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Grand Canyon (1991)
Released By: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Lawrence Kasdan
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Alfre Woodard, Danny Glover, Kevin Kline, Mary McDonnell, Mary-Louise Parker, Steve Martin
Published ID: 1295
UPC: 024543012481,
Plot: Director Lawrence Kasdan's Grand Canyon is a gathering of random events, uniting the film's wildly divergent protagonists. Driving home from an LA Lakers game, Mack (Kevin Kline), an immigration attorney, is stranded in an unsavory part of town when his car breaks down. He is rescued from a gang of hoods by Simon (Danny Glover), an African-American tow truck driver, inaugurating a friendship between these two men. Mack offers to repay Simon's kindness by helping his sister (Tina Lifford) find an apartment in a better neighborhood, and by arranging a blind date between Simon and Jane (Alfre Woodard), a friend of Mack's secretary Dee (Mary Louise Parker). Woven into this fabric are the tribulations of Mack's best friend, a pompous exploitation movie producer (Steve Martin), who is later wounded in a robbery similar to the one threatening Mack at the beginning of the film; of Mack's wife Claire (Mary McDonnell), who adopts an abandoned baby, and disenfranchised son Roberto (Jeremy Sisto); and of Simon's nephew (Patrick Malone), who is contemplating joining a street gang. The title is symbolic, referring to the class-imposed chasms which would normally separate the characters. Kasdan co-wrote the screenplay with his wife Meg. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Misunderstood?
Added 10/1/2009

I've read a lot of negative reviews about this film, but I absolutely love it. Can't really tell you why - the music, the characters, the way all the characters mesh, the storyline. I also happen to love a few of these actors - Keven Kline, Steve Martin and Danny Glover, people who always make a film enjoyable for me, no matter what surrounds them. I guess I just want to say, if you've read a few negative reviews, please be aware that not everybody hates this film. You may want to give it a try, and you may actually enjoy it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
it's all about recognizing opportunities
Added 9/6/2009

The people who are blasting this film in their reviews as being pretentious are missing the whole point. The specific events in the movie are just examples - the movie is about the fact that all of us have opportunities presented to us all the time, and we can either grab them or let them pass by. The scene where Kevin Kline is teaching his son to make a left-hand turn in LA traffic is an in-your-face metaphor for this whole theme.

The Mary-Louise Parker character's story is an illustration of the flip side - she gets stopped by a cute, sympathetic cop, and our collective knowledge of movie romance says this is it, he's the perfect guy for her, but she fumbles the ball and lets the opportunity pass without grabbing it (or even recognizing that it's happening).

Don't get too caught up by whether the events in the movie seem 100% realistic (it is only a movie, after all) - just let the movie inspire you to think about the opportunities that come and go in your own life, and how the choices you make about them affect subsequent events in your life.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
I want those two hours of my life back.
Added 12/1/2008

I saw this movie in the theatre with some friends when it first came out. We barely made it through this train wreck without walking out. I immediately considered it to be among the worst movies I'd ever seen. How gratifying to see that many professional critics had the same sentiments. Long, boring, pretentious, PC, etc., etc. A torturous waste of time.
1 out of 4 people found this helpful.
Still A Great Movie
Added 12/1/2008

The movie Grand Canyon is still one of the most under-rated of all time. I just watched it again this evening for the first time in several years and it still hits home like a shot to the stomach. The actors (Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, Steve Martin) are phenomenal. Lawrence Kasdan tries to make sense of the world in a way that leaves you thinking for months after watching this movie. I originally saw this movie in the theaters when it was first released and it still, possibly more so, makes its point about all humans and their actions being intertwined with each other and how much we have in common is as important as our differences between one another.
A thought-provoking movie at its core, Grand Canyon is truly a great movie.

2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Saw the movie again after 17 years
Added 10/28/2008

Saw the movie again today. I did enjoy how the stories intersected. No matter what you think we are not islands. We do influence each other for good or for bad. I am not used to R rated movies anymore so the F-bombs and profanity was very offputting. The thing that I can reccomend without reservation is the soundtrack. It was still as awesome to the story as I remember. Put that on your i-pod and crank up the Bose speakers. Phenonmenal!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Misunderstood?
Added 10/1/2009

I've read a lot of negative reviews about this film, but I absolutely love it. Can't really tell you why - the music, the characters, the way all the characters mesh, the storyline. I also happen to love a few of these actors - Keven Kline, Steve Martin and Danny Glover, people who always make a film enjoyable for me, no matter what surrounds them. I guess I just want to say, if you've read a few negative reviews, please be aware that not everybody hates this film. You may want to give it a try, and you may actually enjoy it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
it's all about recognizing opportunities
Added 9/6/2009

The people who are blasting this film in their reviews as being pretentious are missing the whole point. The specific events in the movie are just examples - the movie is about the fact that all of us have opportunities presented to us all the time, and we can either grab them or let them pass by. The scene where Kevin Kline is teaching his son to make a left-hand turn in LA traffic is an in-your-face metaphor for this whole theme.

The Mary-Louise Parker character's story is an illustration of the flip side - she gets stopped by a cute, sympathetic cop, and our collective knowledge of movie romance says this is it, he's the perfect guy for her, but she fumbles the ball and lets the opportunity pass without grabbing it (or even recognizing that it's happening).

Don't get too caught up by whether the events in the movie seem 100% realistic (it is only a movie, after all) - just let the movie inspire you to think about the opportunities that come and go in your own life, and how the choices you make about them affect subsequent events in your life.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
I want those two hours of my life back.
Added 12/1/2008

I saw this movie in the theatre with some friends when it first came out. We barely made it through this train wreck without walking out. I immediately considered it to be among the worst movies I'd ever seen. How gratifying to see that many professional critics had the same sentiments. Long, boring, pretentious, PC, etc., etc. A torturous waste of time.
1 out of 4 people found this helpful.
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