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Neil Diamond Movies

Popular singer Neil Diamond has occasionally appeared in film. He debuted onscreen in The Jazz Singer (1980). ~ Rovi
2007  
 
Add The Best of the Johnny Cash TV Show, 1969-1971 to Queue Add The Best of the Johnny Cash TV Show, 1969-1971 to top of Queue  
The Best of the Johnny Cash Show captures a number of memorable performances from the variety show hosted by the country music legend. This collection includes performances by Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison, Neil Young, Ray Charles, Pete Seeger, and Creedence Clearwater Revival. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Kris Kristofferson
 
2001  
PG13  
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This romantic comedy is from director, former actor, and regular Adam Sandler collaborator Dennis Dugan. Darren Silverman (Jason Biggs) is a loser at love, so his best friends J.D. (Jack Black) and Wayne (Steve Zahn) set him up on a date with his dream girl, Judith (Amanda Peet). A serious relationship develops and threatens to become a marriage, but J.D. and Wayne come to the conclusion that Judith is totally wrong for Darren. In an effort to reunite their pal with Sandy (Amanda Detmer), his long-lost love from school, they kidnap Judith. However, the wily bride to be is at least one step ahead of her captors in the wits department. Saving Silverman also stars R. Lee Ermey and Neil Diamond in a cameo role as himself. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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Starring:
Jason BiggsSteve Zahn, (more)
 
1992  
 
Since the 1960s, singer and songwriter Neil Diamond has been entertaining audiences with his blend of music that has transcended the pop, country, and gospel genres. In this video the charismatic performer sings some classic Christmas tunes in his signature style, including "I'll Be Home for Christmas," "Jingle Bells," "O Holy Night," "When My Heart Finds Christmas," "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town," "Silent Night," "Morning Has Broken," "Merry Christmas (War Is Over)," "Little Drummer Boy," "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," "O Come, O Come Emmanuel", "We Three Kings of Orient Are," "White Christmas, and "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen." ~ Forrest Spencer, Rovi

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1988  
 
Add Neil Diamond: Greatest Hits Live to Queue Add Neil Diamond: Greatest Hits Live to top of Queue  
One of America's most popular singers and songwriters, Neil Diamond performs 18 of his biggest hits in this 1988 concert filmed in Los Angeles. Selections include I Am, I Said, Sweet Caroline, Cherry, Cherry and You Don't Bring Me Flowers. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1986  
R  
Add Something Wild to Queue Add Something Wild to top of Queue  
A wildly inventive and entertaining comic nightmare from former Roger Corman prodigy Jonathan Demme (The Silence of the Lambs), this screwball odyssey is a ride to remember. Jeff Daniels plays clean-cut New York bond trader Charlie Driggs, who accepts a ride home from a strange but attractive lower-class woman named Lulu (Melanie Griffith). The sexy Louise Brooks lookalike doesn't take him home, but shanghais him for a bizarre roadtrip to Virginia that includes kinky bondage sex, destruction of property, and robbery. Things get stranger when Lulu tells Charlie that her real name is Audrey and takes him home to meet her mother, asking him to pose as her husband. The charade continues until her high-school reunion, where the roadtrip (and the entire film) takes a sharp U-turn into psycho-thriller territory. Audrey's dangerously psychotic ex-con husband, Ray Sinclair (Ray Liotta), shows up. What had been a liberating fling for Charlie turns into a bloody and vicious battle for survival. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
Jeff DanielsMelanie Griffith, (more)
 
1980  
PG  
Add The Jazz Singer to Queue Add The Jazz Singer to top of Queue  
Pop singer Neil Diamond stars in this ill-begotten second remake of Al Jolson's seminal 1927 musical The Jazz Singer. The moth-eaten story concerns a cantor's son who desires success as a pop singer, despite the wishes of his imperious father. The film takes place in the present day with Yussel Rabinowitz (Neil Diamond) playing a young (though middle-aged looking) cantor performing at the synagogue of his father (Laurence Olivier). Yussel is married and has settled down to a life of religious devotion to the teaching of his fath. But on the side, he writes songs for a black singing group, and when a member of the quartet takes ill, Yussel covers for him at one of their gigs by wearing blackface! The nightclub engagement is such a success that Yussel abandons his family -- and his father's synagogue -- and leaves his New York home for Los Angeles, hoping to break into the music business. Almost immediately he is spotted by spunky agent Molly Bell (Lucie Arnaz), who books him as an opening act for a touring comic. Yussel hits it big, but his father resents Yussel's forsaking their traditional Jewish ways. His father disowns him, rending his garments and bellowing, "I hef no son!" ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

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Starring:
Neil DiamondLaurence Olivier, (more)
 
1978  
PG  
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Martin Scorsese's documentary of the 1976 final performance of the legendary Sixties rock group The Band is at once a show featuring some of the greatest rock performers of their generation and a bittersweet look back at an era that was just beginning to fade. As Scorsese guides the group through interview segments discussing their 15 years together, these relatively young men sound like battle-weary survivors. But The Band were in splendid form for this show, and their multiple guest stars pulled out all the stops, especially Muddy Waters, whose "Mannish Boy" is so powerful it nearly burns a hole in the screen; Van Morrison, with a rousing performance of "Caravan;" and Bob Dylan, whose "Baby Let Me Follow You Down" displays the brilliant cockiness of his barnstorming days with this band. The all-star camera crew and superb stereo sound mix create what is considered to be of the best-looking and sounding rock films ever (as the opening credit says, play this movie loud!), and two studio-shot sequences with Emmylou Harris and The Staple Singers stand on their own. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Bob DylanJoni Mitchell, (more)
 
1976  
 
Since the 1960s, singer and songwriter Neil Diamond has been entertaining audiences with his blend of music that has transcended the pop, country, and gospel genres. In this live-concert recording Neil Diamond sings many of his classic songs at Los Angeles' famed Greek Theater, including "Beautiful Stranger," "If You Know What I Mean," "Kentucky Woman," "Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good)," "Stargazer," "Song Sung Blue," "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show," "Surviving the Life," "Glory Road," "Jonathan Livingston Seagull," "Street Life," "Lady Oh," "I've Been This Way Before," "Holly Holy," "I Am...I Said," and "Play Me." ~ Forrest Spencer, Rovi

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1976  
 
This Neil Diamond concert video captures a 1976 performance. The setlist features well over a dozen favorites including "Son Sung Blue," "Cracklin' Rosie," "Solitary Man," and "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show." ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Neil Diamond
 
1973  
G  
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Hal Bartlett co-wrote and directed this film curiosity, based on Richard Bach's best-selling fable, featuring an overbearing music score by Neil Diamond. The story begins as a flock of seagulls are pecking at the garbage left by a boat that has dumped a bunch of fish heads in the surf. One of the seagulls, Jonathan (voice of James Franciscus), would rather leave his life of garbage-picking and fly high in the sky to see other parts of the earth. Jonathan leaves the flock and flies around the world. He travels so far that he reaches an aviary heaven, where he meets Maureen Seagull (voice of Juliet Mills). Maureen introduces Jonathan to new experiences, and Jonathan returns to the flock to tell them the news. The other seagulls scorn him, but then they take notice when he heals a seagull that has died. Then the entire flock greets him as "the Son of the Great Gull." ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

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1970  
PG13  
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Paul Newman served as co-producer of this allegorical drama and stars as Rheinhardt, a opportunistic drifter who ends up in New Orleans and hits up his old friend Farley (Laurence Harvey), a con man-turned-phony preacher, for a job. Farley is able to get Rheinhardt hired on as an announcer at a local radio station, WUSA, but the station is a right-wing propaganda mill that devotes its air time to venomous tirades against political and social progress. Rheinhardt is happy to be making decent money, and he makes the friendly acquaintance of a local working girl, Geraldine (Joanne Woodward), so he refuses to look his gift horse in the mouth. However, when he finds out that WUSA is actually involved in shadowy political actions, he is at a loss for what to do, especially after a naïve and troubled social worker (Anthony Perkins) is tricked into starting a race riot. Robert Stone wrote the screenplay, adapted from his novel A Hall of Mirrors. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Paul NewmanJoanne Woodward, (more)