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SCTV: Volume 4

SCTV, though, has a higher batting average than most sketch comedies. The latest DVD set chronicles one of the series’ later years, but it’s still got plenty of laughs. There is the occasional skit (or episode) that completely falls dead, but most of these pack enough laughs still to merit your viewing.

Inside Deep Throat

In June 1973, the Nixon appointee-loaded Supreme Court reorganized the obscenity laws. Law enforcement began cracking down. At the same time, the Mafia, the film argues, got involved in adult film distribution. By the mid-1970’s, the feds decided to prosecute Harry Reems. The prosecutor? Larry Parrish, a former preacher. Parrish implemented, as Alan Dershowitz called it, “a very creative use” of the…

Lord of War

Yuri Orlov (Nicolas Cage) is part of a machinery without a conscience: The arms industry. To illustrate, I think, the soullessness of this machinery, the film opens with a vignette about the birth, life and death of a bullet. You see, from the bullet’s point of view, how it is manufactured, packaged, distributed, and ultimately, used. As with Andrew Niccol’s films, “Gattaca” and “The Truman Show,” Niccol personalizes…

Just Like Heaven

Dr. Elizabeth Masterson (Reese Witherspoon) is in a beautiful garden, only to wake up and realize she’s been up for 23 hours straight in the ER/Trauma center of St. Matthews General Hospital in San Fransisco. My initial inclination was that this would be another hokey romantic comedy, and, well, to a certain extent, it is. But it’s…

To Kill a Mockingbird

In the documentary interviews on this DVD, Gregory Peck reveals that his mannerism of clutching the pocketwatch is taken directly from observing the way Harper Lee’s father fiddled with his pocketwatch. During filming, Lee befriended Peck and believed…

The Exorcism of Emily Rose

Was Emily Rose possessed or afflicted by a medical disorder that required clinical treatment and therapy? If that question sounds perfunctory, it is—intentionally. The way in which the subject of Emily Rose’s death is approached is with equal parts mysticism and fact. I’m pointing this out because generally, in real life, I tend to err on the side of…

The Man

“You know your speech, I know your speech… the kids know your speech,” says Susan (Gigi Rice), the wife of Andy Fiddler (Eugene Levy). He’s a dental supplies salesman. Fiddler is perfect for the job. He’s obsessive about dental hygiene… and about giving a good speech. I’m glad someone’s enthused, because I have this funny feeling we’re going…

The Sting

The film opens on a dank streetside in Joliet, Illinois, at what appears to be the height of the Great Depression. A bookie, Granger (Ed Bakey) steps out of his office and witnesses a thief making off with an old man’s wallet. Johnny Hooker (Robert Redford) stops the thief. The old man, Luther Coleman (Robertearl Jones), explains to them that he had to deliver that money to someone fast or face a…