Return to Paradise (1998) Anne Heche was terrific in it. Cool seeing Vince Vaughn and Joaquin Phoenix as well.
i love the world of henry orient. it was so sweet, and the two unknown girls in the lead-merrie spaeth and tippy walker- are adorable scene stealers. fyi - richard attenborough and novelist/screenwriter william goldman initially wanted gene wilder to play the lead in magic but the producers were worried that audiences may not buy him in a horror film.
I mentioned Drugstore Cowboy on this Forum recently. I'm always surprised that To Die For never got more traction either, considering the quality of the performances therein. Definitely one of the best endings of any film released that decade (lol)... https://th.bing.com/th/id/R.d33afcc...cZ19EEweOnNk6h/yn4dhOHI=&risl=&pid=ImgRaw&r=0
I love To Die For. I recently rewatched that and Drugstore Cowboy and I’m surprised they aren’t more lauded. Ileana Douglass skating away on the ice with that smile on her face is a ‘shining sigh of contentment’ moment.
I had heard of Brigadoon but never knew anything about it. Whenever I saw the word I thought of army brigades so I assumed it was a war picture. I just now looked it up and it's not a war picture but it sounds interesting.
Well, if I mention the one I'm thinking of, since it was "MENTIONED", it would no longer qualify as a film that no one mentions... It's late here, let me sleep on it...
Two of Van Zandt's films are in my all-time top twenty. Another is probably in my top forty. His redundant take on Psycho isn't.
Shucks, I have a copy of the 1984 low-budget, made-in-Texas movie BLOODSUCKERS FROM OUTER SPACE . . . but I don't think anyone ever talked about it to begin with so it's un-surprising no one mentions it anymore!