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Hurlyburly |
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his business partner, Mickey (Kevin Spacey). Whereas Eddie is generally manic and out-of-control, Mickey is the epitome of calm and cool. Despite their different personalities, Eddie and Mickey make a good team, both at work and at home. As the film opens, Eddie is jealous because Mickey has gone out with Darlene (Robin Wright Penn), whom Eddie has dated in the past. Sensing this jealousy, Mickey agrees to step aside so that Eddie and Darlene can attempt a relationship. Meanwhile, Eddie's friend Phil (Chazz Palminteri) has been kicked out of his house by his wife and is constantly hanging around Eddie's house. Phil, a would-be |
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As I mentioned in the opening, there are many well-known stars in “Hurlyburly” and it is this acting power which drives the film. Sean Penn gives a very intense performance as Eddie. Penn comes across as very believable, due to his bulging eyes and veiny temple. Penn has the most dialogue in the film and delivers it all in a desperate manner that makes us buy into Eddie's pain. Kevin Spacey (sporting bleached blonde hair) plays the ultra-cool Mickey to the hilt. Imagine Mickey as a silmy version of the character Spacey played in L.A. Confidential. Chazz Palminteri steals the film as Phil. In a film full of reprehensible characters, |
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The New Line Home Video DVD of “Hurlyburly” is packed with the quality and extras that we've come to expect from them. The film is presented in a letterboxed 1.85:1 format and is enhanced for 16x9 TVs. The picture is suitably framed, as Drazan's camera focuses mostly on people and not action. The picture is very clear and the color balancing is correct, rendering every shot very faithfully. Most of Eddie's house is white and the whites in the transfer are very true, not gray. There is no artifacting or scratches on the source print and the compression is very good. Small traces of pixelation are noticeable throught the transfer but no chroma noise is evident. The Dolby Digital 5.1 channel soundtrack supplied on the disc is adequate, but not very active, as this is a mostly dialogue driven film. |
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Brown, who focuses on the themes of the film. Penn's comments integrate so badly that it seems as if they were taken from an interview and then mixed in to match the film. Brown's comments generally have little to do with the on-screen action, while she focuses on what the film is "really" about, going so far to compare it to Macbeth (!?). During the silences on this commentary track, select musical cues are highlighted. While any commentary track is usually better than none, it's surprising that both of the commentary tracks on “Hurlyburly” are quite disappointing. |
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“Hurlyburly” is a perfect example of what can happen when people work together to make a product. The film succeeds by spotlighting the talents of its fine cast, and the DVD shines by showing the depth that the medium can have. Give it a try. |
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July 1999 |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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