Dave Murray Movies
This low-budget, independently produced film chronicles the summertime love affair between Abe, a black scrap-metal worker (Steve Ako), now unemployed, and Jess, his white former boss' daughter (Joeline Garner-Joel). The story is set in Liverpool, and makes extensive use of that locale. Jess moves in with Abe, but after she has gets pregnant and has a miscarriage, she gets depressed and leaves. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

- 1989
- PG13
- Add Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade to QueueAdd Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade to top of Queue
The third installment in the widely beloved Spielberg/Lucas Indiana Jones saga begins with an introduction to a younger Indy (played by the late River Phoenix), who, through a fast-paced prologue, gives the audience insight into the roots of his taste for adventure, fear of snakes, and dogged determination to take historical artifacts out of the hands of bad guys and into the museums in which they belong. A grown-up Indy (Harrison Ford) reveals himself shortly afterward in a familiar classroom scene, teaching archeology to a disproportionate number of starry-eyed female college students in 1938. Once again, however, Mr. Jones is drawn away from his day job after an art collector (Julian Glover) approaches him with a proposition to find the much sought after Holy Grail. Circumstances reveal that there was another avid archeologist in search of the famed cup -- Indiana Jones' father, Dr. Henry Jones (Sean Connery) -- who had recently disappeared during his efforts. The junior and senior members of the Jones family find themselves in a series of tough situations in locales ranging from Venice to the most treacherous spots in the Middle East. Complicating the situation further is the presence of Elsa (Alison Doody), a beautiful and intelligent woman with one fatal flaw: she's an undercover Nazi agent. The search for the grail is a dangerous quest, and its discovery may prove fatal to those who seek it for personal gain. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade earned a then record-breaking $50 million in its first week of release. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Harrison Ford, Sean Connery, (more)
A geeky accountant becomes a world class runner thank to a pair of magic sneakers. ~ All Movie Guide
Daring Canadian downhill skiers do their stuff in this look at the World Cup Ski season of 1979-80. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Canadian writer/director Murray Markowitz based his film Recommendation for Mercy on a true story. Andrew Skidd plays a teenaged boy accused of raping and murdering a young girl. The flimsy evidence is offered by three of Skidd's buddies and by one of the friends of the dead girl. The boy is strongarmed and drugged by the police who hope to extract a confession. Despite the civil-liberty outrages inflicted upon Skidd, he is found guilty. Recommendation for Mercy does not ask us to forgive the boy his alleged crimes; rather, it is a plea for a reassessment of the treatment afforded Canadian juvenile offenders. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Andrew Skidd, Karen Martin, (more)









