|
|
|
search movies
Genres
World Cinema
UK Premier
US Premier
Indie-Arthouse Cinema
Film Noir
UK Classics
US Classics
Australian
All genres
showcase
Now Available
Kino Hot Picks
Directors
Actors
collections
Kino All-time Top 100 rental titles
Christmas Movies
Blu-Ray High Definition
Featured Genre
Director's Cut
Actors' Studio
AACTA - AFI Winners . . . Best Picture
Oscar Winners . . . Best Picture
Cannes Classics
Members' Top 100 requested Titles
Service
Send a Gift
Contact Us
|
|
Titles
|
|
|
|
Short Cuts (2 Disc Set) (1993) |
<<back |
|
|
|
Director: |
Robert Altman
|
Starring: |
Tim Robbins, Madeleine Stowe, Andie MacDowell, Bruce Davison, Peter Gallagher, Frances McDormand, Chris Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Matthew Modine, Julianne Moore, Tom Waits, Lily Tomlin, Annie Ross, Lori Singer
|
Genres: |
Drama, Indie-Arthouse Cinema
|
Origin: |
USA
|
Certificate: |
MA
|
Languages: |
English
|
Running Time: |
187 min
|
|
|
Using the short stories of Raymond Carver as a jumping-off point, Robert Altman weaves a tapestry of interlocking tales set against the seedy backdrop of contemporary middle-class Los Angeles. Tracking the various stages of denial, rage, and despair in the lives of several couples - a philandering cop and his masochistic spouse (Tim Robbins and Madeline Stowe); a helicopter pilot who gets revenge on his ex by trashing her house (Peter Gallagher and Frances McDormand); a man and woman whose perfect life falls apart when they lose their son in a hit-and-run accident (Bruce Davison and Andie MacDowell); a pool cleaner who listens in mounting frustration to his wife performing phone sex each day while tending her brood of children (Chris Penn and Jennifer Jason Leigh); a wealthy couple who are haunted by an incident from the past (Matthew Modine and Julianne Moore); an aging jazz singer and her suicidal daughter (Annie Ross and Lori Singer); an alcoholic limo driver and his waitress wife (Tom Waits and Lily Tomlin)--Altman reveals their common threads of family dysfunction and marital discord in the unforgiving glare of the Southern Californian sunlight. The result is a sweeping motion picture that also stands as an important sociological artifact of late 20th century Los Angeles life.
*MR
|
|
|
|
|
|
|