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His 'Moving Target' promised to be a dreary two-hour exercise in flattering a budding star's ego." However, Ruth acknowledged that his preconceived notions about the movie were wrong, and that it was "a nice, little movie, full of action, crisp dialogue and a host of terrific performances cast against type, which combine to provide a taut ...
Moving Target (1988 Italian film), an Italian thriller film starring Ernest Borgnine; Moving Target, an American film starring Michael Dudikoff and Billy Dee Williams; Moving Target, an American-Irish action film; Moving Target, a British thriller; The Moving Target, the UK title for the 1966 American film Harper
Moving is a 1988 American comedy film starring Richard Pryor as Arlo Pear, a father moving his family cross-country.. Other notable appearances in the film include Randy Quaid as an annoying neighbor, Dana Carvey as a man with multiple personalities hired to drive Pryor's car, Rodney Dangerfield as an embezzling loan officer, musician Morris Day, and WWF wrestler King Kong Bundy as a monstrous ...
Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 8 Cop: Atlantic Releasing Corporation: James B. Harris (director/screenplay); James Woods, Lesley Ann Warren, Charles Durning, Charles Haid, Raymond J. Barry, Randi Brooks, Steven Lambert, Christopher Wynne, Jan McGill, Vicki Wauchope, Melinda Lynch, John Petievich, Dennis Stewart, Annie McEnroe: 15 The Couch ...
Kim received from her boyfriend the key to a safety deposit box that holds the swag. Chasing the girl a motorcyclist who does not hesitate to kill anyone who obstacles, a journalist and a photographer.
Highest-grossing films of 1988 by In-year release [57]; Rank Title Distributor Domestic gross 1. Rain Man: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer: $172,825,435 2. Who Framed Roger Rabbit
The Dead Pool (1988) Masquerade (1988) Moving Target (1988) The Presidio (1988) Shakedown (1988) Sunset (1988) ... Cast a Deadly Spell (1991) [20] Homicide (1991 ...
Something naked and bright, a moving target in the road." [4] For the book, Macdonald created the fictional city of Santa Teresa, a version of Santa Barbara, California. [5] The city is portrayed as divided between a rich class corrupted by easy living who live in the canyons above it and a poor underclass, many of them non-white.