Today in Chicago
Sunday
03.21.10
Overcast
39.0ºF

Your Messages and MailPersonals and MatchmakerJobs and CareersDance Music 24/7ShopProfilesProfilesProfilesProfiles
Join the Community! (free) or Login:     Password:    
View cart | Checkout


Lt. Dan Choi 
3/15/2010

Suzanne Westenhoefer 
3/10/2010

Shirely Jones 
3/3/2010

Joan Rivers 
3/3/2010

Steven Petrow 
2/24/2010

Patti LuPone 
2/17/2010

Sandra Bernhard 
2/10/2010

More Interviews

Books Music DVD Movies
  Search type

Keyword

Inventory

 

   
You have no items in your shopping cart




With Honors (Keepcase)
Warner Home Video
$12.98



The Emperor's Club (Widescreen Edition)
Universal Studios
$9.99



Dead Poets Society
Walt Disney Video
$14.99



Toy Soldiers
Sony Pictures
$9.95



Mrs. Winterbourne
Sony Pictures
$14.94



Gods and Monsters
Lions Gate
$14.98


  
School Ties
by Paramount

List Price: $9.98
Price: $8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $0.99 (9%)

Add this item to your shopping cart

DVD
FRASER,BRENDAN
Publisher: Paramount
Freddie Francis
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
Actors: Brendan Fraser, Matt Damon, Chris O'Donnell, Randall Batinkoff, Andrew Lowery

A young man from the wrong side of the tracks gets a football scholarship to a private school, which will lead to his entrance to Harvard. He is well accepted at the blue blood school until it is revealed that he is Jewish.
Genre: Feature Film-Drama
Rating: PG13
Release Date: 13-AUG-2002
Media Type: DVD

Brendan Fraser plays a student attending a wealthy boarding school on a football scholarship in the 1950s. When the other kids find out he's Jewish--a fact he's been hiding--his fortunes and relationships instantly change. The film is pretty much what one would expect with that scenario: a story of bigotry, conflict, the hero trying to hang on. In the end, good intentions are the driving force of the movie, but it is not much more than the sum of its obvious parts. Directed by Dick Wolf, creator of television's Law and Order. --Tom Keogh


Customer Reviews:
 
School Ties, an Unknown Gem
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
Any fans of Ben Afflack, Matt Damon, Chris O'Donnell or Brendan Frazier should enjoy this gem which was made before anyone had heard of any of them.

It is a sharp view of a world that was and hints into what still is.

AND as adorable as Matt Damon is, isn't it fun to see him in the part of a really bad guy?

Margo Arrowsmith

3 stars out of 4
Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 
The Bottom Line:

School Ties sometimes feels episodic and not all of its scenes work (the bit with the evil French teacher falls particularly flat) but the core of the film is an interesting and well-told story about a Jewish boy in a Christian prep school; rarely less than engaging, if not riveting, it's a decent film.

Great movie about racism, tolerance, and honor.
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
This movie is simply great. The cast is great, the story is great, the message is great.

Great movie, great seller
Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 
I really enjoy this movie, ton of great actors, great plot. The seller sent the movie in a timely manor allowing me to enjoy my movie shortly after I ordered it.

A complicated movie about a comlicated subject
Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 
Watch this movie, and then talk about it with people whom you respect. When the movie ends, we realize the story isn't really over. Cinematically this forces us to question what's going to happen next, and should beg discussion by the audience.

If you read the other reviews (especially the negative reviews) before watching this movie you'll probably wonder how this seemingly formulaic prep-school movie could be as good as it is. Well, here's the answer: the movie was not meant to be a feel-good family movie with a happy ending. Rather, it was meant to make you squirm just a bit, and in the end question how we in the USA could possibly have come to a point of relegating ANY race or group of people to second-tier status. The movie simply offers that reality in counterpoise with the supposedly perfect world of an upper-class prep school, but you and I know it's happening around us right now, where we live and where we work.

Another reviewer took the sexual low road and railed against the shower scene. However, consider this: every time these boys hit the showers (they were football players, after all) one could reasonably expect this could be the place David Green's secret is discovered. Also, in a group shower situation one's defenses are completely down - there is nothing behind which to hide. For those of us who have been in the locker room, who have been part of a close team, the scene works and there is no more effective (and poignant) place for what is really the first of 2 climactic scenes in the movie. The scene wasn't sexual; it was revealing as a double-entendre: David's secret is out, and he can no longer hide who he is.

This movie was meant to be watched and then discussed; it's still not over.

By the way -- I gave this movie 4 stars because it isn't perfect; and because Ben Affleck proves in this movie that "Gigli" is really just about as good as he is going to get.





Login | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Media Assets | Webmasters / RSS | Advertise

Sponsorship or Partnerships | Contact the Editor | Email the President | Press Inquiries | Contact Us

Become a fan of ChicagoPride.Com on FacebookBecome our friend on MySpaceBecome our friend on MyPrideBecome our friend on Twitter
Serving Boystown and Gay Chicago since 1995
© Copyright 1995-2010 All rights reserved. Info on this site is strictly for entertainment purposes.



03/21/2010 05:59P