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TechnoTV - Midnight Cowboy

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List Price: $14.95
Our Price: $3.00
Your Save: $ 11.95 ( 80% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD) Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Jon Voight, Sylvia Miles, John McGiver, Brenda Vaccaro Directed By: John Schlesinger
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: X (Mature Audiences Only) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9780792838487 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 0792838483 Label: MGM (Video & DVD) Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD) Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD) Release Date: 1998-04-14 Running Time: 113 Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Theatrical Release Date: 1969
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: 3.5 stars out of 4 Comment: The Bottom Line:
Marred only by the fact that the numerous flashback sequences are more confusing than anything else, Midnight Cowboy is an excellent and poignant urban drama whose datedness has not diminished its power.
Customer Rating:      Summary: check your prices Comment: I paid 13.99 then went to Target.... 8.99. Wish I would have done my homework.
Customer Rating:      Summary: People: no one cares what you think of the movie, could SOMEONE discuss the PRODUCT e.g. special features for gawd's sake?!?! Comment: Seriously, nobody needs you to tell them Midnight Cowboy is a classic film, and even fewer nobodies care if you didn't "get it." The main purpose of an Amazon review, certainly of as well-known a title as this, is to discuss the product at hand -- namely the video and audio remastering, the bonus disc and special features here -- so that other customers can make an informed decision about whether to order it or not. So please -- somebody -- review THIS DVD, not the movie!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Depressing but powerful look into the all too human Comment: *** spoilers ***
Joe Buck is a guy who has a little too much confidence in his sexual prowess. He decided in his optimism to make a run to New York to become a hustler for rich women. He's in for a surprise as the only people into his cowboy schtick is the homosexual underground. He quickly becomes a victim to a seedy man by the name of Rico. and in a circumstantial set of events run into each other again and become roommates.
In and of themselves, the actions of these two towards everyone they meet is despicable, but fits well with how the people treat each other in general in the city. Joe gets a rude awakening when he sees a man passed out in the middle of the sidewalk and no one interested in helping the man out. Joe and Rico steal money, addresses, try to take advantage of the lonely, but as their relationship progresses they commit these acts for the sake of the other person.
This culminates in the end, as Joe beats a man and takes his money to get bus fare so himself and a terminally ill Rico can go to Florida. The ending is depressing but to be expected.
In all, a testament to the bonds of friendship, even amongst thugs, and the terrible paths they take as they have nothing to lose. No character in itself is really redeemable in this movie, only the incredible bond between two human beings.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Disappointed after I finally saw it - Midnight Cowboy Comment: What a let-down. I had never seen the orginal movie in 1969 - finally bought it and was really disappointed in the overall movie. I really didn't see what the fuss was all about. Jon Voight and especially Dustin Hoffman gave terrific performances but I thought the movie style was really odd (was probably very cool at the time) and overall was very disappointed when I finally viewed it. Watched it once, will never watch it again probably.
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Editorial Reviews:
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The first, and only, X-rated film to win a best picture Academy Award, John Schlesinger's Midnight Cowboy seems a lot less daring today (and has been reclassified as an R), but remains a fascinating time capsule of late-1960s sexual decadence in mainstream American cinema. In a career-making performance, Jon Voight plays Joe Buck, a naive Texas dishwasher who goes to the big city (New York) to make his fortune as a sexual hustler. Although enthusiastic about selling himself to rich ladies for stud services, he quickly finds it hard to make a living and eventually crashes in a seedy dump with a crippled petty thief named Ratzo Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman, doing one of his more effective "stupid acting tricks," with a limp and a high-pitch rasp of a voice). Schlesinger's quick-cut, semi-psychedelic style has dated severely, as has his ruthlessly cynical approach to almost everybody but the lead characters. But at its heart the movie is a sad tale of friendship between a couple of losers lost in the big city, and with an ending no studio would approve today. It's a bit like an urban Of Mice and Men, but where both guys are Lenny. --Jim Emerson
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