Mary Lou Retton Movies

2002  
 
Olympic gymnastics champion Mary Lou Retton is your host for this episode of the children's television series Mary Lou's Flip Flop Shop, which aims to encourage better health for kids of both the body and the mind for kids. In Mary Lou's Flip Flop Shop: Sharing Our Feelings, Mary Lou's friend Mr. Bump arrives with an armload of boxes for the children, and when each child opens a box, they find themselves expressing a different emotion. We soon learn that the boxes represent feelings, and that it's important to understand our own feelings, as well as those of others; we also learning the importance of being able to share our feelings with our close friends. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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2002  
 
Hosted by 1984 Olympic champion gymnast Mary Lou Retton, the live-action PBS children's series Mary Lou's Flip Flop Shop encourages kids to develop healthy active lifestyles. In this episode, "Shaping Our Self-Confidence," Mary Lou teaches her friends about being "number one." Jumpy cuts in line and learns about the importance of friendship. Blake tries out for the swim team and learns about believing in yourself. Mary Lou closes the show with a Christian message and a reminder to honor your community service leaders. This series is designed for preschool and elementary kids aged four to seven. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

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1994  
PG13  
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The further misadventures of bumbling Los Angeles police Lieutenant Frank Drebin (Leslie Nielsen) are chronicled in this third installment in the popular Naked Gun comedy series. This by-the-numbers entry begins with Drebin as a happily retired house-husband called back into action when an evil terrorist organization threatens Los Angeles. As in the other Naked Gun films, this plot is merely an excuse for an unhinged, rapid-fire succession of gags, ranging from satirical lampoons of cop movies to broad slapstick, all played with a perfectly straight face. Nielsen provides his familiar combination of complete witlessness and oblivious dignity as Drebin, and the film attempts to match the earlier Naked Gun films -- and the Police Squad! television series that inspired them -- in the number of jokes. However, the film proved less successful than its predecessors, as some viewers found that the freewheeling comic style of the earlier films had solidified into its own formula, now mildly entertaining but disappointingly predictable. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Leslie NielsenPriscilla Presley, (more)
1988  
PG13  
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A darkly comic and surreal contemporization of Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol, this effects-heavy Bill Murray holiday vehicle from 1988 sees the former SNL funnyman assuming the role of television executive Frank Cross, the meanest and most depraved man on earth. Cross will stoop to unheard of levels to increase his network's ratings -- even if it means mounting outrageous programs to retain an audience, such as "Robert Goulet's Cajun Christmas" and Lee Majors in "The Night the Reindeer Died," with an AK-47-toting Santa. Cross plots his foulest move, however, for the Christmas holiday, when he will force his office staff to mount a live production of A Christmas Carol on national television -- and thus work through Christmas Eve. Cross's life is turned upside down with visits from three ghosts: a craggy-faced cabbie known as The Ghost of Christmas Past (David Johansen); the sugar-plum fairy Ghost of Christmas Present (Carol Kane) (who gets her jollies by bonking Frank across the face with a toaster oven); and, eventually, the caped, headless Ghost of Christmas Future, who will send Frank sliding into a crematory oven -- just before he gives the sleazoid one last chance to redeem himself. Along the way, the spirits carry Frank to scenes from his past, present, and future (per Scrooge) and impart a glimpse of how he became so thoroughly rotten. The radiant Karen Allen co-stars as Frank's girlfriend, Claire Phillips, and the film packs in cameos from countless celebrities -- among them, Mary Lou Retton, John Houseman, Jamie Farr, and, in a truly grisly and tasteless bit, John Forsythe. Richard Donner directs, from a script credited to the late Michael O'Donoghue and Mitch Glazer. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bill MurrayKaren Allen, (more)

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