|
|
Digital Cameras - Camcorders - Amazon Women on the Moon

|
List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $6.93
Your Save: $ 3.05 ( 31% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Universal Studios Starring: Stanley Brock, Corey Burton, Debbie Davison, Griffin Dunne, Steve Forrest Directed By: Peter Horton, Joe Dante, John Landis, Robert K. Weiss
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9780783209968 Format: Color ISBN: 0783209967 Label: Universal Studios Manufacturer: Universal Studios Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Universal Studios Release Date: 1998-03-10 Running Time: 85 Studio: Universal Studios Theatrical Release Date: 1987-09-18
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Amazon Women on the Moon a classic! Comment: If you are into off the wall comedies that have great appearances by many great and funny actors then this cult classic is right up your ally!
Customer Rating:      Summary: AMAZON WOMEN ON THE MOON Comment: I LOVED IT THE FIRST TIME I EVER SAW IT AND CONTINUE TO LOVE AND ENJOY IT!!!! IF IT ISN'T A CULT MOVIE, IT SHOULD BE!!!!! I HAVEN'T LAUGHED SO HARD IN A LONG TIME!!! IT'S FUN TO SHARE LINES FROM THE MOVIE WITH FRIENDS THAT KNOW THE MOVIE!!!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Stupid & funny Comment: Saw this movie years ago and thought it was great, stupid but great. We laughed through the entire movie. The amount of big name stars in this movie is amazing. This is a good Saturday night movie for anyone in the mood for old fashioned laughs.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Hilarious Comment: was so glad to see it on dvd. This movie allways gets laughs out of my wife and I. A must see.
Customer Rating:      Summary: NONSENSE WAS NEVER SO FUN! Comment: Balderdash doesn't get much better than this! Imagine 84 minutes of good Saturday Night Live episodes strung together and you have some idea of what's in store for you in Amazon Women.. These small segments are strung together by a Late Night "B" movie (Amazon Women On The Moon) that keeps getting interuputed by advertisements (which are themselves skits) due to 'technical difficulties'. It doesn't take long to get interested in this picture if you have a mind for parody and humor along the lines of say, "Airplane" in it's better moments. The skits and segments change fairly quickly, though some are like running jokes recurring throughout. It's good cheap fun, but fun it is! Like when the kid goes into the drugstore to buy condoms and the old grandfatherly clerk (also a friend of the family of course) says, "I'll bet I know what you want"
Kid: "You do?"
"Sure, I was young once.. Licorice sticks! They came in fresh this morning", he says, pulling one out from a jar.
"Mr Gower, I'm 17 years old!"
"Already? Seems like only yesterday your mom was in here buying talc to powder your little bottom!"
What follows after that could only be any teenagers nightmare.. But for us it's great fun..
This movie is recommended if you need a good laugh (or twenty) and can appreciate the ridiculous! And yes, as this film has more than it's fair share of 't&a', it might be time to put the kiddies to bed... hopefully your laughing won't wake 'em up.
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
Contrary to popular rumor, this 1987 collection of comedy skits is not about a group of female employees from Amazon.com on a mission to the lunar surface. It's a series of unrelated spoofs and sketches designed to resemble an aimless night of TV channel-surfing, and the satirical targets include grade-Z science fiction films of the 1950s, sex films of the 1930s, hospital soap operas, and Playboy video centerfolds. There's a charity drive in which legendary bluesman B.B. King pleas for donations to help "Blacks Without Soul," and Ed Begley Jr. thinks he's the son of the Invisible Man, which would be fine if he weren't as visible as everyone else. The various sketches feature an all-star cast including Rosanna Arquette, Griffin Dunne, Carrie Fisher, Michelle Pfeiffer, the late Phil Hartman in an early role, and many others. It's strictly hit-or-miss, and many of the sketches fall flat, especially since the subjects being spoofed (the title sketch is a send-up of the actual 1954 movie Cat Women on the Moon) are funny enough without being satirized. Even though Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide describes most of the sketches as "astonishingly unfunny," this can be a very amusing movie if you're in the mood for a no-brainer with a lot of familiar Hollywood faces. Now a modest little cult film, it's the kind of disposable entertainment that maintains its appeal almost in spite of itself. --Jeff Shannon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|