Stars: George Clooney, Maureen McCormick, Vince Edwards, Brendan Hughes, Scott Jacoby, Lori Lethin, Alex Rocco | Written by Bill Froehlich, Mark Lisson | Directed by Bill Froehlich
In 1982 Crippen High School was the scene of a series of brutal murders and yet the killer was never caught. Now a low budget film crew that includes an ill-fated leading man (Clooney), the pretentious director (Jacoby), a lecherous producer (Rocco) and numerous disposable cast and crew have all returned to Crippen High to film the story of the ’82 murders. But when members of the production staff are stalked and slaughtered one by one it appears the killer has returned… Who will survive? And what will be left of their careers?
So, did anyone see the first film? Actually I’m joking, much like the movie itself. Yes, Return to Horror High is that strange beast – part traditional slasher movie, part comedy, part parody. The...
In 1982 Crippen High School was the scene of a series of brutal murders and yet the killer was never caught. Now a low budget film crew that includes an ill-fated leading man (Clooney), the pretentious director (Jacoby), a lecherous producer (Rocco) and numerous disposable cast and crew have all returned to Crippen High to film the story of the ’82 murders. But when members of the production staff are stalked and slaughtered one by one it appears the killer has returned… Who will survive? And what will be left of their careers?
So, did anyone see the first film? Actually I’m joking, much like the movie itself. Yes, Return to Horror High is that strange beast – part traditional slasher movie, part comedy, part parody. The...
- 6/17/2017
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
The week before Hurricane Irene struck, I viewed a film that certainly could have benefitted from some of that storm's gusts.
The American indie The Family Tree does, truthfully, blow about quite a bit thanks to its choice cast (e.g. Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Selma Blair, Keith Carradine, Jane Seymour), but its overabundance of inane plot lines configured by screenwriter Mark Lisson and its unfocused direction by Vivi Friedman couldn't get a kite knee-level.
read more...
The American indie The Family Tree does, truthfully, blow about quite a bit thanks to its choice cast (e.g. Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Selma Blair, Keith Carradine, Jane Seymour), but its overabundance of inane plot lines configured by screenwriter Mark Lisson and its unfocused direction by Vivi Friedman couldn't get a kite knee-level.
read more...
- 8/30/2011
- by Brandon Judell
- www.culturecatch.com
It’s times like this that make one rue the day American Beauty made it big. While it introduced millions to the beautiful style of Sam Mendes and cemented both Kevin Spacey and Chris Cooper as two of the more talented thespians around town (not to mention reviving Annette Bening’s career), it also opened the door for more than a decade’s worth of satirical suburban dark comedy-retreads, The Family Tree not discounted.
And though it starts dark (and funny) enough – with a mysterious tree-top peeping tom slipping from his perch and accidentally hanging himself by binocular strap – Vivi Friedman‘s film never finds a balance between comedy and drama, populating the plot with far too many characters and far too little depth.
The film stars Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot as the Burnett family, a sad-sack group of people whose lives are made better when Bunnie,...
And though it starts dark (and funny) enough – with a mysterious tree-top peeping tom slipping from his perch and accidentally hanging himself by binocular strap – Vivi Friedman‘s film never finds a balance between comedy and drama, populating the plot with far too many characters and far too little depth.
The film stars Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot as the Burnett family, a sad-sack group of people whose lives are made better when Bunnie,...
- 8/28/2011
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
If you think your family is crazy, you should see mine!
Isn’t that the old saying? What family is perfect, and what would define this perfect family? Certainly not the model perfect family are the Burnett family in Vivi Friedman’s darkly comedic drama debut The Family Tree, yet throughout the 90-minutes, a family might have only glimpses of happiness, and sometimes that might just be enough. It is for the Burnetts, and even through infidelity, armed robbery, job loss, and one over-bearing mother-in-law, all of the dysfunction just might be the normal fitting pieces for them to be happy. In a kaleidoscope of dark humor and drama, The Family Tree might be funniest jab at America’s dying family unit since TV’s Married…with Children.
The notion of a modern American family is, or has, greatly changed recently, but if this founding notion is going to survive,...
Isn’t that the old saying? What family is perfect, and what would define this perfect family? Certainly not the model perfect family are the Burnett family in Vivi Friedman’s darkly comedic drama debut The Family Tree, yet throughout the 90-minutes, a family might have only glimpses of happiness, and sometimes that might just be enough. It is for the Burnetts, and even through infidelity, armed robbery, job loss, and one over-bearing mother-in-law, all of the dysfunction just might be the normal fitting pieces for them to be happy. In a kaleidoscope of dark humor and drama, The Family Tree might be funniest jab at America’s dying family unit since TV’s Married…with Children.
The notion of a modern American family is, or has, greatly changed recently, but if this founding notion is going to survive,...
- 8/26/2011
- by Jon Peters
- Killer Films
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(June 2011)
Directed by: Vivi Friedman
Written by: Mark Lisson
Starring: Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson, Chi McBride, Max Thieriot, Rachael Leigh Cook, Keith Carradine, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Madeline Zima, Shad Moss, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler and Jane Seymour
A teeming cast inhabits this sprawling narrative from first-time feature director Vivi Friedman. And that seems to be the film’s problem — a lack of focus.
Opening with picturesque frames of manicured lawns, Volvo drivers and a priest smoking weed, “The Family Tree” begins with a family — constituted by Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot — on its emotional edge. So screwed up that she and her family are fired by their therapist (a minute turn by Rachael Leigh Cook), Davis’ Bunnie Burnett lives to turn on most of the town’s male population (other than her husband) until an accident delivers short-term...
(June 2011)
Directed by: Vivi Friedman
Written by: Mark Lisson
Starring: Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson, Chi McBride, Max Thieriot, Rachael Leigh Cook, Keith Carradine, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Madeline Zima, Shad Moss, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler and Jane Seymour
A teeming cast inhabits this sprawling narrative from first-time feature director Vivi Friedman. And that seems to be the film’s problem — a lack of focus.
Opening with picturesque frames of manicured lawns, Volvo drivers and a priest smoking weed, “The Family Tree” begins with a family — constituted by Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot — on its emotional edge. So screwed up that she and her family are fired by their therapist (a minute turn by Rachael Leigh Cook), Davis’ Bunnie Burnett lives to turn on most of the town’s male population (other than her husband) until an accident delivers short-term...
- 7/3/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(June 2011)
Directed by: Vivi Friedman
Written by: Mark Lisson
Starring: Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson, Chi McBride, Max Thieriot, Rachael Leigh Cook, Keith Carradine, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Madeline Zima, Shad Moss, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler and Jane Seymour
A teeming cast inhabits this sprawling narrative from first-time feature director Vivi Friedman. And that seems to be the film’s problem — a lack of focus.
Opening with picturesque frames of manicured lawns, Volvo drivers and a priest smoking weed, “The Family Tree” begins with a family — constituted by Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot — on its emotional edge. So screwed up that she and her family are fired by their therapist (a minute turn by Rachael Leigh Cook), Davis’ Bunnie Burnett lives to turn on most of the town’s male population (other than her husband) until an accident delivers short-term...
(June 2011)
Directed by: Vivi Friedman
Written by: Mark Lisson
Starring: Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson, Chi McBride, Max Thieriot, Rachael Leigh Cook, Keith Carradine, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Madeline Zima, Shad Moss, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler and Jane Seymour
A teeming cast inhabits this sprawling narrative from first-time feature director Vivi Friedman. And that seems to be the film’s problem — a lack of focus.
Opening with picturesque frames of manicured lawns, Volvo drivers and a priest smoking weed, “The Family Tree” begins with a family — constituted by Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson and Max Thieriot — on its emotional edge. So screwed up that she and her family are fired by their therapist (a minute turn by Rachael Leigh Cook), Davis’ Bunnie Burnett lives to turn on most of the town’s male population (other than her husband) until an accident delivers short-term...
- 7/3/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Check out a movie clip and images from The Family Tree, starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Max Thieriot and Britt Robertson. Also in the cast are Chi McBride, Keith Carradine, Madeline Zima, Shad “Bow Wow” Moss, Christina Hendricks, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler, and Jane Seymour. The film directed by Vivi Friedman from the script by Mark Lisson, opens August 26, 2011 via Entertainment One. Life in suburban Serenity, Ohio is never quite as serene as it appears. The dysfunctional Burnett family – Bunnie (Hope Davis), Jack (Dermot Mulroney) and their twin 17 year olds Eric (Max Thieriot) and Kelly (Britt Robertson) – seems like a lost cause. When a freak accident leaves Bunnie with a case of amnesia, the Burnetts get an unexpected second chance at happiness. Meanwhile...
- 6/16/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Check out a movie clip and images from The Family Tree, starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Max Thieriot and Britt Robertson. Also in the cast are Chi McBride, Keith Carradine, Madeline Zima, Shad “Bow Wow” Moss, Christina Hendricks, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler, and Jane Seymour. The film directed by Vivi Friedman from the script by Mark Lisson, opens August 26, 2011 via Entertainment One. Life in suburban Serenity, Ohio is never quite as serene as it appears. The dysfunctional Burnett family – Bunnie (Hope Davis), Jack (Dermot Mulroney) and their twin 17 year olds Eric (Max Thieriot) and Kelly (Britt Robertson) – seems like a lost cause. When a freak accident leaves Bunnie with a case of amnesia, the Burnetts get an unexpected second chance at happiness. Meanwhile...
- 6/16/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Check out a movie clip and images from The Family Tree, starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Max Thieriot and Britt Robertson. Also in the cast are Chi McBride, Keith Carradine, Madeline Zima, Shad “Bow Wow” Moss, Christina Hendricks, Gabrielle Anwar, Evan Handler, and Jane Seymour. The film directed by Vivi Friedman from the script by Mark Lisson, opens August 26, 2011 via Entertainment One. Life in suburban Serenity, Ohio is never quite as serene as it appears. The dysfunctional Burnett family – Bunnie (Hope Davis), Jack (Dermot Mulroney) and their twin 17 year olds Eric (Max Thieriot) and Kelly (Britt Robertson) – seems like a lost cause. When a freak accident leaves Bunnie with a case of amnesia, the Burnetts get an unexpected second chance at happiness. Meanwhile...
- 6/16/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Film starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Brittany Robertson and Chi McBride to open in New York City and Los Angeles on August 26th
New York . June 15, 2011 . Entertainment One has acquired North American rights to
The Family Tree, a hilarious, touching and offbeat comedy which explores the frailties and complexities of the contemporary American family, starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Max Thieriot, Brittany Robertson and Chi McBride. The acquisition was negotiated by Sejin Park, VP of Worldwide Acquisitions for Entertainment One, and producers Allan Jones and J. Todd Harris. Entertainment One will open the film August 26th with a platform theatrical release in New York City and Los Angeles prior to distribution on home video, VOD, digital and TV.
Entertainment One.s U.S. President Michael E. Rosenberg commented, .It is truly a pleasure to be releasing an independent feature like The Family Tree. With its smart script and incredible ensemble cast,...
New York . June 15, 2011 . Entertainment One has acquired North American rights to
The Family Tree, a hilarious, touching and offbeat comedy which explores the frailties and complexities of the contemporary American family, starring Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Max Thieriot, Brittany Robertson and Chi McBride. The acquisition was negotiated by Sejin Park, VP of Worldwide Acquisitions for Entertainment One, and producers Allan Jones and J. Todd Harris. Entertainment One will open the film August 26th with a platform theatrical release in New York City and Los Angeles prior to distribution on home video, VOD, digital and TV.
Entertainment One.s U.S. President Michael E. Rosenberg commented, .It is truly a pleasure to be releasing an independent feature like The Family Tree. With its smart script and incredible ensemble cast,...
- 6/15/2011
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Return To Horror High
Stars: George Clooney, Maureen McCormick, Vince Edwards, Brendan Hughes, Scott Jacoby, Lori Lethin, Alex Rocco | Written by Bill Froehlich, Mark Lisson | Directed by Bill Froehlich
In 1982 Crippen High School was the scene of a series of brutal murders and yet the killer was never caught. Now a low budget film crew that includes an ill-fated leading man (Clooney), the pretentious director (Jacoby), a lecherous producer (Rocco) and numerous disposable cast and crew have all returned to Crippen High to film the story of the ‘82 murders. But when members of the production staff are stalked and slaughtered one by one it appears the killer has returned… Who will survive? And what will be left of their careers?
So, did anyone see the first film? Actually I’m joking, much like the movie itself. Yes, Return to Horror High is that strange beast – part traditional slasher movie, part comedy,...
Stars: George Clooney, Maureen McCormick, Vince Edwards, Brendan Hughes, Scott Jacoby, Lori Lethin, Alex Rocco | Written by Bill Froehlich, Mark Lisson | Directed by Bill Froehlich
In 1982 Crippen High School was the scene of a series of brutal murders and yet the killer was never caught. Now a low budget film crew that includes an ill-fated leading man (Clooney), the pretentious director (Jacoby), a lecherous producer (Rocco) and numerous disposable cast and crew have all returned to Crippen High to film the story of the ‘82 murders. But when members of the production staff are stalked and slaughtered one by one it appears the killer has returned… Who will survive? And what will be left of their careers?
So, did anyone see the first film? Actually I’m joking, much like the movie itself. Yes, Return to Horror High is that strange beast – part traditional slasher movie, part comedy,...
- 2/5/2011
- by Phil
- Nerdly
Currently making rounds on the festival circuit, The Family Tree has been described as “a quirky” indie film that supposedly “packs in plenty of comedy, a pinch of pathos, an inkling of irony, a drop of drama, and just the right amount of excitement…”
Hope Davis stars as a restless housewife who hits her head during an illicit sexual encounter with her next-door neighbor (McBride) and winds up losing her memory. She can’t remember her husband (Mulroney) or her two teenage kids. While her amnesia provides the spark that her marriage has been missing, it allows the kids to run amok.
Written by Mark Lisson and directed by Vivi Friedman, the cast includes Chi McBride, Evan Ross, Bow Wow, Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Keith Carradine and more.
The film is the directorial debut of Friedman, a Finnish-born filmmaker best known for her work in commercials.
Hope Davis stars as a restless housewife who hits her head during an illicit sexual encounter with her next-door neighbor (McBride) and winds up losing her memory. She can’t remember her husband (Mulroney) or her two teenage kids. While her amnesia provides the spark that her marriage has been missing, it allows the kids to run amok.
Written by Mark Lisson and directed by Vivi Friedman, the cast includes Chi McBride, Evan Ross, Bow Wow, Dermot Mulroney, Hope Davis, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Keith Carradine and more.
The film is the directorial debut of Friedman, a Finnish-born filmmaker best known for her work in commercials.
- 11/23/2010
- by Cynthia
- ShadowAndAct
Myriad Pictures has acquired offshore rights to the Vivi Friedman-directed comedy The Family Tree. Scripted by Mark Lisson, the pic stars Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Selma Blair, Christina Hendricks, Max Thieriot, Jane Seymour, Rachael Leigh Cook and Bow Wow. Davis plays a restless housewife who bumps her head during an illicit encounter with her next door neighbor and loses her memory. Allan Jones, J. Todd Harris, Kathy Weiss and Mark Lisson produced it. Myriad will screen the pic at Afm and shop it. IP Advisors sold the pic and is brokering North American rights.
- 11/5/2010
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline
NEW YORK -- Max Thieriot, Bow Wow, Evan Ross, Chi McBride and Gabrielle Anwar will star in and Selma Blair is in final negotiations to join the indie black comedy Driving Lessons.
Thieriot (Kit Kittredge: An American Girl) will play the religious, right-wing teenage son of Bunnie (Hope Davis), a woman given a second chance at her unhappy marriage to Jack (Dermot Mulroney) after losing her memory. It conveniently helps her forget an interracial affair with her burly next-door neighbor Simon (McBride).
Blair will play a sarcastic lesbian high school teacher having an affair with a student (Madeline Zima). Anwar will play Jack's sexy, power-crazed co-worker, and Brittany Robertson is cast as his sexually adventurous daughter.
Ross will play Simon Son,'s and actor-rapper Bow Wow and Jermaine Williams will play wannabe thugs who complicate everyone's lives. John Patrick Amedori also stars.
Vivi Friedman's feature debut is based on an original screenplay by Mark Lisson. J. Todd Harris, Allan Jones and Lisson will produce the project, set to begin principal photography next month in Los Angeles.
Thieriot (Kit Kittredge: An American Girl) will play the religious, right-wing teenage son of Bunnie (Hope Davis), a woman given a second chance at her unhappy marriage to Jack (Dermot Mulroney) after losing her memory. It conveniently helps her forget an interracial affair with her burly next-door neighbor Simon (McBride).
Blair will play a sarcastic lesbian high school teacher having an affair with a student (Madeline Zima). Anwar will play Jack's sexy, power-crazed co-worker, and Brittany Robertson is cast as his sexually adventurous daughter.
Ross will play Simon Son,'s and actor-rapper Bow Wow and Jermaine Williams will play wannabe thugs who complicate everyone's lives. John Patrick Amedori also stars.
Vivi Friedman's feature debut is based on an original screenplay by Mark Lisson. J. Todd Harris, Allan Jones and Lisson will produce the project, set to begin principal photography next month in Los Angeles.
- 2/26/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Strong Cup of 'Mighty Joe' / Buena Vista's ape call scores with solid story, sympathtic characters and that great gorilla
By Duane Byrge
This monkey shines. Buena Vista's "Mighty Joe Young", an amusing and good-hearted family film that follows the trials and tribulations of a massive gorilla amid the incursions of poachers and "imprisonment" in an American theme park, will win young hearts as well as the admiration of parents who appreciate a solidly told tale with sympathetic characters.
Joe here is truly a monkey man: He's got anthropomorphic qualities and feels things and perceives them very much like human beings. Only, he's more generous and trusting than your typical Homo sapien. In fact, he's the protector of a small African village. He's also the faithful servant and champion of a concerned and comely young woman, Jill (Charlize Theron), who shares a particular bond with Joe -- both their mothers were killed by poachers 20 years ago. It's this legacy that propels "Mighty Joe"'s plot line -- the same evil poacher (Rade Sherbedgia) has returned, and he realizes the commercial potential of Joe as an exhibit in today's theme-park world.
Basically, "Mighty Joe" is a person-in-distress story, the saga of a natural innocent whose resistance to the real world precludes him from being an effective protector of his natural habitat. It's a winning tale, and screenwriters Mark Rosenthal and Lawrence Konner have kindly distilled it for family-fun dimension. The respect and friendship between Joe and Jill is particularly heartwarming.
Admittedly, "Mighty Joe" does get clogged somewhat in explication of the gorilla's heredity, and the plotting of the climax may seem derivative for even the youngest viewers. Still, director Ron Underwood has shaped the film to a towering dimension and propelled the schematic narrative to its fastest capacity.
Special praise to Theron for her sympathetic protector portrayal; unfortunately, Bill Paxton's performance as a explorational zoologist is decidedly flaccid, wavering in determination and motivation. Sherbedgia is aptly cunning as the arch villain.
The technical contributions are strong, particularly Rick Baker's creation of this extraordinary ape. It's both towering and appealing. Other tech contributions serve the story line well, especially directors of photography Don Peterman and Oliver Wood's expansive lensing.
MIGHTY JOE YOUNG
Buena Vista
Credits: Producers: Ted Hartley, Tom Jacobson; Director: Ron Underwood; Screenwriters: Mark Rosenthal, Lawrence Konner; Executive producer: Gail Katz; Co-executive producers: Mark Lisson, Gary Stutman; Supervising producer: Ralph Winter; Directors of photography: Don Peterman, Oliver Wood; Production designer: Michael Corenblith; Editor: Paul Hirsch; Creature designed and produced by Rick Baker; Visual effects supervisor: Hotyt Yeatman; Music: James Horner; Costume designer: Molly Maginnis; Casting: Pam Dixon Mickelson; Sound mixer: Richard Bryce Goodman; Based on a screenplay by Ruth Rose and a story by Merian C. Cooper from RKO Pictures' "Mighty Joe Young". Cast: Jill Young: Charlize Theron; Gregg O'Hara: Bill Paxton; Strasser: Rade Sherbedgia; Garth: Peter Firth; Harry Ruben: David Paymer; Cecily Banks: Regina King; Kweli: Robert Wisdom. MPAA rating: PG. Running time -- 115 minutes. Color/stereo.
By Duane Byrge
This monkey shines. Buena Vista's "Mighty Joe Young", an amusing and good-hearted family film that follows the trials and tribulations of a massive gorilla amid the incursions of poachers and "imprisonment" in an American theme park, will win young hearts as well as the admiration of parents who appreciate a solidly told tale with sympathetic characters.
Joe here is truly a monkey man: He's got anthropomorphic qualities and feels things and perceives them very much like human beings. Only, he's more generous and trusting than your typical Homo sapien. In fact, he's the protector of a small African village. He's also the faithful servant and champion of a concerned and comely young woman, Jill (Charlize Theron), who shares a particular bond with Joe -- both their mothers were killed by poachers 20 years ago. It's this legacy that propels "Mighty Joe"'s plot line -- the same evil poacher (Rade Sherbedgia) has returned, and he realizes the commercial potential of Joe as an exhibit in today's theme-park world.
Basically, "Mighty Joe" is a person-in-distress story, the saga of a natural innocent whose resistance to the real world precludes him from being an effective protector of his natural habitat. It's a winning tale, and screenwriters Mark Rosenthal and Lawrence Konner have kindly distilled it for family-fun dimension. The respect and friendship between Joe and Jill is particularly heartwarming.
Admittedly, "Mighty Joe" does get clogged somewhat in explication of the gorilla's heredity, and the plotting of the climax may seem derivative for even the youngest viewers. Still, director Ron Underwood has shaped the film to a towering dimension and propelled the schematic narrative to its fastest capacity.
Special praise to Theron for her sympathetic protector portrayal; unfortunately, Bill Paxton's performance as a explorational zoologist is decidedly flaccid, wavering in determination and motivation. Sherbedgia is aptly cunning as the arch villain.
The technical contributions are strong, particularly Rick Baker's creation of this extraordinary ape. It's both towering and appealing. Other tech contributions serve the story line well, especially directors of photography Don Peterman and Oliver Wood's expansive lensing.
MIGHTY JOE YOUNG
Buena Vista
Credits: Producers: Ted Hartley, Tom Jacobson; Director: Ron Underwood; Screenwriters: Mark Rosenthal, Lawrence Konner; Executive producer: Gail Katz; Co-executive producers: Mark Lisson, Gary Stutman; Supervising producer: Ralph Winter; Directors of photography: Don Peterman, Oliver Wood; Production designer: Michael Corenblith; Editor: Paul Hirsch; Creature designed and produced by Rick Baker; Visual effects supervisor: Hotyt Yeatman; Music: James Horner; Costume designer: Molly Maginnis; Casting: Pam Dixon Mickelson; Sound mixer: Richard Bryce Goodman; Based on a screenplay by Ruth Rose and a story by Merian C. Cooper from RKO Pictures' "Mighty Joe Young". Cast: Jill Young: Charlize Theron; Gregg O'Hara: Bill Paxton; Strasser: Rade Sherbedgia; Garth: Peter Firth; Harry Ruben: David Paymer; Cecily Banks: Regina King; Kweli: Robert Wisdom. MPAA rating: PG. Running time -- 115 minutes. Color/stereo.
- 12/15/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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