Graham-Greene Movie Reviews


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VHS movie reviews for "Graham-Greene" sorted by average review score:

Last of His Tribe
Released in VHS Tape by Hbo Studios (06 June, 2000)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Harry Hook
Average review score:

Whatever happened to...
Every time i start to wonder "whatever happened to Jon Voight?..."I discover another gem like The Last Of His Tribe. Graham Greene (one of my all-time favorite actors) connects with his usual manly grace with Jon to make for a very convincing performance. This is a "period" video...1911...and the set design, costuming and language are all very well done.

excellent on many levels
This movie is a must see for many reasons, primarily because it documents the very end of the ~15,000 year legacy of free Native Americans on this continent: "Ishi," the last Yahi and free ranging Native American is forced by circumstance to enter modern civilization in the early 20th Century in California. The historical significance alone makes it worth seeing.

Beyond that, Graham Greene and Jon Voight give outstanding and moving performances. Greene (who is always excellent - Clearcut, Thunderheart, Dances With Wolves, etc.) as Ishi, and Voight as the genius anthropologist who takes him in.

Voight's character is a pure scientist through and through who finds it difficult to get emotionally involved with much of anything. He prefers to look at the world in terms of evidence and hard data. He is distant as his wife is dying, and Ishi tells him (paraphrasing) 'you put me in your book, but not in your heart.'

That's why it's so moving at the end when Voight's character finally mourns the loss of Ishi so heavily. Highly recommended.

Heart Wrenching!
I read the book, but the movie really brings home what the story meant. Truly amazing and heart wrenching - you will cry for Ishi, you will cry for all the Native Americans. Truly a must see! You will not be disappointed. Greene does another remarkable job!


The Last of His Tribe
Released in VHS Tape by Hbo Studios (06 June, 2000)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Harry Hook
Average review score:

Whatever happened to...
Every time i start to wonder "whatever happened to Jon Voight?..."I discover another gem like The Last Of His Tribe. Graham Greene (one of my all-time favorite actors) connects with his usual manly grace with Jon to make for a very convincing performance. This is a "period" video...1911...and the set design, costuming and language are all very well done.

excellent on many levels
This movie is a must see for many reasons, primarily because it documents the very end of the ~15,000 year legacy of free Native Americans on this continent: "Ishi," the last Yahi and free ranging Native American is forced by circumstance to enter modern civilization in the early 20th Century in California. The historical significance alone makes it worth seeing.

Beyond that, Graham Greene and Jon Voight give outstanding and moving performances. Greene (who is always excellent - Clearcut, Thunderheart, Dances With Wolves, etc.) as Ishi, and Voight as the genius anthropologist who takes him in.

Voight's character is a pure scientist through and through who finds it difficult to get emotionally involved with much of anything. He prefers to look at the world in terms of evidence and hard data. He is distant as his wife is dying, and Ishi tells him (paraphrasing) 'you put me in your book, but not in your heart.'

That's why it's so moving at the end when Voight's character finally mourns the loss of Ishi so heavily. Highly recommended.

Heart Wrenching!
I read the book, but the movie really brings home what the story meant. Truly amazing and heart wrenching - you will cry for Ishi, you will cry for all the Native Americans. Truly a must see! You will not be disappointed. Greene does another remarkable job!


Welcome to 18
Released in VHS Tape by Artisan Entertainment (15 September, 1988)
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Terry Carr
Starring: Terry Carr
Average review score:

1grtmovie
welcome to 18 is a great movie. All the actors do a perfect job. The story is fun movie to watch with friends or by yourself. The movie is filled with comedy and romance.

This movie is great to watch with the girls!!
I watched this movie when I was 16 with a bunch of my girlfriends at a slumber party. It was great. We've rented it about a hundred times.


A Challenge for Robin Hood
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (06 April, 1999)
MPAA Rating: G (General Audience)
Director: C.M. Pennington-Richards
Hammer Studios' third go at the Robin Hood tale reworks the legend into a case of fratricide and ruthless family double dealing. Jealous that his father has willed a third of his land to his honorable cousin Robin de Courtenay (Barrie Ingham, who cuts a fine figure of moral certitude and confidence), the evil Roger (Peter Blythe) kills his brother and frames Robin for the murder. The rest of the legend should be familiar, differing only in details: Robin organizes the repressed and the homeless into a band of noble outlaws who prey upon the rich, give to the poor, and fight the injustice of the crafty Sheriff of Nottingham (James Arnatt), who joins forces with Roger to capture Robin and his merry men. The lush green forests and meadows and the handsome castle that serves as the de Courtenay estate set this low-budget adventure film in a distinctive environment. The fight scenes are rather loose and the sword duals pale compared to the flashing brilliance of Errol Flynn and Basil Rathbone in The Adventures of Robin Hood, but the pastoral mood created by the lilting score (inspired by folk songs of the Middle Ages) and the landscape serve this modest but exuberant drama quite nicely. --Sean Axmaker
Average review score:

Oh, the nostalgia
Frankly, I may be overestimating this video, but it was my first Robin Hood movie and it is the one that has stuck with me the best. It has an excellent pie fight and it's fairly kid-friendly from what I remember.


Huck & The King of Hearts
Released in VHS Tape by Turner Home Entertai (01 August, 1995)
MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Director: Michael Keusch
Average review score:

Very sweet natured family film.
A loosely updated version of the classic Huckleberry Finn. A young boy flees abusive stepfather and goes in search of the adventurous grandfather that he's never met. Along the way he meets "Injun" Joe, a small time con. They team up and head for Vegas, while trying to stay ahead of the gangster who wants to kill Joe.


Spirit Rider
Released in VHS Tape by Ghadar & Assoc (06 July, 1999)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Michael J.F. Scott
Starring: Michael J.F. Scott and Michelle St. John
Average review score:

Spiritrider, an uplifting, positive and beautiful story!
This rich and well constructed story begins with the camera following Jessie Threebears as he races his bike through city streets. He is a street wise high school boy placed in a foster care home. His social worker visits to tell him that he is to be reconciled with his family and his tribe. Jessie has big dreams of competing in the Tour de France and does not want to leave the only life he knows for the reservation. The tribe greets him warmly but Jessie is angry and resentful. Slowly, he learns new truths. This story addresses many themes--life on the reservation, adolescent alienation from family and community, forgiveness, belonging and self acceptance. It's a great story with a cast of some great Native American actors.


Squanto & The First Thanksgiving
Released in VHS Tape by Rabbit Ears Producti (20 March, 1996)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: Graham Greene
Average review score:

Daniel
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The Green Mile
Released in VHS Tape by Warner Home Video (13 June, 2000)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Frank Darabont
Starring: Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan
"The book was better" has been the complaint of many a reader since the invention of movies. Frank Darabont's second adaptation of a Stephen King prison drama (The Shawshank Redemption was the first) is a very faithful adaptation of King's serial novel. In the middle of the Depression, Paul Edgecomb (Tom Hanks) runs death row at Cold Mountain Penitentiary. Into this dreary world walks a mammoth prisoner, John Coffey (Michael Duncan) who, very slowly, reveals a special gift that will change the men working and dying (in the electric chair, masterfully and grippingly staged) on the mile . As with King's book, Darabont takes plenty of time to show us Edgecomb's world before delving into John Coffey's mystery. With Darabont's superior storytelling abilities, his touch for perfect casting, and a leisurely 188-minute running time, his movie brings to life nearly every character and scene from the novel. Darabont even improves the novel's two endings, creating a more emotionally satisfying experience. The running time may try patience, but those who want a story, as opposed to quick-fix entertainment, will be rewarded by this finely tailored tale. --Doug Thomas
Average review score:

A mile of heart-wrenching emotion
The Green Mile draws its name from the lime floor tiles that cover the floor of a southern prison's death row. In a story with that backdrop and set in a 1935, you could expect death to be a main theme... in this case you'd be wrong. Surprisingly, we are quickly drawn into the lives of the prisoners and their guards in what can only be described as normal daily existence. They worry about normal things like friendships, security, conformity and boredom. We can therefore believe in them as real people, with pasts and futures, rather than two-dimensional silhouettes merely cast onto horrific scenery.

The Green Mile is not a film that can be easily described. All of the characters are important. If there is a plot, it is submerged beneath a dozen important sub-plots. The characters are what keep us entranced during this three-hour celebration of morality. Our point of view is firmly glued to the senior guard on the Green Mile, Paul Edgecomb, played with feeling by Tom Hanks. Paul is a good man, surviving the great depression in a less than attractive job. We are witness to his strength early in the film as he deals with an excruciating urinary tract infection. This strength is displayed in other ways as the story progresses.

Based on a series of Stephen King novellas, we are not surprised when a new inmate arrives who fails to fit into any kind of prison mold. John Coffey, (J.C. - get it?), is a mountain of a man who exudes innocence and peace in equal measures. Every day that he stays on the row, increases Paul's belief that Coffey was wrongly convicted of killing two little girls. It is only after Coffey displays a miraculous healing gift that Paul starts to question the status quo.

But Paul's redemptive efforts, and even his work, are constantly hampered by a junior guard, Percy Wetmore, (Doug Hutchison). Percy is well connected in political circles and uses this form of protection to free his base desires. He likes to humiliate, frighten and hurt other people, never a good combination in a prison guard. Luckily, Percy is well matched by Paul Edgecomb. We have confidence that Paul will eventually master Percy.

Balance seems to be important in the story because just as Paul and Percy struggle on opposite sides of morality, John Coffey is soon introduced to his opposite, William "Wild Bill" Wharton, (Sam Rockwell). Wharton is a thoroughly evil man. Not content with enjoying his own warped hobbies, he seems driven to spread as much suffering as inhumanly possible. Unconcerned with his impending execution, he takes every opportunity to attack the guards. We even feel some sympathy for Percy when he comes within the diseased reach of Wharton.

All the support roles are outstanding, although Graham Green's character, Arlen Bitterbuck, was not so memorable. I'd like to especially praise David Morse, who plays Brutus, Paul's right hand man; and Michael Jeter, playing a Cajun prisoner, Eduard Delacroix, who has a comic dose of eccentricity. Eduard introduces another minor character, Mr Jangles the mouse.

There is a lot of symbolism in The Green Mile. The mouse, eventually adopted by Eduard, seems to represent freedom. He comes and goes without restriction. He can't be trapped and he enjoys life, as expressed through his simple circus tricks. Coffey's healing power clearly represents good or perhaps the power of God. The ephemeral black insects he releases after absorbing disease, imply more than illness. Perhaps sickness is supposed to be an evil of the body. Sadly, Coffey eventually embodies pure goodness in our minds, and then he renounces the world and its ubiquitous evil. We are almost convinced there is no hope in our lives but luckily, Paul's strength shows us that hope can never fully disappear.

In the end, a film that might have centered on the morality of the death penalty, takes us in another direction entirely. Our focus is always Paul Edgecomb. His moral strength and eventual spiritual test are offered to us as a testimony. Hank's performance forces us to examine our own lives. Can we recognize the good in those around us and, more importantly, can we resist the evil?

A Powerful Journey
It was very easy for many cynical reviewers to rip this movie apart. After all the story is episodic. The portrayal of the prisoners unfair since it lets us feel great sympathy for them not having seen their crimes. It could also be argued that John Coffey's miracle scenes were overstated with unneccesary special effects. But how can I sit here and analyise the faults of a movie that brought to tears to my eyes.

John Coffey, as played by Micheal Clarke Duncan in a beautiful performance, is a man who physically feels the pain of the wrongs people do to each other. "I am tired of all the uglyness people do to each other", he is a man who feels the pain of all humanity's wrong doings. His size is symbolic of that, expressing years of absorbed pain. Now tired, constantly in tears, all he wants in the world is the ability to "take it back", undo everyone else's wrongs.

The Green Mile contains another pleasant surprise, Tom Hanks. After a last couple of years of playing characters with no edge, his Paul Edgecomb is a moraly conflicted man capable of violence, revenge and guilt. Welcome back Tom.

Amazing how this film balances all the different tones it does. One particular sequence involving the rehearsal of an execution will have you laughing out loud, only to be in shocked disbeleif at the actual execution just minutes later. A point of contention about this film is the nessecity of the present day framing sequences, and although I usually don't like this device, I think it works well here giving the story a larger scope, magnifying the effects of John Coffey.

Frank Darabont's last film was The Shawshank Redemption, one of the best films of the 1990s and obviously a hard act to follow. The Green Mile is not as good as that, but it is a moving, powerful and unique film in its own right. Don't miss this.

Wonderful Movie
I'm not going to give away the plot of this movie, but this movie takes you through all the ranges of emotion. It includes black humor (If you're not easily offended, you'll enjoy it), among many other things.
You have to take my word for this, Green Mile is a GREAT movie.


The Green Mile
Released in VHS Tape by Castle Rock (02 September, 2003)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Frank Darabont
Starring: Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan
"The book was better" has been the complaint of many a reader since the invention of movies. Frank Darabont's second adaptation of a Stephen King prison drama (The Shawshank Redemption was the first) is a very faithful adaptation of King's serial novel. In the middle of the Depression, Paul Edgecomb (Tom Hanks) runs death row at Cold Mountain Penitentiary. Into this dreary world walks a mammoth prisoner, John Coffey (Michael Duncan) who, very slowly, reveals a special gift that will change the men working and dying (in the electric chair, masterfully and grippingly staged) on the mile . As with King's book, Darabont takes plenty of time to show us Edgecomb's world before delving into John Coffey's mystery. With Darabont's superior storytelling abilities, his touch for perfect casting, and a leisurely 188-minute running time, his movie brings to life nearly every character and scene from the novel. Darabont even improves the novel's two endings, creating a more emotionally satisfying experience. The running time may try patience, but those who want a story, as opposed to quick-fix entertainment, will be rewarded by this finely tailored tale. --Doug Thomas
Average review score:

A mile of heart-wrenching emotion
The Green Mile draws its name from the lime floor tiles that cover the floor of a southern prison's death row. In a story with that backdrop and set in a 1935, you could expect death to be a main theme... in this case you'd be wrong. Surprisingly, we are quickly drawn into the lives of the prisoners and their guards in what can only be described as normal daily existence. They worry about normal things like friendships, security, conformity and boredom. We can therefore believe in them as real people, with pasts and futures, rather than two-dimensional silhouettes merely cast onto horrific scenery.

The Green Mile is not a film that can be easily described. All of the characters are important. If there is a plot, it is submerged beneath a dozen important sub-plots. The characters are what keep us entranced during this three-hour celebration of morality. Our point of view is firmly glued to the senior guard on the Green Mile, Paul Edgecomb, played with feeling by Tom Hanks. Paul is a good man, surviving the great depression in a less than attractive job. We are witness to his strength early in the film as he deals with an excruciating urinary tract infection. This strength is displayed in other ways as the story progresses.

Based on a series of Stephen King novellas, we are not surprised when a new inmate arrives who fails to fit into any kind of prison mold. John Coffey, (J.C. - get it?), is a mountain of a man who exudes innocence and peace in equal measures. Every day that he stays on the row, increases Paul's belief that Coffey was wrongly convicted of killing two little girls. It is only after Coffey displays a miraculous healing gift that Paul starts to question the status quo.

But Paul's redemptive efforts, and even his work, are constantly hampered by a junior guard, Percy Wetmore, (Doug Hutchison). Percy is well connected in political circles and uses this form of protection to free his base desires. He likes to humiliate, frighten and hurt other people, never a good combination in a prison guard. Luckily, Percy is well matched by Paul Edgecomb. We have confidence that Paul will eventually master Percy.

Balance seems to be important in the story because just as Paul and Percy struggle on opposite sides of morality, John Coffey is soon introduced to his opposite, William "Wild Bill" Wharton, (Sam Rockwell). Wharton is a thoroughly evil man. Not content with enjoying his own warped hobbies, he seems driven to spread as much suffering as inhumanly possible. Unconcerned with his impending execution, he takes every opportunity to attack the guards. We even feel some sympathy for Percy when he comes within the diseased reach of Wharton.

All the support roles are outstanding, although Graham Green's character, Arlen Bitterbuck, was not so memorable. I'd like to especially praise David Morse, who plays Brutus, Paul's right hand man; and Michael Jeter, playing a Cajun prisoner, Eduard Delacroix, who has a comic dose of eccentricity. Eduard introduces another minor character, Mr Jangles the mouse.

There is a lot of symbolism in The Green Mile. The mouse, eventually adopted by Eduard, seems to represent freedom. He comes and goes without restriction. He can't be trapped and he enjoys life, as expressed through his simple circus tricks. Coffey's healing power clearly represents good or perhaps the power of God. The ephemeral black insects he releases after absorbing disease, imply more than illness. Perhaps sickness is supposed to be an evil of the body. Sadly, Coffey eventually embodies pure goodness in our minds, and then he renounces the world and its ubiquitous evil. We are almost convinced there is no hope in our lives but luckily, Paul's strength shows us that hope can never fully disappear.

In the end, a film that might have centered on the morality of the death penalty, takes us in another direction entirely. Our focus is always Paul Edgecomb. His moral strength and eventual spiritual test are offered to us as a testimony. Hank's performance forces us to examine our own lives. Can we recognize the good in those around us and, more importantly, can we resist the evil?

A Powerful Journey
It was very easy for many cynical reviewers to rip this movie apart. After all the story is episodic. The portrayal of the prisoners unfair since it lets us feel great sympathy for them not having seen their crimes. It could also be argued that John Coffey's miracle scenes were overstated with unneccesary special effects. But how can I sit here and analyise the faults of a movie that brought to tears to my eyes.

John Coffey, as played by Micheal Clarke Duncan in a beautiful performance, is a man who physically feels the pain of the wrongs people do to each other. "I am tired of all the uglyness people do to each other", he is a man who feels the pain of all humanity's wrong doings. His size is symbolic of that, expressing years of absorbed pain. Now tired, constantly in tears, all he wants in the world is the ability to "take it back", undo everyone else's wrongs.

The Green Mile contains another pleasant surprise, Tom Hanks. After a last couple of years of playing characters with no edge, his Paul Edgecomb is a moraly conflicted man capable of violence, revenge and guilt. Welcome back Tom.

Amazing how this film balances all the different tones it does. One particular sequence involving the rehearsal of an execution will have you laughing out loud, only to be in shocked disbeleif at the actual execution just minutes later. A point of contention about this film is the nessecity of the present day framing sequences, and although I usually don't like this device, I think it works well here giving the story a larger scope, magnifying the effects of John Coffey.

Frank Darabont's last film was The Shawshank Redemption, one of the best films of the 1990s and obviously a hard act to follow. The Green Mile is not as good as that, but it is a moving, powerful and unique film in its own right. Don't miss this.

Wonderful Movie
I'm not going to give away the plot of this movie, but this movie takes you through all the ranges of emotion. It includes black humor (If you're not easily offended, you'll enjoy it), among many other things.
You have to take my word for this, Green Mile is a GREAT movie.


The Green Mile (Collector's Edition)
Released in VHS Tape by Warner Home Video (17 October, 2000)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: Frank Darabont
Starring: Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan
"The book was better" has been the complaint of many a reader since the invention of movies. Frank Darabont's second adaptation of a Stephen King prison drama (The Shawshank Redemption was the first) is a very faithful adaptation of King's serial novel. In the middle of the Depression, Paul Edgecomb (Tom Hanks) runs death row at Cold Mountain Penitentiary. Into this dreary world walks a mammoth prisoner, John Coffey (Michael Duncan) who, very slowly, reveals a special gift that will change the men working and dying (in the electric chair, masterfully and grippingly staged) on the mile . As with King's book, Darabont takes plenty of time to show us Edgecomb's world before delving into John Coffey's mystery. With Darabont's superior storytelling abilities, his touch for perfect casting, and a leisurely 188-minute running time, his movie brings to life nearly every character and scene from the novel. Darabont even improves the novel's two endings, creating a more emotionally satisfying experience. The running time may try patience, but those who want a story, as opposed to quick-fix entertainment, will be rewarded by this finely tailored tale. --Doug Thomas
Average review score:

A mile of heart-wrenching emotion
The Green Mile draws its name from the lime floor tiles that cover the floor of a southern prison's death row. In a story with that backdrop and set in a 1935, you could expect death to be a main theme... in this case you'd be wrong. Surprisingly, we are quickly drawn into the lives of the prisoners and their guards in what can only be described as normal daily existence. They worry about normal things like friendships, security, conformity and boredom. We can therefore believe in them as real people, with pasts and futures, rather than two-dimensional silhouettes merely cast onto horrific scenery.

The Green Mile is not a film that can be easily described. All of the characters are important. If there is a plot, it is submerged beneath a dozen important sub-plots. The characters are what keep us entranced during this three-hour celebration of morality. Our point of view is firmly glued to the senior guard on the Green Mile, Paul Edgecomb, played with feeling by Tom Hanks. Paul is a good man, surviving the great depression in a less than attractive job. We are witness to his strength early in the film as he deals with an excruciating urinary tract infection. This strength is displayed in other ways as the story progresses.

Based on a series of Stephen King novellas, we are not surprised when a new inmate arrives who fails to fit into any kind of prison mold. John Coffey, (J.C. - get it?), is a mountain of a man who exudes innocence and peace in equal measures. Every day that he stays on the row, increases Paul's belief that Coffey was wrongly convicted of killing two little girls. It is only after Coffey displays a miraculous healing gift that Paul starts to question the status quo.

But Paul's redemptive efforts, and even his work, are constantly hampered by a junior guard, Percy Wetmore, (Doug Hutchison). Percy is well connected in political circles and uses this form of protection to free his base desires. He likes to humiliate, frighten and hurt other people, never a good combination in a prison guard. Luckily, Percy is well matched by Paul Edgecomb. We have confidence that Paul will eventually master Percy.

Balance seems to be important in the story because just as Paul and Percy struggle on opposite sides of morality, John Coffey is soon introduced to his opposite, William "Wild Bill" Wharton, (Sam Rockwell). Wharton is a thoroughly evil man. Not content with enjoying his own warped hobbies, he seems driven to spread as much suffering as inhumanly possible. Unconcerned with his impending execution, he takes every opportunity to attack the guards. We even feel some sympathy for Percy when he comes within the diseased reach of Wharton.

All the support roles are outstanding, although Graham Green's character, Arlen Bitterbuck, was not so memorable. I'd like to especially praise David Morse, who plays Brutus, Paul's right hand man; and Michael Jeter, playing a Cajun prisoner, Eduard Delacroix, who has a comic dose of eccentricity. Eduard introduces another minor character, Mr Jangles the mouse.

There is a lot of symbolism in The Green Mile. The mouse, eventually adopted by Eduard, seems to represent freedom. He comes and goes without restriction. He can't be trapped and he enjoys life, as expressed through his simple circus tricks. Coffey's healing power clearly represents good or perhaps the power of God. The ephemeral black insects he releases after absorbing disease, imply more than illness. Perhaps sickness is supposed to be an evil of the body. Sadly, Coffey eventually embodies pure goodness in our minds, and then he renounces the world and its ubiquitous evil. We are almost convinced there is no hope in our lives but luckily, Paul's strength shows us that hope can never fully disappear.

In the end, a film that might have centered on the morality of the death penalty, takes us in another direction entirely. Our focus is always Paul Edgecomb. His moral strength and eventual spiritual test are offered to us as a testimony. Hank's performance forces us to examine our own lives. Can we recognize the good in those around us and, more importantly, can we resist the evil?

A Powerful Journey
It was very easy for many cynical reviewers to rip this movie apart. After all the story is episodic. The portrayal of the prisoners unfair since it lets us feel great sympathy for them not having seen their crimes. It could also be argued that John Coffey's miracle scenes were overstated with unneccesary special effects. But how can I sit here and analyise the faults of a movie that brought to tears to my eyes.

John Coffey, as played by Micheal Clarke Duncan in a beautiful performance, is a man who physically feels the pain of the wrongs people do to each other. "I am tired of all the uglyness people do to each other", he is a man who feels the pain of all humanity's wrong doings. His size is symbolic of that, expressing years of absorbed pain. Now tired, constantly in tears, all he wants in the world is the ability to "take it back", undo everyone else's wrongs.

The Green Mile contains another pleasant surprise, Tom Hanks. After a last couple of years of playing characters with no edge, his Paul Edgecomb is a moraly conflicted man capable of violence, revenge and guilt. Welcome back Tom.

Amazing how this film balances all the different tones it does. One particular sequence involving the rehearsal of an execution will have you laughing out loud, only to be in shocked disbeleif at the actual execution just minutes later. A point of contention about this film is the nessecity of the present day framing sequences, and although I usually don't like this device, I think it works well here giving the story a larger scope, magnifying the effects of John Coffey.

Frank Darabont's last film was The Shawshank Redemption, one of the best films of the 1990s and obviously a hard act to follow. The Green Mile is not as good as that, but it is a moving, powerful and unique film in its own right. Don't miss this.

Wonderful Movie
I'm not going to give away the plot of this movie, but this movie takes you through all the ranges of emotion. It includes black humor (If you're not easily offended, you'll enjoy it), among many other things.
You have to take my word for this, Green Mile is a GREAT movie.


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