movie.

It seems to take for ever before the introduction and build-up in the story stops. There is a lot of talking about natural disasters but not enough of it gets actually shown on the screen. The movie is too long on its drama.

The use of news archive material of bad weather conditions and tornadoes is too obvious. It makes the movie seem even more cheap and silly.

There are some good actors in the movie but even they can't make the movie work out fully- or the dialog. Randy Quaid, Dianne Wiest and Brian Dennehy are no small time actors. Guess they also regret being in this, looking back at it.

But the movie does a good job at keeping the pace high, even though when nothing is happening. For a made for TV production this really wasn't all that bad. I mean, I have seen far worse attempts. The movie was overall good looking, despite of the weak and cheap special effects. But I don't really see what's the big deal about it, since the special effects get never featured that prominently in the movie. I therefor also feel that some of the negativity toward this movie is for most part unjustified. Not that it deserves raving criticism but its a decent attempt that does not bore but just becomes too silly and unlikely in parts.

5/10

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