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TripleT
 
 
 
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  • Review count
    55
  • Helpfulness votes
    54
  • First review
    October 16, 2008
  • Last review
    July 4, 2009
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  • Average rating
    4.3
 
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TripleT's Reviews
<< 1 2 3 4 5 6
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Jimmy's best album
on July 1, 2009
Posted by: TripleT
from Grand Rapids, Michigan
Jimmy's best album makes it good to listen to. A booklet makes it nice to learn his history.
What's great about it: Many songs and a good booklet.
What's not so great: Artwork isn't great.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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Customer Rating
4 out of 5
4
Jimmy is hilarious.
on July 1, 2009
Posted by: TripleT
from Grand Rapids, Michigan
When Jimmy is live, he tells jokes and gets into the music with the crowd. He doesn't sound as good live compared to a studio.
What's great about it: Live.
What's not so great: Live.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Best reggae album ever!
on July 1, 2009
Posted by: TripleT
from Grand Rapids, Michigan
Bob Marley's mellow tone and influential music makes this album great to listen to on the beach, in the car or at your house.
What's great about it: Listening.
What's not so great: Not every song.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Awesome fantasy movie.
on July 1, 2009
Posted by: TripleT
from Grand Rapids, Michigan
The best King Kong movie yet. It contains many entertaining elements making it a good visual experience.
What's great about it: Great special effects.
What's not so great: It's three hours long.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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The "Complete Trilogy" is right. All three movies are here, and that would be a pretty full meal in itself, but along with the 339 minutes of movie on three discs -- all transferred about as well as anyone ever imagined they could be for the home screen, with bright, solid colors and resolution that reveals picture details that might have previously escaped viewers, plus ear-popping sound -- we also get ten hours of extra features. Each disc leads off its bonus section with a 14-minute making-of featurette, done at the time of each respective movie's release, about the evolution of ideas for the plots, the design of the sets and props, the way in which the score was conceived, and the makeup, casting, etc. None is revelatory, but it also would have been silly not to have included each in this package. Much more interesting is "The Making of the Trilogy," three new 15-minute featurettes in which the creators explain themselves better in all of the areas covered by the older featurettes, especially where the special effects and makeup are concerned, though each also reveals some superficiality in the thinking of the producers, such as Bob Gale's statement that no Hollywood movie had ever been built on the notion that every adult was once a kid (there's a movie called It's a Wonderful Life that spends a good bit of time on that very subject). Not that this matters -- the makers came up with two eminently enjoyable and one genuinely funny, touching movie, and it's fascinating to see how they did it, to learn that the movie was nearly sunk by its PG-rated orientation (with R-rated comedies like Fast Times at Ridgemont High making a fortune, every studio thought Back to the Future was too "soft," except for Disney, where they felt the script was too "dirty" because of the implication of defacto incestuous attraction between two of the characters), and to see how Michael J. Fox managed to get the lead role after shooting had already commenced with Eric Stoltz in the part. And then there are the sets of commentary tracks on each disc, one a live question-and-answer session by Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale before an audience of film students; another an "enhanced" interview with Michael J. Fox (who appears in a window in the upper right-hand corner of the screen) discussing the movie and his role in it; and a commentary track by Gale and Neil Canton, which is deliberately keyed to carry the viewer past the boundaries of the other two commentaries. Disc two contains a similar range of material, but without Fox's enhanced reminiscences; instead, we get a selection of some substantial outtakes from the movie, with the optional accompaniment of Bob Gale's commentary explaining why they were deleted, and an array of outtakes, including flubbed lines and cues. Disc three, in addition to two commentaries, contains one violent scene that was cut out of the third movie, with Gale's explanation of why. The commentary is a little bit thin by this time, as though the participants lost some of their own continuity, even engaging in some strained and limp humor that doesn't quite work. They do admit to an error in the script during the first ten minutes of the movie, but otherwise the remarks here are less focused, and seem to suffer from some of the same weariness that overtook the makers in shooting the third movie. Each disc is dual-layered and offers a seamless, invisible transition, even on older players. Each one opens to a three-tiered menu that is very easy to use, with bonus features that advance automatically on the selection list as they play out. There are also production stills, storyboards, conceptual art, and promotional and marketing materials presented in an interactive format, and each disc offers a DVD-ROM function (for those playing these discs on their computers) that includes the original script for each movie. These extras all may be a little bit more than the trilogy deserves in the total scheme of cinema -- none of the Back to the Future movies is remotely as significant as, say, The Birth of a Nation, Citizen Kane, etc. -- but it is all interesting to take in, one movie at a time, one day at a time, and enlightening about how important luck is, along with talent and bold intentions, in making a successful film (or two or three).
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
Great Movies
on October 16, 2008
Posted by: TripleT
Very good movies. Seen them many of times and they have never gotten old.
What's great about it: Everything is good in this movie; Acting, jokes, and plot are all great.
What's not so great: O.K. special features.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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