Microuse Available On Wireless Devices
Breaking News:
Jail for corrupt ex-Juventus boss
[20 mins]
Former Juventus football club general manager Luciano Moggi is sentenced to 18 months in prison for corruption.
Related stories:
Jail for millionaire boss of carjackers who sold and stole back vehicles up to SIX times
Gangs working to 'corrupt' Manitoba jail guards: Officials
~3 grouped stories
Serious Fraud Office launches UK probe into billionaire Madoff pyramid scheme
[44 mins][United Kingdom]
Investors and former employees will be quizzed after the Serious Fraud Office launched an investigation into the British activities of alleged fraudster Bernard Madoff.

SEARCH
HIDE
SORT BY PRICE
HIDE
selectedFeatured items

Panic

  add to cart
DVD:
List Price: $9.98
Price: $2.75
You Save: $7.23 (72%)
32 Merchants Used & new
Merchant: crimson_phoenix_tears
Condition: Used
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Panic

Editorial Reviews

1. Product Description
Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 09/05/2006 Run time: 93 minutes Rating: R


2. Amazon.com
When Sarah (Neve Campbell) strikes up a conversation with a sad-eyed man called Alex (William H. Macy) at her therapist's office, she asks, "Are you one of those middle-aged guys who's tired of his marriage and thinking maybe a beautiful young thing could help him out?" She's right, but the source of Alex's depression is far from typical: he's a second-generation hit man who wants out, but his mom and dad won't let him quit.

Donald Sutherland makes Alex's laconic and utterly monstrous father the most frightening parent since John Huston in Chinatown. A series of flashbacks show how he introduced Alex to his trade, beginning with shooting squirrels in the woods. We never find out whether Alex's father has mob connections, and the fact that it's just a business to him ("This one's a big job, lots of moola, I'll buy your mother a Lexus") makes him all the more chilling. Alex's mother (the steely Barbara Bain) knows all about the family business, but his wife (Tracey Ullman) thinks he runs a mail-order company, and the only person he confides in is a therapist (John Ritter). When he meets and falls for Sarah, Alex realizes that he alone can stand up to his father, and he needs to act before his own son becomes the next apprentice.

Henry Bromell's debut film as a writer-director probes the same dark corners of the middle-aged male psyche as American Beauty and The Sopranos. Alex's tormented life is a symbol of the damage that parents can inflict on their children, and Bromell imbues his story with a tragic inevitability. Panic received a shamefully limited theatrical release, in spite of its rare combination of a great script and brilliant performances. It deserves to be rediscovered and appreciated by a much larger audience on home video. -.-Simon Leake


Recently Found - Mobile - My Cart - About Us - Contact Us - Email This Page - Privacy Policy
View RSS Add to Microuse Feed Add to My Yahoo! Add to Google

©2009 Microuse. All Rights Reserved.