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Biloxi Blues [VHS]
 
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Biloxi Blues [VHS]

Matthew Broderick , Christopher Walken , Mike Nichols    Suitable for 15 years and over   VHS Tape
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
Price: £10.13
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Product details

  • Actors: Matthew Broderick, Christopher Walken, Matt Mulhern, Corey Parker, Markus Flanagan
  • Directors: Mike Nichols
  • Writers: Neil Simon
  • Producers: Joseph M. Caracciolo, Marykay Powell, Ray Stark
  • Language English
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: 4 Front
  • VHS Release Date: 22 May 2000
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004SX41
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 53,140 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Spike Owen TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
Biloxi Blues is directed by Mike Nichols and written by Neil Simon. It is based on Simon's semi-autobiographical 1985 play of the same name. It stars Matthew Broderick, Christopher Walken, Penelope Ann Miller, Corey Parker and Matt Mulhern. Music is by Georges Delerue and Bill Butler is the cinematographer.

The second part of Neil Simon's Eugene Morris Jerome trilogy, the plot centres around Eugene's (Broderick) draft into the United States Army during the last year of World War II. Sent to training camp at Biloxi, Mississippi, Eugene is thrust in amongst people from all walks of life. Here he will not only learn about life, but also have it changed for him.

Straight from the off I have to say that this has become one of my favourite films of all time. From the moment I first caught it back on release, where I only went to see it because it was written by the guy who wrote The Odd Couple, I have been humoured and charmed every year since without fail. On synopsis it seems to be yet another run of the mill coming of age picture, or just another tales from the boot camp time filler, but with Simon holding the pen and Nichols painting the narrative with careful nostalgic splendour, Biloxi Blues is much better than it's often given credit for. A film that is that rare old beast that strikes the right balance between laughter and sentiment.

"It was hard to believe these guys had mothers and fathers who were worried about them"

Although this is primarily Eugene's story, film is propelled by the bubbling concoction of a group dynamic. At training camp Eugene and the other lads have to face up to a number of challenges, not just growing up into men, but learning about bigots, bullies, homosexuals and intellectuals, all while under the borderline crazy command of Sergeant Merwin J. Toomey (Walken). They may all be different, from different backgrounds, but one thing binds them together, none of them want to be there! In other hands this group would have consisted of annoying stereotypes, but Simon and Nichols, courtesy of the writing and the garnering of acting performances, ensure this isn't the case. The audience isn't short changed with these characterisations because they are stripped down to being survivors by way of humour and naive honour. Thus it never feels false.

"I wasn't in on that Pearl Harbour thing"

One of America's most celebrated film critics said Biloxi Blues contains limp dialogue! That's something which I certainly can't begin to comprehend. For the film is an advertisement for witty retorts, where often responses are used as a survivalist tool, to de-heat a flare up or to hide nervousness. In this respect Biloxi Blues pays big on revisits, each time another little one-line gem registers where previously it had been missed, maybe because we are too focused on the airy sound track first time around? Or most likely because we are too lost in a "Eugene" or "Toomey" facial moment. One of the best passages in the story concerns a one wish game the lads play, the writing is sharp, yet tender, funny, yet telling, it really is a case of laugh whilst being drawn into the frightening reality that these boys are a long way from home, and possibly soon to be fighting for their lives in some muddy trench.

The cast are uniformly strong. Walken delivers one of his quintessential mania turns, marking Toomey out as being one click away from either sane or insane. Broderick holds court and narrates with earnest style, while Corey Parker s a revelation as intellectual Arnold Epstein, a guy who no matter how much he is persecuted by Toomey and the other rookies, refuses to be shaken and lose his principles. Miller and Park Overall get the two female roles of note, both memorable in short appearances, with the latter deliciously dry as a hooker with a heart. In the support there's macho mirth from Mulhern (stomach of a goat) and Markus Flanagan (he calls his mother Louise), homespun mystery from an excellent Michael Dolan, and wistful tunings from Casey Siemaszko as Don Carney (can anyone count on him?).

The ending doesn't quite have the dramatic impact that many would expect, and there is indeed some mellow periods of tinted nostalgia that will have some viewers urging the pace to go faster. But these are mere fly specks on a mound of horse droppings. Biloxi Blues, a wonderfully rich comedy drama, and to my mind the best thing Simon has written. 10/10
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:DVD
I saw this film many years ago, and it remains my favourite. I can't remember how many times I have seen it, but it still makes me laugh out loud and I still get goosepimples at all the right moments. I love its sense of history - it captures the spirit of its age, yet it also manages to combine comedy with characterisation. The characters are real, and I can certainly identify with them all - even the most unlikeable among them. Christopher Walken and Matthew Broderick share the honours, with a strong supporting cast. I love this film so much. It feels like a hidden gem, but I want everyone else to experience it too. Hopefully it will have the same effect on you as it had on me all those years ago
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Format:DVD
(the film): In this semi-autobiographical screenplay,
Neil Simon's private memoirs in the US Army are made public.
Set in 1943 at an army base in Biloxi, Mississippi,
a lowly recruit (Broderick) comes under the command of a very weird drill sergeant (Walken)...
what can I say?
Biloxi Blues is a movie that embraces many of the "rites of passage"
that we all face in life and deals with them using comedy as a foil to gently explore them,
without diminishing their poignancy.
Neil Simon is peerless in this.
The casting is faultless.
The acting is immaculate.
The humour is intelligent.
The story is perfect,
The cast is perfect
The acting is perfect.
Matthew Broderick portraying Eugene is perfect
Christopher Walken as Sgt is perfect
only one thing left to say?
Biloxi Blues is perfect
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