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virginia-classifieds.net - Grim Prairie Tales
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List Price: $14.99
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Your Save: $ 14.99 ( 100% )
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Manufacturer: Academy Home Entertainment Starring: James Earl Jones, Brad Dourif, Will Hare, Marc McClure, Michelle Joyner Directed By: Wayne Coe
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786301879408 Format: Color ISBN: 6301879406 Label: Academy Home Entertainment Manufacturer: Academy Home Entertainment Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Academy Home Entertainment Release Date: 1992-12-09 Running Time: 86 Studio: Academy Home Entertainment
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Interesting and different, but not exactly grim Comment: For such a distinguished actor, James Earl Jones has made some really forgettable movies, and I would count Grim Prairie Tales among them. This 1990 anthology piece seems to have garnered decent reviews, but I personally can't see how this movie could impress anyone. Just because it's different - a horror/Western anthology which eschews the standard formula of "it is the story, not he who tells it" (i.e., the two storytellers are more interesting than the stories they tell) - doesn't mean it's very good. Without the overpowering presence of James Earl Jones as an uncouth, darkly mysterious range ride, I daresay Grim Prairie Tales would border on the unbearable.
Brad Dourif plays Farley Deeds, a squirrelly-looking, city slicker-type who looks and dresses like he should be running away from the Headless Horseman rather than traveling alone through the desert. He's all set to turn in for the night when a stranger disturbs the peace and quiet of his little campsite - a veritable mountain of a man with a strange air about him whom Deeds doesn't exactly welcome with open arms (in his defense, the stranger does arrive with a dead guy draped over the back of his horse). Morrison (Jones) is a strange one, but the two eventually bluff and argue their way into a round of storytelling. Aha, you say, this is where that whole "horror" part kicks in, especially when both fellows start talking about stories that will make bats fly out of your ears. Well, I hate to break it to you, but an impressionable five-year-old kid wouldn't take fright over anything these stories have to offer.
Morrison opens up with a story about some old coot who foolishly decides to cross over an Indian burial ground at night, followed up by a strange tale of "a good man" who comes to the aid of a pregnant woman out wandering alone. Given the campiness of the second story in particular, Deeds thinks he can do better and gives us a sort of morality tale in which a wife and daughter try to deal with the father's participation in a monstrous human act - unfortunately, the rather dark print of the film leaves you a little unsure of the specifics of that act. Morrison, obviously more impressed than I was with Deeds' story, then sets out to top it with the story of a gunslinger haunted by one of his victims.
Morrison and Deeds are much more interesting than the stories they tell, but I didn't find these two men all that riveting. Their exchanges are far too theatrical to make me forget I'm watching a movie - James Earl Jones is great, but Dourif seems to spend most of his time over-acting. With its anthology angle, Grim Prairie Tales is certainly different, but I found the movie to be average at best.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A terrific study of a growing friendship posing as a horror story Comment: Those expecting this movie--which should be on DVD--to scare them will go away disappointed. None of the stories the two men tells is particularly frightening. What they are, though, are insights into the moral character of the men telling the stories. And, what makes this film so good is the dead body sitting on James Earl Jones' horse while the two men joust across the campfire.
From the beginning we identify with Brad Dourif's nervous city slicker crossing a lonely expanse. When bounty hunter James Earl Jones arrives with a person he has killed, we "know" who we're supposed to root for. Yet, as the stories progress and the interaction between Jones and Dourif's characters deepens, we come to see that their moral positions are not as black and white as things might seem. And the final scene really emphasizes the moral ambiguity of both men.
All this is played out in an atmospheric, if low-budget, landscape. This is a very subtle and appealing movie that repays repeated watching. It is extremely well acted by the two leads, and each of the characters in the 4 stories within stories are also well drawn.
All in all, an absorbing way to spend an evening.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Grim is the word for it! Comment: I just watched the movis "Grim Prarie Tales" What can I say but totaly awsome!! This movie had me on the edge of my seat. Why can't they make good movies like this anymore???
Customer Rating:      Summary: Not on DVD? No ratings? Comment: How did this get overlooked? This is a very worthy movie, consisting of Brad Dourif and James Earl Jones playing two travellers sharing a campfire in the old west, and sharing stories of a rather unusual bent. Dourif is the city slicker type, taken aback by Jone's turn as a rough and tumble mountain man. But he has an ace up his sleeve, in the form of a story. It's just for fun, and it is. Any movie fancier should see this at least once. I don't understand the low profile.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Flawed Anthology Comment: The problem with most anthologies is that you cannot put much characterization into them, and some stories are just plain better than the others. Dourif and Jones' storytelling antics were more entertaining than the stories they told, it was nice not to have Jones sitting behind a desk somewhere bellowing in his famous voice. Here, he MOVES, and is very good. The finale leaves something to be desired, I only slightly recommend this film.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Writer-director Wayne Coe's low-budget anthology is not as scary as its title or packaging would have you believe, but it is a charming effort nonetheless. Brad Dourif and James Earl Jones star as a city slicker and a bounty hunter who meet at night on a quiet prairie and end up swapping stories by the campfire. Since the four tales are part of a slowly building competition between the two men, they become progressively more gruesome. The two most memorable revolve around a grotesque gunfight and its aftermath, and a wandering prairie woman with a bizarre appetite. Ultimately the stories are mood pieces rather than outright scare fare, but they are absorbing, and the connecting scenes with Dourif and Jones are so energetically played out that you forget how calculated some of their exchanges are. --Bryan Reesman
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