Twilight (1998)
Facts
| Directed by | Robert Benton |
| Cast | Paul Newman, Susan Sarandon, Gene Hackman, Reese Witherspoon, Stockard Channing, Lewis Arquette, Giancarlo Esposito, James Garner, April Grace, Peter Gregory, Clint Howard, Margo Martindale, Liev Schreiber, John Spencer and M Emmet Walsh |
| Theatrical Release | March 6, 1998 |
| DVD Release | October 7, 1998 |
| Running Time | 96 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 097363349570 |
| Buy this item | $8.49 at Amazon.com As of Nov 12 1:01 EST (details) 1 DVD, Paramount, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 49 new from $4.04, 27 used from $3.75, 5 collectible from $10.00 |
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- Art.com - Search for Twilight posters.
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User Reviews
Average user review:| The Things You Don't Think About |
Excepting a very young Reese Witherspoon, who bounces through an early scene, the main characters are all...old. Paul Newman, Gene Hackman, and James Garner are seasoned actors who know their craft and themselves through decades of experience. They use this knowledge to bring a world-weary, knowing depth to their characters. Not-so-old Susan Sarandon and Stockard Channing also invest their characters with this depth of years, their beauty undiminished by it. These people have lived complex lives and learned something from them. They know who they are.
They know each other, too. You can hear it in how they talk, the abbreviated references to shared events and sadly remembered friends. You can hear it in the silences. There are silences of understanding, when nothing needs saying. And there are silences of considered restraint, when something is thoughtfully left unsaid. ("You haven't apologized to me," complains Gene Hackman. "You haven't been listening," Paul Newman chides in return.)
My favorite exchanges between Paul Newman and James Garner occur while they seem to be resting from previous scenes' exertions. Their words are sometimes blunt, sometimes carefully incomplete, always casual, yet rich with reference and understated implication. These men understand each other with fewer words than younger men use. They haven't the energy or the need to say more.
See this movie with someone you think you know well. It may give you something to talk about. Or carefully not talk about. November 1, 2008
| Film noir for the everyman and woman |
| An All-Star Cast, a Good Story |
Maybe the most significant mark of this film is the very heavy-duty cast . . . Paul Newman (aged like fine wine), Gene Hackman (the BEST), Susan Sarandon (hate her politics but enjoy her work, and again, a gratuitous look at her backside), James Garner (fortunately, no skin shots here), Reese Witherspoon (all of her), Stockard Channing (I don't care for her, personally, but she is a NAME).
A good whodunnit tale. Fading starlets, ex-cop private eyes, slithering opportunists, the always pleasant L.A. vista as seen from Mulholland Drive. Enjoy. Adults only please (nudity, language, shooting/beating violence). July 6, 2008
| Solid performances by top actors |
| Terrific cast. That's all. |
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