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Empire Records (Remix: Special Fan Edition) by Allan Moyle
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DVD detailsActor: Anthony LaPaglia, Debi Mazar, Johnny Whitworth, Maxwell Caulfield, Rory Cochrane Director: Allan Moyle Brand: Warner Brothers Cinematographer: Walt Lloyd Producer: Alan Riche Producer: Arnon Milchan Producer: Michael G. Nathanson Producer: Paul Kurta Producer: Tony Ludwig Writer: Carol Heikkinen DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 5.1; English (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 5.1 Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.85:1 Running Time: 90 minutes DVD Release Date: 2003-06-03 Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: Warner Home Video
DVD Reviews of Empire Records (Remix: Special Fan Edition)DVD Review: Quirky, Offbeat Indie Film About Quirky, Offbeat Characters Summary: 4 Stars
Allan Moyle's EMPIRE RECORDS (1995) is pretty much as how I described it in the title of this review. Although it's essentially a comedy, it contains disparate elements that are off-putting at times. Still, it manages to work. The director, Allan Moyle, had previously directed the similarly uneven PUMP UP THE VOLUME (1990), which starred Christian Slater in a truly inspired and star-making performance. In this film, he directs an intersting combination of dependable character actors (Anthony LaPaglia and Maxwell Caulfield, both Australian actors playing Americans) and up-and-coming young actors who would eventually make it big (Renee Zellweger, Liv Tyler and Tobey Maguire), combines them into a quirky, often-meandering script---and somehow makes it all work. Here's the setup: In a large but independent record store (in Wilmington, Delaware, of all places), Empire Records, which has been around since 1959 (as the large neon sign out in front constantly reminds us & the store's customers), a trusted employee named Lucas (an inspired performance by no-name actor Rory Cochrane) is put in charge of closing the store one night by the responsible but boring store manager Joe Reaves (LaPaglia), when he experiences a kind of epiphany when he lets in a strange girl after Midnight (when the store closes, another fact of which the movie is always seeming to remind us). After a sort of weird conversation which essentially leads to nowhere, Lucas finds in the boss' office plans to sell Empire Records to behemoth Music Town. This will not do, and the now-philosophically-transformed Lucas decides to drive to Atlantic City, New Jersey with the store's $9,000 in the day's proceeds to hopefully win enough money to buy out the store and thus prevent it from being "sold out to the man." He puts it all on the line for a game of craps, winning on his first roll and doubling his stash to $18K. Feeling really lucky, he decides to do it again...and craps out. Dejected, and seemingly in shock, he returns back to the store, wondering how he'll explain it all to Joe. In the morning, well, let's just say that everything hits the fan...and then some! With fading pop star Rex Manning (Caulfield) scheduled to make an autograph-signing appearance that day, and lovestruck, seemingly innocent store employee Corey Mason (Tyler) practicing to meet and seduce him, and her (...) friend and fellow employee (Zellweger) with her own tricks up her sleeveless blouse, and a death-obsessed, head-shaving Goth fellow employee (Robin Tunney) who just plain has issues, and a 16-year-old pathological shoplifter who calls himself Warren Beatty, the pot is all stirred up on this day, after which you can be sure that none of the principals will ever be the same. I loved Anthony LaPaglia's nuanced performance, as a thirty-something guy in a position of authority who really feels just as put-upon as any of his employees, who wants to kill his thieving underling for betraying his trust, and yet can't help covering for his mistake and trying to help him. Indeed, Joe tries to be everyone's father figure while still haplessly trying to exert control over the situation. It shows yet again that Anthony LaPaglia is one of the most underrated actors in the world, even to this day. Also welcome is Renee Zellweger in a young, pre-JERRY MAGUIRE role in which she, surprisingly, takes on a bad-girl role and plays it very believingly (and gets some of the best lines in this film). She is one of my favorite actresses today, and this role shows that she had bigger and better things coming up ahead for her. Liv Tyler is fresh-faced, beautiful and just shining through in her role that is not quite as simple as it initally seems to be. Her interplay with Zellweger makes for some of the best scenes in this film. Also, Debi Mazar is good in her cynical role as Rex's publicist who secretly can't stand the self-obsessed jerk. Lastly, Tobey Maguire has a small role as a stoner named Andre that's good for a look. Whether or not you will like EMPIRE RECORDS just depends on whether or not you go for quirky, young-casted independent films...and also if you go for big 70's, 80's & 90's-filled rock'n'roll soundtracks, with diverse songs that permeate every scene. It also helps if you like Anthony LaPaglia, Renee Zellweger and Liv Tyler! I found it far more satisfying than the overrated John Cusack-starring-love-dud HIGH FIDELITY (2000). Although it has some fairly racy language and situations at times, EMPIRE RECORDS is a solidly PG-13 film that is appropriate for most kids over the age of 10. They're also sure to enjoy the music! RECOMMENDED
More Empire Records (Remix: Special Fan Edition) reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Description of Empire Records (Remix: Special Fan Edition)THE EMPLOYEES OF AN INDEPENDENT MUSIC STORE LEARN ABOUT EACHOTHER AS THEY TRY ANYTHING TO STOP THE STORE BEING ABSORBED BY ALARGE CHAIN. This story about a day in the life of an independent record store, truly a threatened species, screeches with the sound of teenagers falling apart emotionally every five minutes. The script, which feels like an old guy's idea of how kids talk and think, concerns the young employees of a Delaware music shop faced with imminent extinction. While the ship is sinking, the staff indulge in tantrums, depressions, and run-ins with low self-esteem. There's a lot of noise in this thing, but not a lot is really said. Rory Cochrane has the best part as a secretive guy who loses the store's proceeds one night while gambling, Anthony LaPaglia is the adult boss and unofficial dad to the others, Renée Zellweger plays a promiscuous girl, and Liv Tyler is OK as a lovestruck sweet thing trying to get up the nerve to express her feelings to a fellow employee. --Tom Keogh
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