0 comments
Published Tuesday, September 2, 2008 by Tatyanavvganqbjkvv.
No Dessert Dad, 'Til You Mow the Lawn- It is a movie that everyone can enjoy together.This is something not usually seen in movies of this type, so it makes it an unusual, yet pleasant experience.The movie is absolutely stunning and Joshua Schaefer deliver some award-winning performances in this movie. I also think Robert Hays was great!
I think Joshua Schaefer and Robert Hays worked wonderful in No Dessert Dad, 'Til You Mow the Lawn. The great supporting cast includes Joshua Schaefer, Robert Hays, Joanna Kerns, Allison Mack, James Marsden.
You should see it, make no mistake this is a definite blockbuster!
I left some information, immages, and video previews of No Dessert Dad, 'Til You Mow the Lawn below.
Summary of No Dessert Dad, 'Til You Mow the Lawn: The Cochran kids want parents! Not the workaholic, chain-smoking absentee wimps that brought them into the world. So when their mom (Joanna Kerns, TV's GROWING PAINS) and dad (ROBERT HAYES, AIRPLANE!) buy self-hypnosis tapes to try to kick the smoking habit, the kids see an opportunity. They doctor the hypnosis tapes with a few suggestions of their own, and suddenly, their parents are seriously cool, while everything else is totally wild.
Click on images below to see No Dessert Dad, 'Til You Mow the Lawn online :
Wildflower- To begin, this movie has a great beginning; it pulled me right into it.This is something not usually seen in movies of this type, so it makes it an unusual, yet pleasant experience.The action scenes are really great. Beau Bridges played his role great. Susan Blakely actually caught my interest.
I think Beau Bridges and Susan Blakely worked wonderful in Wildflower. The great supporting cast includes Beau Bridges, Susan Blakely, William McNamara, Reese Witherspoon, Patricia Arquette.
All in all, I would rate this movie an 8.5/10. I would definitely watch this movie again.
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Wildflower below.
Summary of Wildflower: Director Diane Keaton brings a tender touch to Wildflower, a Lifetime cable-TV movie showcasing early-career excellence from Reese Witherspoon and Patricia Arquette. Witherspoon's big-screen debut in The Man in the Moon had premiered shortly before this movie's original broadcast in 1991, and a year earlier, Arquette had starred in a Keaton-directed CBS Schoolbreak Special, The Boy with the Crazy Brother. These rising talents are well served by Sara Flanigan's teleplay, closely adapted from her popular juvenile novel Alice. Set in the mid-1930s, the story follows two compassionate teens (Witherspoon, William McNamara) who discover and essentially adopt a partially deaf epileptic (Arquette) who'd been locked away by her psychotically abusive father. Beau Bridges and Susan Blakely provide different parental perspectives, and while Keaton doesn't always avoid Flanigan's tear-jerking sentiment, she handles it with delicate grace. Aiding her are a gifted cast and the fine cinematography of Janusz Kaminski, who would soon begin an enduring collaboration with Steven Spielberg. --Jeff Shannon