Keith-Carradine Movie Reviews


The Angel Doll
A New Holiday Classic
Grandmother's Choice

Now available on UK DVD!
Simply OutstandingAngela Riley
chiefs mini series

One of the Best Westerns Made
Tom Selleck is the next John Wayne!
Can't Wait for the DVD!

All you need is love and faithIt is emotionally very complex, it explores love and passion at it's most extreme and its cinematography is breathtaking. The writing, production design, costumes and music are first rate. Terrific production values!
There are more memorable characters in this one two hour movie that in all the movies I have seen from the year 2001. Great cast! Keith Carradine is marvellous as Dan Scott. Young Mia Kirshner is fantastic! Other parts are wonderful too. There is not a single bad perfomance in this film.
This movie combines action, love, tragedy, drama and politics all in one. Funny, tragic and human you name it.
What makes this film really precious to me is that it brings to the surface the best feelings that we miss in our everyday life -love, sympathy and faith.
After watching this movie one feels really clansed and elevated. In one word it's a must - see movie!
Love Conquers All

Senstive PortrayalJohn (Keith Carradine) and his wife Lily (Farah Fawcett) live with their pretty and intelligent daughter; Larkin (Alison Pill) and John's mother Byrd (Jean Stapleton).
One day a, baby, named Sophie, is left on their doorstep, with a note by her mother explaining that she will collect the baby when she is able to do so.
The baby is taken to the heart of the family, with some reluctance by John, who is unsure of what the consequences will be, but who learns to love the baby like the rest of the family.
My favourite character in the film was Larkin, through whose eyes we can much understanding of the problems faced by the family, and who is the sparkling star of this human drama.
It is the sensitive child, Larkin, who reminds us that '"Everything has a name and a place. Even stars."--


Excellent!

Choose Me

A Quirky Ode To Sexual Liberation (And Romance!)
Choose it.'No, I'm the same. The town's different.'
Love at large, indeed.
Rudolph doesn't always get it spot-on, but this and Trouble in Mind and Equinox is 3 movies better than some directors of greater renown.
Choose it!
Clever as it gets, but . . .

1970s Historical Mini-Series don't get better than this one!It's too bad they just don't make 'em like this anymore. I miss the 1970's.
Oh, and "Bravo!" to Hannah Shearer, too. Well done!
The Seekers&The RebelsI highly recomend both.Kevin Tighe was
great as Thomas Jefferson in The Rebels
and Randolph Mantooth was great as
Abraham Kent in The Seekers.They are
great actors.It's a must see.
The SeekersI loved him in The Seekers.
Delta Burke was fabulous as Abraham's
wife Elizabeth.I don't like how Abraham's
brother took Abraham's son Jared away
from him at the end.I cry everytime I
watch the scene where Elizabeth tragically
dies.It's a must see for Randy fans.

The copious material on the war and its principal personalities, especially General Ulysses S. Grant, will be a delight to Civil War buffs, and material about how Lincoln conducted the war (enraging his many enemies in the process) may surprise some viewers. Indeed, in his own time, Lincoln was hardly the icon he later became, and this documentary presents him flaws and all. This is a magnificent historical documentary that, despite its length, is never less than thoroughly absorbing. --Robert J. McNamara

A story of a man being great when greatness was neededThis combination of Lincoln's personality traits are the main theme of the tape. His persona shows through and you cannot help but like him, even after the passage of so many years. You also learn that he was a relatively untested national politician when he took the oath of office, yet he proved more than worthy to the challenge. In this respect, he has much in common with Harry Truman, who also was untested when he became president.
While the issues of the war must be dealt with, as they were so much a part of Lincoln's presidency, they are relegated to a necessary backdrop to the explanation of how Lincoln performed as president. His handling of an occasionally disloyal cabinet was a masterful stroke of how you put ambitious men in their place. It also shows how talented a politician he was.
Lincoln's relationship with his wife Mary Todd Lincoln is also explored in great detail and she is portrayed in an honest, yet unflattering light. At a time when the nation was in great crisis, she often appears as a petty, insecure woman who does not realize the true nature of the events as they unfold. One point well made that I was unaware of was Lincoln's relationship with his children. He generally allowed them free reign around the White House. Put bluntly, they behaved as undisciplined brats.
In a tie for the position of greatest president ever, Lincoln was that rare combination of traits: humble, gentle, yet powerful and ruthless when necessary. It is one of the great tragedies of this country that he was killed just when he was needed most. Many of the politicians that we are saddled with today could learn some, serious, significant lessons by studying the life of Lincoln. I recommend this tape to everyone.
Insightful and Well-done documentary
Fascinating and informativeThis four hour VHS biography is very well done. It does jump around a bit, but the jumping is always done in context of the story being told. Kind of the video equivalent of someone saying "to tell this story in all it's richness, let me back up a bit here and tell you some of the history..."
It appears Mary Todd and Abe Lincoln truly had a love affair, albeit a tempestuous one. They also loved their children and were devoted to their family, yet Lincoln had nothing to do with his own father after ascending to the Presidency. Mary Todd had no sadness upon learning her half-brother had died fighting for the Confederacy, yet showed her half-sister, whose husband died on the Confederate side, the most tender solicitude.
As has been said of all good biographies, and can be said of this VHS bio, this really shows all sides of Lincoln - "warts and all."
A real bonus are the voices used to tell the story of Lincoln's life. The beautiful rich voice of James Earl Jones provides the primary narration, but a laundry list of stars such as Richard Dreyfuss, Glenn Close, Oprah Winfrey and and many others narrate the anecdotes and reminiscences of Lincoln's friends, family and adviors.
This biography is well done, informative, engaging and entertaining and shows the many sides of Lincoln.