DCSIMG
 
 

Steve King Movies

1994  
 
A talk show host confronts his friend's murderer on live TV in this Italian psychodrama. Outspoken journalist Arnold Gardner was deeply upset by the death of a good friend in a Chicago hotel room. He believes his friend's death was involved in a recent deal with a TV network to become a talk show host. Despite the network's initial reservations, Gardner, known for his no-holds-barred reporting style, becomes his friend's successor. He becomes quite popular, but his rise is fraught with personal difficulties. He is divorced from an upper crust woman, but soon begins getting mail and phone calls from a nut in his Indiana hometown. Gardner, under tremendous pressure, offers the murderer a chance to call into his live call-in show. During the conversation it is revealed that twenty years ago both Gardner and the killer raped the same girl. The confrontation eventually ends in a shoot-out. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
Jason Robards IIIAmy Galper, (more)
 
1992  
PG  
Add The Babe to Queue Add The Babe to top of Queue  
John Goodman is cast as the Sultan of Swat, whose excesses -- especially drinking -- and private demons can (in this context) be excused in view of his genuine love of baseball. The facts never get in the way of a good story for screenwriter John Fusco; we're even offered the umpteenth rehash of "Little Johnny", the largely fanciful tale of the invalid boy who promises to get well if Babe hits him a homer (as in Pride of the Yankees, the cured Johnny makes return a appearance as grownup). The most amusing fabrication is the casting of narrow James Cromwell as the Babe's orphanage mentor Brother Mathias, who in real life weighed 300 pounds. Many of the characters are composites, notably Bruce Boxleitner's Jumpin' Joe Dugan. At least Ruth's two wives--Trini Alvarado as Helen, who suffers Babe's many peccadilloes and dies under strange circumstances, and Kelly McGillis as Claire, who keeps Babe on a very short leash-are depicted with a modicum of accuracy. The baseball sequences are well handled (though there could have been less slo-mo) while Elmer Bernstein's charmingly old-fashioned musical score is right in tune with the film's approach to its subject. The Babe is rated PG; had this been the whole truth and nothing but, and R rating would probably have been in order. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

Starring:
John GoodmanKelly McGillis, (more)