The Judy Garland Show - Just Judy - Movie Download Services
The Judy Garland Show" continues the award-winning "Series of The Series," by presenting a very special edition : "JUST JUDY" is a collection of her finest solo moments. Compiled by noted Garland historian Scott Schechter and the DVD's Executive Producer Matthew Friedman, the disc contains a whopping 28 classic songs, including her hits "The Man That Got Away," "Swanee," "Come Rain Or Come Shine," "San Francisco," and "Over The Rainbow," among many others. Judy is presented in a wide variety of song styles, from up-tempo jazz tunes ("Who Cares?," "From This Moment On") to heartbreaking ballads ("All Alone," "When Your Lover Has Gone"), along with many hits from Broadway and Hollywood ("Just In Time," "Hey, Look Me Over," "As Long As He Needs Me," "Too Late Now.") You'll see Judy (in a glamorous succession of gowns by acclaimed designers Ray Aghayan and Bob Mackie) at the peak of her talent and career in a stunning, concert type presentation of her best series solo songs. The legend's legacy is best represented by her work on these timeless shows, and the show's best moments were from it's star, and are presented here on "The Judy Garland Show" : "JUST JUDY.
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The Judy Garland Show - Just Judy is a movie that everyone can enjoy together.This is something not usually seen in movies of this type, so it makes it an unusual, yet pleasant experience.The movie is absolutely stunning and Jerry Van Dyke deliver some award winning performances in this movie. I also think Harvey Evans was great!
The Cotton Club - Movie Reviews and Your Movie Experience
Summary of The Cotton Club:
The Cotton Club is routinely eclipsed by the controversies that surrounded its tumultuous production, but the film itself offers abundant pleasures that should not be overlooked. If Apocalypse Now represents the triumph of director Francis Coppola's perilous ambition, then The Cotton Club represents the ungainly glory of uncontrolled genius, as brilliant as it is out of its depth. As an upscale homage to classic gangster films it's frequently astonishing, cramming a thick novel's worth of plot and characters into 129 minutes, gloriously serviced by impeccable production design, elegant cinematography, and stylistic flourishes that show Coppola at the top of his game.
What The Cotton Club lacks is cohesion. As written by Coppola and novelist William Kennedy (then enjoying the peak of his critical acclaim), the movie struggles to exceed the narrative scope of The Godfather, but its multiple early-'30s plot lines fail to form any strong connective tissue. It's three (or four) movies in one, with cornet player Dixie Dwyer (Richard Gere, playing his own jazzy solos) drifting from one story to the next--loving a young, ambitious vamp (Diane Lane, with whom Gere shares precious little chemistry), enjoying the success of a hotshot hoofer (Gregory Hines), and protecting his brazen bother (Coppola's then-newcomer nephew, Nicolas Cage) from the deadly temper of mob boss Dutch Schultz (James Remar). Bob Hoskins and Fred Gwynne also score big in grand supporting roles, but The Cotton Club is perhaps best appreciated for its meticulous re-creation of Harlem's Cotton Club heyday, and the brilliant music (Ellington, Calloway, etc.) that brought rhythm to gangland's rat-a-tat-tat. --Jeff Shannon
I think Richard Gere and Gregory Hines worked wonderful in The Cotton Club. The great supporting cast includes Richard Gere, Gregory Hines, Diane Lane, Lonette McKee, Bob Hoskins.