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Local Hero [1983]
 
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Local Hero [1983]
DVD ~ Burt Lancaster
4.9 out of 5 stars 27 customer reviews (27 customer reviews)

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Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Long before The Full Monty there was this lovely fish-out-of-water comedy by deft Scots writer-director Bill Forsyth (Gregory's Girl). Set in the 1980s during a period of controversy over North Sea oil drilling, Local Hero follows a likeable, woolly American junior executive (Peter Riegert) dispatched from Texas by his blustering boss (a high-spirited Burt Lancaster) to a small fishing village on the coast of Scotland for the purpose of swindling the presumably simple-minded locals out of their drilling rights. The surprise isn't that the villagers turn the tables on the American schemers, but that they do so without displaying a hint of malice. They get a kick out of flummoxing the city slickers. Even Lancaster's greed-head Felix Happer eventually has a change of heart. In outline, this may sound more ordinary than it feels as you're watching it. The fine young British actor Denis Lawson, who had a tiny role as one of the fighter pilots in Star Wars plays Riegert's UK contact, Gordon Urquhart, a sad sack with a noble soul. --David Chute

Special Features
16:9 Wide Screen
DVD 5
English
English
Region 2
Dolby Digital English
Dolby Digital
Interactive Menus
Stills Gallery


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Customer Reviews
27 Reviews
5 star: 88%  (24)
4 star: 7%  (2)
3 star: 3%  (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
38 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Home may not be where the heart is, 4 Jan 2003
By Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Before the relative spate of British comedic films recently appearing on American screens - THE FULL MONTY, WAKING NED DEVINE, and SAVING GRACE - there was the 1983 release LOCAL HERO, a gentle fable of big city, corporate avarice meeting its match when pitted against rural backwater shrewdness.

Peter Riegert is cast as MacIntyre, a young Houston exec of Knox Oil, packed off by CEO Felix Happer, colorfully played by Burt Lancaster, to Furness, a remote Scottish coastal village. His mission - to buy the town and adjacent beach, thus acquiring the land upon which Knox Oil plans to build a sprawling facility to receive North Sea crude. On site, MacIntyre finds himself dealing with a canny townsman named Urquhart, delightfully portrayed by Denis Lawson. (Urquhart, with his wholesomely sexy wife, owns the town's only hotel and only pub, and is apparently the local gentleman of influence when arranging matters of such great import.) Unforeseen complications in the negotiations arise, necessitating Happer's clattering arrival by helicopter late in the game. As it turns out, title to the village is of no use without the beach, and the latter is owned by a crusty, old beachcomber named, as luck and bloodlines would have it, Knox.

LOCAL HERO exhibits that quirkiness of characters and circumstance that has made British comedies so appealing. Eccentricities abound. Take, for example, the sleepy hamlet's only street, which is always deserted except whenever MacIntyre needs to cross it, at which time he is almost run down by a yokel whizzing by on a motor scooter. Or, the Soviet fishing boat captain that makes periodic, illegal landfall at Furness to check on his very non-communist financial investments made through Urquhart. And, the baby that seems to belong to nobody, but is unconcernedly cared for by the town at large. Furness seems just ever so slightly askew - but only if you're an outsider.

The fictional community of Furness is actually Pennan, north of Aberdeen on Moray Firth, and the Furness beach is actually Camusdarach Beach 150 miles distant on the western coast. Notwithstanding the filmmaker's magic in rearranging geography, anyone who has visited the breathtakingly beautiful shores of northern Scotland will understand the changes that occur in MacIntyre as he becomes exposed to the serene grandeur of his environment. What is the allure of Houston, or any other soulless place, when one could walk barefoot on Scottish sands under magnificent sunsets and collect seashells? The ending, which is supremely satisfying, should give anyone involved in a day-to-day rat race second thought about what gives life meaning.

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars one of the best, 5 Feb 2006
A film made with huge affection Bill Forsyths Local Hero is an almost uncanny sumliminal tribute to another scottish classic Whiskey Galore.The utopian scots scene versus the misguided outside world.Almost plotless it relies on character and charicature to carry it along.The funniest parts are almost unnoticeble first time around such is the subtlety of wry observation.in one scene a drunk fails to coordinate leaning down to clap a passing dog ...all filmed at the back of another shot in the foreground.
There are quite a few in jokes to spot as well..The ceilidh section has some of the best silent comedy ever and captures the dry quintessence of scottish humour.
The ending is I believe meant to be wistful rather than sad....as the character looks out and listens to depersonalised urban America the music juxtaposes it with the unspoiled idyll of Furness.Its a cracker of a film
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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Warm, Funny, Beautiful!, 21 May 2006
I will be the fist to admit that not every one is going to "get" this film - nor does it leave you rolling in the aisles. But for me personnally, this is an absolute gem of a movie! The music is wonderful - including Mark Knopler and Gerry Rafferty, the scenery truly beautiful and the cast superb - even if the talents of John Gordon Sinclair are slightly wasted. I have watched this movie numerous times and never tire of this. This is one of my favourite movies! If you enjoy subtle warm comedies - you will love this movie! Make sure when you buy this you also buy a good single malt to go with it - a perfect companion!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars My favourite film
Still my favourite film almost twenty-five years after its release. Nice to see so many other people also rate it so highly. Makes you wish you were there on Scotland's west coast.
Published 4 months ago by dino

5.0 out of 5 stars A British Classic
This is the type of film that you keep on coming back to periodically, like It's A Wonderful Life or Breakfast At Tiffany's. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Mr. A. S. T. Bateman

5.0 out of 5 stars Essential movie
Agree with all the reviews. This is a beautiful, heartwarming movie.

Germany have just re-released it on their Focus Edition series, so there's no need to pay up to... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Stephen Hardaker

5.0 out of 5 stars An underrated 1980's feel good movie
I can just about remember watching this with my dad as a child in the 1980's and being absolutely bored to the point of insanity, watched this sometime in 2006 on film four and... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Lando Malak

5.0 out of 5 stars Superbly gentle comedy
I love this film! Its sumptuous, gorgeous, beautiful, gentle, funny, amusing, sad, poignant... so many words to describe this quirky film set mostly in a Scottish coastal village... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Mr. Andrew Moore

5.0 out of 5 stars Simple pleasure which has mature very well
On first watching this film, you finish with the thought "oh well that was harmless".

However, it has depth if you watch it again you start to get caught by the... Read more
Published 13 months ago by N. D. Jervis

5.0 out of 5 stars Slow paced comedy that might not be for everyone.
Anyone with