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The Mosquito Coast
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Directed by Peter Weir.
Harrison Ford delivers one of his most-acclaimed performances in Peter Weir's adaptation of Paul Theroux's novel (scripted by Paul Schrader). Ford plays Allie Fox, an inventor embittered by the blighted landscape of the contemporary United States. As he tells his oldest son, Charlie (River Phoenix), "Look around you. It's a toilet." He moves his wife (Helen Mirren) and kids -- Charlie, Jerry (Jadrien Steele), April (Hilary Gordon), and Clover (Rebecca Gordon) -- to the rain forests of Central America, where he plans to create a new civilization starting with his own nuclear family. Allie's family compliantly goes along with his scheme to build a free society, but slowly notices that his obsession has turned him into a tyrannical fascist. Rather than create a utopia, Allie's driving egomania demands total subservience from his downtrodden brood. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
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paulpaul FilmCouch #38
by paul in paul on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Movies are a great way to explore the risk we never took. INTO THE WILD opens tonight, Sean Penn shares the story of first reading the book from an interview in Telluride. We also look at THE MOSQUITO COAST (1986, Peter Weir), starring Harrison Ford, and what these films tell us about breaking from civilization and doing the unthinkable. Karina interviews the makers of HEAVY METAL IN BAGHDAD and it becomes clear why she wrote “I don???t care how tired of Iraq documentaries you think you are???you need to see Heavy Metal in Baghdad.” FilmCouch #38 Subscribe in the iTunes store and a new free episode will download every Friday. Into the Wild, The Mosquito Coast, Heavy Metal in Baghdad Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Paul " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #38
by paul in FilmCouch
hasn't rated it.
"Movies are a great way to explore the risk we never took. INTO THE WILD opens tonight, Sean Penn shares the story of first reading the book from an interview in Telluride. We also look at THE MOSQUITO COAST (1986, Peter Weir), starring Harrison Ford, and what these films tell us about breaking from civilization and doing the unthinkable. Karina interviews the makers of HEAVY METAL IN BAGHDAD and it becomes clear why she wrote "I don’t care how tired of Iraq documentaries you think you are–you need to see Heavy Metal in Baghdad." FilmCouch #38 Subscribe in the iTunes store and a new free episode will download every Friday. " [More]
JimBellJimBell The Mosquito Coast
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"The Mosquito Coast (1986) is based on the Paul Theroux novel of a brilliant American inventor (Harrison Ford) who abandons his ailing country and attempts to live the lifestyle he wants in the jungles of Belize. Although the movie is two decades old, it is not dated in form or content. Things do not go smoothly. “I wanted everything to be right angles,” says the main character, “but life is not like that. Cut your finger on the lid of a tuna can and die.” Good movie. Jim Bell " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
An easy film to admire artistically but a difficult one to like, this intense character drama is one of the most challenging to audience expectations to ever emerge from star Harrison Ford or director Peter Weir. It should come as no surprise that it sprung from the pen of Paul Schrader, an artist adept at fashioning cinematic portraits of societal misfits. Ford is searing and powerfully memorable as Allie Fox, one of his best roles, an iconoclastic perfectionist who may very well be mentally ill, but who insists, in the style of many a creative genius before him, on doing everything in life on his own eccentric, tunnel-vision terms. Ford gets able support from Helen Mirren as his much-beleaguered wife and especially young River Phoenix as his son, whose sexual coming of age and one-time worship of his brilliant dad is thwarted by the realization that Allie's autocratic, self-centered vision of a utopian existence is not only foolhardy, but dangerous. There isn't much onscreen with which an audience might identify, so The Mosquito Coast faced an uphill and losing struggle at the box office, but its superior performances and potent political symbolism make it a worthy companion to other such "bungle in the jungle" films as Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) and Apocalypse Now (1979). ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
 

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