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They especially recommended the film for fans of director Alan Rudolph, and praised the effects of the low-flying helicopters snatching cows from their pastures at night. [10] John Stanley of Creature Feature also liked the film, giving it 3.5 out of 5 stars. finding it thrilling and enthralling.
Fort Worth Flyover II begins with a leisurely daytime view of the city, as well as a CareFlite air ambulance helicopter flying below. The audience is then zoomed around Fort Worth at night, followed by a similarly speedy daytime view, before hovering over the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History itself.
In the novel, the Soviet sailor is attacked by street thugs and later commits suicide by jumping from the top floor of a hospital, while in the movie he is hit by a truck. In the book the story about Berenson is linked to the atomic plot because it provides a way for Irvine to send a false message to Karpov suggesting the operation is blown.
Co-writers Dan O'Bannon and Don Jakoby began developing the plot while living together in a Hollywood apartment in the late 1970s, where low-flying police helicopters woke them on a regular basis. Their original script was a more political one, attacking the concept of a police state controlling the population through high-tech surveillance and ...
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The Edge is a 1997 American survival thriller film written by David Mamet and directed by Lee Tamahori starring Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin.The plot follows wealthy businessman Charles Morse (Hopkins), photographer Bob Green (Baldwin), and assistant Stephen (Harold Perrineau), who must trek through the elements and try to survive after their plane crashes in the Alaskan wilderness, all ...
Several witness saw the helicopter spinning and losing altitude before it crashed. Helicopter crashes in front yard of a Fresno home, sending two people to hospital Skip to main content
The website's critics consensus reads, "Screenwriter Vince Gilligan's mordant sense of humor strikes a discordant note in Home Fries, a romantic caper full of empty calories." Roger Ebert gave the film a mixed review, writing, " Home Fries is not a great movie, and as much as I finally enjoyed it, I'm not sure it's worth seeing two times just ...