Ron Silver

  • John Herzfeld – A Father’s Revenge (1988)

    1981-1990ActionDramaJohn HerzfeldUSA

    imdb:
    German terrorists kidnap the crew of an aeroplane as they leave the airport. The terrorists demand the release of two of their colleagues, who are to be extradited to the USA. The father of one of the stewardesses decides he can no longer wait for diplomacy, and so flies out to Germany. There, frustration leads him to hire a former SAS counter-terrorism expert. Together they hunt down the terrorists.Read More »

  • Geoff Murphy – Blind Side (1993)

    1991-2000Geoff MurphyMysteryUSA

    A couple visits Mexico to scout a new location for their furniture manufacturing business and hit a cop with their car on the way back stateside. Realizing that if they report it they could land in a Mexican jail (guilty until proven innocent) they clean up the car and return home. A few days later an insistent man shows up wanting a job and insinuating that he saw something in Mexico that he would not want to report, and the couple must make a decision about how far they will allow themselves to be blackmailed.Read More »

  • Barbet Schroeder – Reversal of Fortune [+ Commentary] (1990)

    1981-1990Barbet SchroederDramaMysteryUSA

    Wealthy Sunny von Bülow lies brain-dead, husband Claus guilty of attempted murder; but he says he’s innocent and hires Alan Dershowitz for his appeal.

    Letterboxd review by chavel ★★★★★
    An aerial shot that opens is like no other, it starts overlooking over the exclusive Easton Bay and then turns upwards, with the shot swooping over estate after estate in ritzy Rhode Island for nearly a minute. In an overhead shot, these are the richest looking houses you’ve ever seen, property after property, perfectly, lushly landscaped.Read More »

  • Sidney J. Furie – The Entity (1981) (HD)

    1981-1990HorrorSidney J. FurieThrillerUSA

    Based on a supposedly true story, a woman is tormented and sexually molested by an invisible demon.

    Quote:
    This big budget entry from the early ’80s horror boom is one of the most underrated of that genre. The Entity succeeds despite potentially exploitative subject matter because it tells its story in a serious, respectful style. Frank de Felitta’s script devotes as much time to building three-dimensional characters and detailing the inner workings of psychology and parapsychology as it does creating shocks.Read More »

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