Cheap Childstar (DVD) (Don McKellar) Price
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| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Don McKellar |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 11 June, 2005 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Sundance Channel Home Entertainment |
| MPAA RATING: | R (Restricted) |
| FEATURES: | Closed-captioned, Color, Widescreen, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Comedies, Comedy, Comedy Video, Feature Film-comedy, Movie |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 829567027424 |
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Customer Reviews of Childstar
Not bad entertainment Mark Rendall was excellent as the child star and showed he has some range. The film unfolds great catching me thinking it was going one way and it went another. That doesn't happen often and made it enjoyable for me. This is a lite comedy, so don't think is film is going to bust your gut, but I think most people will be entertained.
We're Just Doin' It for the Kids
What is it with Don McKellar and why do you keep seeing him in the movies? Does he represent some sort of Canadian triple threat like Orson Welles did in the USA? All through the two hours of CHILDSTAR I kept wondering about the casting agents who said, "A perfect fit for our Don McKellar!" To those of you who don't know who I'm talking about, he's in every Canadian movie that manages to cross the border to the US--the so called "nylon curtain." He's a little bit like Woody Allen, with his constant stream of backtalk and non sequiturs and that nerdy intellectual appeal. Except Don's more fit, almost like a real star, with a good figure and a hint of hard muscle. Opposite him, Jennifer Jason Leigh is more appealing than I've ever seen her in a movie, and she's beautiful too, almost as though she had some sort of plastic surgery of the soul, how old is she now, she's still young, but she's gorgeous here as the driven "stage mother" determined to prove the old cliche wrong.
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>Her little boy, Taylor Brandon Burns, is a huge US sitcom star who acts up on a fictional show called FAMILY DIFFERENCES as the son of omnipresent but goodhumored Alan Thicke. Toronto lures him with the promise of big screen glory as "The First Son" a ludicrous action movie aimed at tweens in which he gets to save the entire Western World and drive a fighter plane to rescue Dad, the POTUS, from a cabal of evildoers who have him tied up and riding a chair on Air Force One. If "The First Son" is more entertaining than the tired satire of CHILDSTAR, who says you have to choose? You get both movies and you get more of them than you want, anyhow.
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>I was like, WTF Don McKellar, but now I know he's good for me. Sign me up for whatever club he stands for.
This Star Does Not Shine
So-So story about a man's relationship with a less than pleasant child star and said child star's mother.
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>Like that old Dickie Roberts movie, it tries to say something about the plight of former and soon to be former child stars, but does not do a good job of it.
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>Mickey Rooney and Shirley Temple, where are you when we need you?
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