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Conference bookie::movies

Title:Movie Reviews and Discussion
Notice:Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie!
Moderator:VAXCPU::michaudo.dec.com::tamara::eppes
Created:Thu Jan 28 1993
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1249
Total number of notes:16012

131.0. "Murder in the Heartland" by DSSDEV::RUST () Sat Apr 10 1993 18:57

    OK, is this synchronicity or what? I heard something on the tube last
    night about this forthcoming BIFMFTV movie (which is either "Death" or
    "Murder" - title to be changed as needed, by the author or the
    moderator or somebody), in which Tim Roth ("Reservoir Dogs,"
    "Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead," etc.) portrays Charles
    Starkweather (who thought he was portraying James Dean). (See the
    "James Dean" note, and anything about Martin Sheen, who played Charlie
    first.)
    
    Personally, I'm appalled. What does it say about the state of American
    cinema that a _British_ actor is called in to play one of the
    quintessentially American criminals??? I mean, honestly!
    
    Then again, whatever it says about the state of American cinema is
    probably correct, and Roth will do a bang-up job, so never mind. ('tis
    pity it's made-for-TV-by-ABC, though, as its premiere will include
    commercial breaks...)
    
    The big controversy to date re this picture is the showing of
    Starkweather's execution. The film folks say it's "grimly realistic"
    (but add that they're not moralizing, just telling the story); the
    anti-capital-punishment folks say it's not _nearly_ realistic enough
    (and they're probably right, as it's hard to send the smell of burning
    flesh through the tube).
    
    I haven't heard whether anybody's protesting how realistically
    Starkweather's crimes were portrayed.
    
    Due to air in early May. Stay tuned!
    
    -b
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131.1wow. dude. etc.12035::RIVERSmay this vale be my silver lining.Mon Apr 12 1993 13:306
    Tim Roth is British?
    
    I knew Gary Oldman (the other half of GnR, not the rockgroup...) was,
    but --  oh well.
    
    kim
131.244243::SNEILMon Apr 12 1993 13:476
    
    
     I you can try and get a hold of the BBC Drama "The firm".Gary Oldman
    is superb in this.
    
     SCott
131.3DSSDEV::RUSTTue May 04 1993 14:1726
    Well, Part I aired last night, and it's certainly... gritty. Definitely
    going for that "banality of evil" touch in a big way. (It's also very
    heavily slanted towards the "Fugate was an innocent hostage" view, even
    though the jury that convicted her thought otherwise.) But despite my
    interest in the actual case, I found the movie uninvolving, even
    boring. The main characters, well-enough played by Roth and Balk as
    bored and aimless teenagers (though Roth does look too old for the part
    and seems to be slumming), didn't hold my empathy, my interest, or even
    a horrified fascination; most of the victims weren't given enough
    context to gain more than token sympathy; and the supporting cast of
    police and FBI agents has, so far, been very much in the background. [I
    gather things pick up for the supporting cast when the trials begin in
    part II.]
    
    There's a certain ironic weirdness in having all this grim, stark,
    '50s-era business interrupted every fifteen minutes for a series of
    bright and splashy commercials (including some for the latest shoot-em-
    up Hollywood spectaculars). And I couldn't help wondering whether the
    movie seems mundane because of some lack in the production, or because
    after decades of having equivalent crimes or worse splattered all over
    the news and the movies and TV, it now _is_ mundane...
    
    But what the heck, I'll be checking in for Part II anyway, to see where
    it goes from here.
    
    -b
131.412116::MDNITE::RIVERSTue May 04 1993 15:3917
    In the grand context of TV movies, this is pretty good (I'm sorry, a 2
    part movie doesn't really qualify as a miniseries in MY book, no matter
    what ABC would have us believe).  
    
    In the grand context of how this might have been done as a feature
    film, it *is* a bit rambling and as -beth said, uninvolving.  (Hey, I
    console myself, it's just commerical TV....)  
    
    I think that it suffers from being on commericial TV, and because this
    is commerical TV, all those bright and happy commericals wouldn't
    really want to sponsor this show if it was as bleak and gripping as the
    subject matter seems to call for.
    
    But, I like Tim Roth, I think he does psychotic well and I'll probably
    watch part II tonite.  
    
    kim
131.5And the word from Poseur's Corner:ESGWST::RDAVISSome justice, some peaceTue May 04 1993 16:384
    I lasted for about 3 minutes, then went back to finish reading a book
    about Antonioni.
    
    Ray
131.6Cross-referenceDSSDEV::RUSTTue May 04 1993 18:024
    [See also topic 87, for discussion of "Badlands," an earlier film
    based on the same story.]
    
    -b
131.7DSSDEV::RUSTWed May 05 1993 14:0628
    Well, Part II didn't do a whole lot better than Part I, although I must
    admit that I derived considerable amusement from the way the movie
    suggested that Fugate was convicted primarily for being a snotty
    teenager. When she pulled the eye-rolling, heavy-sighing, I-can't-
    believe-you're-asking-me-this attitude on the witness stand, I knew she
    was doomed, despite all the truly pitiful sobbing and crying she'd been
    doing the rest of the time (not to mention a few incidental violations
    of her right to a fair trial). 
    
    The much-ballyhooed electrocution sequence was, as I'd suspected,
    pretty dull, though the suggestion that the first shock stuns but
    doesn't kill <some chest movement, etc., between shocks 1 and 2> may
    have disturbed the folks who thought it was really, truly
    instantaneous.
    
    I doubt very much that showing the execution will discourage any
    potential criminals out there, but I do hold out hopes that some young
    people will have learned that it is not in their best interests to
    slouch, snarl, or talk back when being cross-examined by the
    prosecution. ;-)
    
    Oh, and big, big points to whoever scheduled the commercial slots. Just
    after a very hysterical Fugate (having apparently forgotten, if indeed
    she ever knew, that Starkweather had killed her parents) was shrieking
    madly "I want to see my mother!", a commercial came on for - yep,
    Mother's Day bouquets.
    
    -b
131.8SUBWAY::BACHA New York node?Thu May 06 1993 00:3811
    On New Yaaawk news (from where I was forced to watch this show) did a
    little on Fugate after the movie.  They had some real principles of
    the case on the news and made a quick, compelling argument that Fugate
    probably got what she deserved...

    18 years for a 14 year old murderess.

    Anyway, they made a decent argument for gun lovers, as I would have
    hoped to have had a 9mm handy if Charlie came around my neighborhood.

    Chip
131.9Fugate32198::KRUEGERTue Jun 01 1993 13:3323
    Fugate wasn't a murderess; even in the broadest sense of justice, she
    may have been an accomplice after the fact or even an accomplice in the
    case of the teenage couple, but there was absolutely no evidence other
    than Starkweather's testimony that she was in on it.
    
    The strangest part of the movie was the fact that in her book, she
    tells how she came home and found her family slaughtered, but in the
    movie she's supposedly kept in the dark until the very end that they're
    dead.
    
    We all have opinions, but to hand 18 years to a 14-year-old who didn't
    know her butt from her elbow and would never have been in the trouble
    she got into had it not been for a deranged boyfriend, is really
    unbelievable considering how proven murderers and rapists serve less
    time than that, even those with long criminal records.
    
    Fugate was not that bright and wasn't a very sympathetic character, but
    I'm wondering how things would have gone if her demeanor had been
    better.  But that would have taken some thought and acting out,
    wouldn't it?  A none-too-bright 14-year-old wouldn't have been savvy
    enough to play the legal game.
    
    Leslie