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Greetings [1968] | ![Greetings [1968]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51QNFEVESSL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Brian De Palma Actors: Robert De Niro, Gerrit Graham, Jonathan Warden, Allen Garfield Studio: Cinema Club Category: DVD
List Price: £9.99 Buy New: £6.82 You Save: £3.17 (32%)
New (3) from £6.82
Rating: 3 reviews
Format: Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over Region: 2 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 87 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5014138293925 ASIN: B000087I33
Theatrical Release Date: 1968 Release Date: March 10, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: This item is *Brand New* - Well packaged to arrive safely and quickly * Please Check Region Code Before Buying * More CDs More DVDs More Games at Lower Prices - at Morediscs * We ship from the UK in 2
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Brilliant, Subtle Jokes and Situation Comedy August 10, 2000 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
The film was not what I expected it to be, but I was not disappointed by it at all. The film was about three friends, one a hopeless romantic trying out computer dating, another obsessed with the JFK assassination and the third (De Niro) a perverted film maker. The film also had an irelivent sub plot involving Vietnam. The film although giving the impression of un-proffessional at first, still delivered the subtle jokes and had a range of situation jokes. It also had a good, funny ending. After watching it the first time, I rewound it to watch it again. But De Niro fans be patient, as his role doens't excel until half way through.
Not Bad October 17, 2003 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
This film has the foundations to be a good movie but lacks the'X' factor considerably. Robert De Niro deliver a performance which is not to his usually standard, but still makes viewing that bit more entertaining. This film is definately for you if you are an American nationalist but if your any other sane person it may lack to much depth to buy on DVD. A worthy watch if you found the video in the street perhaps, but 9.99 could be a good contribution towards De Niro's better films such as Taxi Driver (the greatest film of all time) or Casino (one of Martin Scorsese's best films)
The comedic side to De Palma November 13, 2007 Jenny J.J.I. (That Lives in Northern Nevada) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
So this is what happened to a high-spirited, talented director who could in 1968 co-write, direct and edit this movie for $39,985 (I know I could of just rounded it out) yet 30 years later made Mission: Impossible? With this, his 3rd film, he was well entrenched in an underground style of low budget works with an element of humor and a vigour that was exciting in its own right, not for what it gorily displayed. Depalma introduces us to three friends through a series of New York-based sketches that bear only tenuous relation to each other; if not for the film's intense forward velocity, all the raw materials would certainly fall apart. Paul (Jonathan Warden) is trying to dodge the draft while testing the waters of computer dating; Jon (Robert De Niro) is giving "amateur" filmmaking a shot; and Lloyd (Gerrit Graham) is a JFK conspiracy nut trying to ferret out the truth of the assassination. The three are introduced in a lengthy, bravura sequence where Lloyd and Jon provide increasingly ridiculous draft-dodging advice as they shift venues: from a clothing store to a zoo, a random apartment, a public bathroom and finally a bar. The first half-hour neatly captures a sense of early twenties aimlessness, where hanging out--wherever--is an end in itself; it's jovial and feels at times not unlike Godard's Band of Outsiders. Even though the "Greetings" theme song, a jangly Byrdsian creation, quickly negates the gravity of the opening LBJ Vietnam clip, the war hangs heavily over the film. (Hearing a president speak in 1968 about fighting terror abroad to help secure the homeland gave me chills.) "I'm not saying you never had it so good, but that is the case isn't it?" says LBJ, and the three draft-concerned friends do their best to prove him right. The sight of a young mustachioed Robert De Niro gallivanting through Central Park and goosestepping through the Lower East Side trying to figure out just how great of an actor he might one day become should be enough to warm the heart of even the most hardened cinephile. And De Palma himself is no slouch here, taking time to skewer the art world, tenuous race relations, JFK conspiracy nuts, the dating scene, radical liberalism, and the city of New York's own innate pretensions. Paul manages to dodge the draft by playing gay, but Jon's not so lucky. His plan to pose as an extremist arch-conservative with bloodlust only rendered him more worthy of the military, forcing him to abandoned his burgeoning "Peepers and the Peep" avant-porn masterwork Even if the film loses a bit of steam mid-way through, Greetings' coup de grace comes in an obviously staged Vietnam by way of Long Island where a newsman hooks up with a rifleman on the front line--none other than Jon Rubin. In the course of the interview Jon captures a young Vietnamese girl, seats her in front of the news camera and begins restaging his "Peepers" film as De Palma intercuts footage from the original taken in a Manhattan bedroom, effectively thumbing his nose at his audience, and the political priorities of the day. I thought the cast (at the time) were fresh and in tune with his anarchy. He uses the story of a draft-dodger with an ingenious line in excuses to present a portrait of late-60s society. Rough and ready compared with later films, but minus the cynicism and contempt of those glossy works.
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