David Copperfield Movies

Roundly and justly considered the preeminent magician of the 20th century, David Copperfield (born David Kotkin) elevated illusionism to new spheres by mounting and pulling off stunning feats before live audiences that most deemed impossible. Copperfield (who did pull his stage name from the Dickens novel) specialized in massively scaled deceptions that included the disappearance of the Statue of Liberty and a bizarre feat in which the performer appeared to "walk through" the Great Wall of China. In time, Copperfield culled such a massive fan base that Forbes magazine indicated him the 13th highest paid performer in the world. Cinematically, he participated in the 1999 documentary Houdini: People Came to See Him Die, and directed, produced and headlined the 2000 performance film David Copperfield: Illusion. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
2000  
 
One of the most prominent names in magic in the latter half of the 20th century, David Copperfield has been wowing audiences with his grand-scale tricks and sleights of hand. Illusion compiles some of his "greatest hits" including: the disappearing Statue of Liberty, the vanishing airplane, the "imploding building," and walking through the Great Wall of China. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide

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1999  
 
Harry Houdini was performing in a circus with his wife when he began dreaming about an even bigger career. This film recalls the highlights of his career, including his 1912 stunt that established him as the world's greatest escape artist. In that instance, Houdini had himself lowered into New York's East River in a crate that was wrapped in chains. In less than a minute, he escaped and came to the surface as both an admired and famous man. Archival footage and dramatic re-creations performed by professional escape artist Bob Fellows allow viewers to revisit some of Houdini's major stunts. On-camera interviews with such people as illusionist David Copperfield, psychic claims investigator James Randi, and many others shed light on Houdini's performing techniques. Actor Mandy Patinkin narrates this probing looking into this performer's life. ~ Elizabeth Smith, All Movie Guide

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1998  
 
This two-hour TV entertainment special takes a surface skim (95 minutes minus commercials and promos) over the history of CBS, quickly skipping past decades of CBS radio to concentrate on CBS television from the late '40s to the present. It features more than a dozen hosts (Adam Arkin, Ed Bradley, Carol Burnett, David Copperfield, Roma Downey, Fran Drescher, Don Johnson, Angela Lansbury, David Letterman, Cheech Marin, Mary Tyler Moore, Dan Rather, Della Reese, Ray Romano, Jane Seymour) introducing a parade of primetime clips covering a variety of shows, events, and people -- Ed Sullivan, The Carol Burnette Show, 60 Minutes (Mike Wallace interviewing Barbra Streisand), Gunsmoke, The Honeymooners, Edward R. Murrow (his oft-seen editorial on Joe McCarthy), I Love Lucy, The Twilight Zone, The Waltons, Dan Rather reporting from Vietnam, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Green Acres, Dallas, Petticoat Junction, The Beverly Hillbillies, M*A*S*H, The Andy Griffith Show, Murphy Brown, the JFK assassination, and more -- with reminiscences from Tom and Dick Smothers, David Letterman (on Ed Sullivan), Larry Hagman (on "Who shot J.R.?"), Alan Alda, Ron Howard, Walter Cronkite, and others. At 95 minutes, these nostalgic nods, truncated tributes, and familiar faces might leave many viewers yearning for an archeological dig through the little-seen rarities and antiquities buried in the Museum of Television & Radio collection while waiting for the major networks to cover broadcasting history in depth. Premiered May 20, 1998 on CBS. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Adam ArkinEd Bradley, (more)
1980  
R  
Add Terror Train to QueueAdd Terror Train to top of Queue
Riding the coattails of the resurgent boom in horror films after the success of Halloween, Terror Train features teeth-chattering direction by Roger Spottiswoode and pristine cinematography from John Alcott. The story is the basic slasher film premise, remounted on a moving train. A college fraternity decides to hold a New Year's Eve party on a train. But an uninvited guest, a disturbed ex-fraternity member, decides to take revenge on the partying students by killing them off one by one in increasingly grisly fashion. On board the terror train is horror film perennial Jamie Lee Curtis, along with David Copperfield, and Ben Johnson as Carne the conductor, who tries to calm the women students by saying things like, "Now you young ladies stay up here --it's too dangerous down in that other car." ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ben JohnsonJamie Lee Curtis, (more)