RRP: £17.99
Our Price: £2.59 (subject to change)
Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review
Geena Davis and her former husband, director Renny Harlin, attempted to pick up the pieces after the debacle of their box-office disaster, Cutthroat Island. What they came up with was The Long Kiss Goodnight, a repulsive ode to American film noir, based on a script by Shane Black (Lethal Weapon) about an amnesiac schoolteacher (Davis) who searches for her true identity and finds she is actually a secret agent immersed in a deadly plot to topple the government. Mechanistic in its violence, obnoxious in its attitude, the film makes Davis, a once-promising actress, nothing more than a special effect. She tosses one to sadists in the audience by allowing her character to be beaten, punched unconscious and tortured. --Tom Keogh
Umbelievably underated movie!?!?!
Review date: 2007-09-29 Rating: 10 out of 10
Brought this off a mate of mine for £1 and watched it a couple of days later.
About 10 minutes into it i realised i had seen it before on tv many years back and promised to myself i would buy it on dvd, but as usuall i forgot what it was called and it went out of my memory. Just by luck i brought it off my mate as he was having a clearout.
All i can say is, his mistake. I have literally hundreds of dvds, movies and series and i can safely say, this dvd wont even be leaving my collect.
3 key factors in this movie dictated why you should buy this:
1- The humour. When Geena Davis unpacks the secretely hidden Sniper Rifle and accidentally almost blows Samuel L. Jackson's characters head off, it almost had me falling off my chair with laughter. Then later when she is questioned as to why she needs SLJ's character help wise and within a split second has the moving car's door open and kicks him out, is utterly hillarious!
2- The action. Wont go into too many details, but there's fighting and explosions so what more can a person want.
3- The acting. Without giving too much away. Geena Davis gives a acting performance in very difficult scripting (hard to explain without giving it away!) which anyone should be proud of. Not to mention a excellent job supporting by SLJ...
All in all, id reccomend this!
What we have in this film are the requistie elements for a great action film: interesting characters, memorable dialogue, and great set pieces for the action. Geena Davis comes on like a next generation Sigourney Weaver, going through a fairly intense gamut of emotions as her new life collides violently with her old one (I think this might have been the film were Davis learned her hand/eye coordination was good enough for her to take up archery on a level just below Olympic caliber). Then there is Samuel L. Jackson: is there another action in America today who curses as well as this guy? Every time he swears it comes across as character development rather than profanity (okay, really kewl profanity, the type our parents would never want to hear coming out of our mouths). Think of this as a buddy film where the buddies have neither gender nor race in common.
The supporting cast features Craig Bierko as Timothy, a terrorist who prides himself on knowing when somebody is lying to him, Brian Cox as Dr. Nathan Waldman, the person who knows the truth about Sam, and David Morse as Luke, another important person from her past. The government as boogey man comes into play yet again in this film, but that old chestnut is not central to the fun and games. Despite Jackson's profanity laced tirades (although Davis holds her own at times), most of the really great lines in this film are not obscene. To make lines like "Chefs do that," "I took lessons," and "Am I lying?" great lines, you have to set them up in term of the characters.
The bottom line is nicely expressed by Henessey's character early in this film. When it comes to judging the quality of "The Long Kiss Goodnight," never make an assumption, because when you do, you make an "ass" out of "u" and "mption." You will not fall asleep during this film.