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Dead Presidents [DVD] [1996]

Dead Presidents [DVD] [1996]Directors: Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes
Actors: Larenz Tate, Keith David, Chris Tucker, Freddy Rodríguez, Rose Jackson
Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm
Category: DVD

List Price: £14.99
Buy New: £2.80
as of 23/11/2009 14:26 GMT details
You Save: £12.19 (81%)



New (14) Used (8) Collectible (2) from £2.34

Seller: gzoop
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 26248

Format: Dubbed, PAL, Widescreen
Languages: English (Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired), Dutch (Subtitled), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Dubbed), Italian (Dubbed)
Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
Region: 2
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 114 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 7321901345629
ASIN: B00004CYQF

Theatrical Release Date: October 4, 1995
Release Date: June 15, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Twin brother codirectors Albert and Alan Hughes planned their first film, the 1991 ghetto crime drama IMenace II Society/I as a response to John Singleton's IBoyz N the Hood/I, which they considered wimpy and moralistic. They set their sights on IThe Deer Hunter/I in this ambitious follow-up, and they just about pull it off. Larenz Tate (from IWhy Do Fools Fall in Love/I) plays Anthony Curtis, an open-hearted African American teenager who gets shipped out to Vietnam with several of his pals, witnesses unspeakable horrors and then struggles to readjust to civilian life. The evolving textures of life in a declining inner-city neighbourhood over a period of a decade are seamlessly evoked and there's enough nuanced character development and personal interaction for a seven-hour miniseries. Still in their early 20s, the Hughes brothers are already poised and masterful movie makers; they cover an enormous amount of historical and emotional ground and every twist and turn is crystal clear. They betray their inexperience only at the very end, in an elaborately staged heist sequence that, while stunningly executed, feels a bit desperate, as if they were reaching blindly for a big pay off. Chris Tucker (IRush Hour/I) has a startling supporting role as a kid who becomes a junkie during the war and never quite recovers. I--David Chute/I


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars ONE HELL OF A GOOD MOVIE   March 28, 2000
4 out of 17 found this review helpful

IF YOU WANT ACTION,ROMANCE,COMEDY LOOK NO FURTHER THAN DEAD PRESIDENTS.THE FILM WHICH IS JUST AS GOOD AS MENACE 2 SOCIETY.BUT A LIITLE UNDER RATED IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A PERFECT FILM THIS IS A PERFECT FILM


5 out of 5 stars Brilliant and a very moving film   March 17, 2009
Ms. P. M. Martin (London, UK)
Having seen this film before, I felt compelled to watch it again this time with my son. As I wanted him to watch and learn that going off to war and the after effects is both destructive and hypocritical. And how it also destroys both a family and a community. br / br /Many thanks


4 out of 5 stars stunning action and a strong story   December 10, 2001
nick4real@aol.com (Bath, UK)
12 out of 15 found this review helpful

This violent and powerful film is definitely not for the Merchant/Ivory brigade. Anyone averse to gore and profanity will be reaching for the remote pretty sharpish, which is a shame because they'll miss a stylish and very well directed movie. The Hughes Brothers only have one other film to their name but they have talent to burn. The heist sequence is one of the most visually stunning and best sustained action scenes I've ever watched. They're pretty good with the actors too, drawing strong performances from Larenz Tate, Keith David and a pre-fame Chris Tucker. The film does have its problems though, mostly stemming from character motivation. It's a little hard to believe that some of these people who you grow to brlike during the movie become capable of such violence, but the Hughes's and writer Michael Henry Brown at least try to illustrate their reasons. However, these are minor quibbles in an otherwise highly impressive and entertaining piece


3 out of 5 stars 3.5--"People out of work everywhere and the government just be throwing money away!"...,   July 3, 2007
Jenny J.J.I. (That Lives in Northern Nevada)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The Hughes brothers certainly had the right idea in mind making this a cool heist, and I give them credit for trying, but they bite off more than they can chew. Dead Presidents is a really good film. Most people think this movie is all about robbing a bank but it really isn't even though it comes at the end. br / br /The most obvious problem is the film tries to be too many things at once. It starts as a ghetto drama-then it's a war movie-then it ends as a crime thriller! (More than a bit reminiscent of Kubrick's "The Killing.") This could have worked with the proper care, but DP suffers from trying to cram too much story in just under two hours. An extra twenty minutes would properly flesh out the plot. The film opens in the late sixties as we meet Anthony (Larenz Tate), Anthony's girl Juanita (Rose Jackson), his friend Skip (Chris Tucker-as bug-eyed as ever) and boss Kirby (Keith David). We follow Anthony through his first experiences with sex, violence, and family resistance. Anthony wants to join the Marines and through a rather clever edit, we are plunged into the Vietnam War head first. The Hughes Bros. handle this material well, although it gets a bit busy with all the Vietnam-isms: drug use, severed heads, mercy killings, Agent Orange, air strikes, etc. The audience discovers that before the war Anthony got Juanita pregnant, and that he has a baby girl "back in the world." It is a lot of material to cover in the brief period of time, and we only get a brief glimpse of what is was like to be a black soldier in country. br / br /We jump back to the "world", where we witness the domestic turmoil the war has brought upon Anthony and Juanita. Another pitfall is the Juanita character, who is so abrasive that we feel no sympathy towards her. The scene where Anthony assaults her is problematic; I mean what did she expect waging the verbal attack that she does on an alcoholic Vietnam Vet? The confrontation with Cutty (Clifton Powell), Juantia's sugar daddy, is contrived and goes on far too long. Broke and alone, Anthony, in his moral confusion, turns to the film's equivalent of the Black Panther Party for support... br / br /This is where `Dead Presidents' abandons the drama for the above mentioned heist aspects. Ignoring the pragmatic problems with the robbery (i.e. face paint instead of masks), it is a rather poor way to resolve a film where so much time has been expended creating complex characters. One does not get the sense that Anthony is desperate enough to do something that goes so much against his character. The other members of the heist have not been properly set up to take part in it either. It seems tacked on, almost an afterthought to the plot proper. Anyway the heist does not go as planned; everything leading to the final shot of `Dead Presidents' seems anticlimactic, leaving many questions unanswered. br / br /One of the major flaws of the film is the lead performance by Larenz Tate; he is a good actor, but does not seem dynamic enough to bring Anthony through a narrative arc that gets lost in the clouds. The editing leaves scenes unfinished and cold. The story: If the Hughes Bros. had focused on one or two aspects of the plot, we would have been presented with a more thoughtful and detailed story. I'll give them credit for being ambitious though, but experienced film makers also know what to cut from a film when everything seems like a good idea. But that is a skill that comes with time. br /

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