billsav57
Iscritto in data ott 2003
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Valutazione di billsav57
The poor writers of this show ... they must have had to come in to work every Monday and seen this on the storyboard: "Who are we going to have kidnapped, Shanghaied, falsely imprisoned, abducted, lost in a blizzard, surrounded by hostiles in a stagecoach with 3 good wheels, trapped in a cave-in with a crazed miner, etc. ... this week? And which brother is going to come and rescue them?"
I loved the automats; I even was at the last one on 42nd Street right before it closed. As such, I had great hopes for this film, but while I thought it had a lot of great moments, especially the recollections of Brooks and Reiner, and it was structured pretty well, and the commercial with George Coe was a great find. But I also thought it began to wander toward the end. (I also wasn't too convinced by the attempt to.paint Starbucks as a protégé.) I realize it was probably hard for the filmmaker to attain redemption because, to be honest, as Mel Brooks said, the lady with the nickels isn't coming back.
I have seen this episode a few times, but until last night, never realized that it featured two actors from "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." Henry Jones (the bike salesman) plays the police chaplain, and Jeff Corey (the sheriff the boys tie up with his approval) plays the prisoner. All they needed was Strother Martin!