Action & Adventure
Cinema
Classic
Children
Comedy
Documentary
Drama
Educational
Fantasy
Fitness & Exercise
Foreign Film
Horror
Kids & Family
Music Video & Concerts
Mystery & Suspense
Science Fiction
Special Interests
Television
Westerns





Web Hosting
Dedicated Server  
Colocation hosting  
Web Stats  
QA  
BlueHost 
Hostgator 
1and1 
real time website statistics 






DVD Search:
Actor & Director :
DVD Punchline:

  • Rate:
  • Actor(s): Sally Field - Tom Hanks - John Goodman 
  • Director(s): David Seltzer 
  • Editor: Columbia Tri-Star
  • Category: Feature Film-drama
  • Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours

    List Price: $9.95
    Our Price: $9.95  YOU SAVE $0!   Buy it





  • DVD Punchline


    At the height of the standup-comedy boom of the 1980s, this film offered the revelation that many comedians were, in fact, rather psychologically unstable individuals for whom performing was an outlet for hostility and aggression. Wow--who would have guessed? This film focuses on two who meet and forge an unlikely friendship: Tom Hanks plays a caustic, self-destructive comic looking for his big break and Sally Field plays a more Roseannelike comedian who begins neglecting her husband (John Goodman) and children because she gets such a kick out of performing. The offstage stuff is strictly soap opera, but Hanks and Field both develop solid comedic rhythms once they get behind a microphone. --Marshall Fine
    Previous Page
    Review(s): DVD Punchline
    So funny I almost lost bladder control.


    Watch for the scene where Field is in a big hurry to get ready for houseguests. You'll be rolling on the floor.

    Underrated, almost brilliant, but flawed


    Punchline begins with an engaging premise. Steven Gold (Tom Hanks at age 31) is a med student driven by his physician father to become a doctor. But Steven hates medical school, can't stand the sight of blood, etc. Instead of going to class, he goes to the local comedy club (The Gas Station). Instead of doing his homework, he does standup. He's very good. Lilah Krytsick (Sally Field at 42) is a frumpy Jersey housewife with three kids and a husband (John Goodman) who sells insurance. He wants her to stay home nights, but she has a passion for wanting to make people laugh. So she too moonlights at The Gas Station. She is not funny. In desperation she spends five hundred dollars of household funds to buy jokes to use on the audience. Everything bombs.

    Meanwhile, Steven is a little behind in his rent and thinks that, what the hey, he can sell Lilah some jokes. But it never comes to that. Instead he becomes enchanted with her and helps her break free of her inhibitions and perform naturally and effectively on stage. Can true love be far behind? (Rhetorical question, but the answer is not pat.)

    If you are a Tom Hanks fan, see this movie. You will be delighted. He puts on a versatile performance depicting a guy who needed to be, in the very fiber of his being, a comedian. The role shows off his talent, and makes us understand why he is now, at the relatively young age of 45, one of America's premiere screen idols.

    The rest of the movie, however, is a mix of strengths and weaknesses. Sally Field, in a difficult role, gives an uneven performance which I think is partly the fault of director David Seltzer, who also wrote the script. His direction is brilliant and awful by turns. In particular the schmaltzy, unnecessarily unrealistic ending is very disappointing. He also dug himself a hole because the top comedic performance had to be the last, yet it wasn't. All the expectations of the audience fell, and perhaps that is why Seltzer stuck himself with an ending that played like something devised by a committee of filmland execs intent on political correctness above all else. Also, any difference between the John Goodman who played Rosanne Arnold's husband on TV and the John Goodman here was not immediately discernable.

    However some of the scenes were just perfect I especially liked it when Steven's overbearing father (instead of a network producer) shows up at the club. Steven Gold's anguished, self-revelatory on stage reaction is excellent. --Or when Lilah rushes to prepare dinner slapstick style for company; or when night is done and it's four or five am and Steven has helped her discover herself and he asks how she will explain being out all night to her husband and she says she will crawl into bed with one of the kids and he will think she slept there all night. Also good was the singing in the rain scene and the scene in which the daughter, showing the wisdom of children, says to Lilah, after her husband asks to see her perform, "Say yes, mom." Also good were the motley troupe of semi-pro comedians, including a fine performance by Mark Rydell as Romeo, the manager of the club.

    This rates a five point something at IMDb, but that's a little unfair. It's a better movie than that. See it for Tom Hanks, and for David Seltzer, who just missed making a great movie.

    EXTREMELY UNDERRATED!


    This is such a good movie! Tom Hanks plays a promising, self - destructive comic with emotional problems, and gives an OSCAR-CALIBUR PERFORMANCE! I have been a huge fan of Hanks since Bosom Buddies, but this was the film which made me realize just how great he is! It actually came out about the same time as "Big", which Hanks was nominated for, and I never understood why this film got slighted. Check it out, and see the first sign of the greatness to come in "Philledelphia" and Forest Gump"!


    Related DVD's Punchline 


    Nothing in Common DVD

    Tom Hanks wanted to prove his dramatic talent in the mid-1980s, and Nothing in Common gave him a ripe opportunity. Playing an emotionally immature Chicago advertising executive, Hanks offers a prototype of his later, better role in Big--the joking man-child with seemingly limitless reserves of energetic humor, perfectly suited to director Garry Marshall's trademark blend of featherweight comedy and sentiment. The movie wanders aimlessly before settling into its dramatic groove, involving Hanks caring for his aging, diabetic father (Jackie Gleason, well cast in his final screen role) after his mother (Eva Marie Saint) files for divorce and strikes out on her own. Like Marshall's Pretty Woman, the movie hits several grace notes and finds unexpected depth in its... More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Tom Hanks - Jackie Gleason - Eva Marie Saint 
    Director(s): Garry Marshall 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 19 February 2002
    Usually ships in 24 hours

    List Price: $9.95
    Your Price: $9.95  YOU SAVE $0!   Buy it
    Dragnet DVD

    The line between parody and tribute can be hard to draw, but any marginally hip baby boomer who ever watched Jack Webb's straight-laced Detective Joe Friday caught a glimmer of the comedic vein waiting to be mined beneath Dragnet's gritty Los Angeles streets. In 1987 moviegoers had yet to be crushed under the weight of the 1990s TV remake mania, and Dragnet comes off as fresh and funny. Dan Aykroyd plays Joe Friday, the straight-arrow nephew of Webb's iconic cop. This part was made for him (in fact, he's given top writing credit), and under his steely exterior you can tell he's having a ball delivering those rapid-fire recitations of regulations and deadpan expressions of moral outrage. Tom Hanks plays Pep Streebek, the laissez-faire narco agent who is Friday's new partner.... More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Dan Aykroyd - Tom Hanks 
    Director(s): Tom Mankiewicz 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 27 October 1998
    Usually ships in 24 hours

    List Price: $14.98
    Your Price: $13.48  YOU SAVE $1.5!   Buy it
    Splash (20th Anniversary Edition) DVD

    Tom Hanks was a relatively unknown TV actor with a sitcom as his biggest credit when relatively unknown director Ron Howard (best known for his own sitcom acting) cast him in this surprise hit. It made stars of Hanks, Daryl Hannah, and John Candy and an A-list director out of Howard. Hannah is a mermaid who comes to Manhattan in search of Hanks, the guy she has twice saved from drowning. Hanks runs a business with his lovable blowhard brother (Candy), whose goal in life is to have a letter published in Penthouse. When this perfect woman shows up, Hanks can't believe his luck and plunges into a dizzyingly romantic relationship, unaware of her sea-water secret. But the mermaid needs to soak and unfurl her tail from time to time, which leads to complications, including her capture by... More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Tom Hanks - Daryl Hannah 
    Director(s): Ron Howard 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 23 March 2004
    Usually ships in 24 hours

    List Price: $19.99
    Your Price: $15.99  YOU SAVE $4!   Buy it
    The Bonfire of the Vanities DVD

    The 1980s were wearing thin when Tom Wolfe delivered this biting commentary about the shallowness of an investment banker in a messed-up place called New York City. Sherman McCoy knows how to make a lot of money. But that's about it. He is oblivious to his wife, his daughter, even his mistress, and shows little interest even in the deeper machinations of business. His focus is on the surface, and when he makes a mistake, it seems that all the dark forces he was so ignorant about circle like a pack of wolves. As usual, Wolfe writes ferociously, showing no favorites among the rich, the poor, the black,or the white and painting each with at least one absurd stroke. The novel is both hilarious and telling, delivered in a distinctive voice by Wolfe, one of our top stylists. More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Tom Hanks - Bruce Willis - Melanie Griffith 
    Director(s): Brian De Palma 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 06 November 2001
    Usually ships in 24 hours

    List Price: $9.97
    Your Price: $9.97  YOU SAVE $0!   Buy it
    Turner and Hooch DVD

    Much better than your average cop-and-dog movie (e.g., K-9), Turner and Hooch is really a love story about a control freak (Tom Hanks) who gradually resigns to the messy chaos of a sweet hulk of a pooch named Hooch. The excuse for this relationship is that the dog can identify a murderer and Hanks needs him, but the film is really about such hilarious moments as Hanks bathing Hooch with a long brush, and a wild chase through the streets when the sharp-eyed mutt spots his suspect. Layered over this is a healthy love story between Hanks and animal vet Mare Winningham, who share a terribly sexy scene together--while fully clothed--doing no more than making breakfast. (Hanks directed this scene, though Roger Spottiswoode directed the rest of the movie.) --Tom Keogh More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Tom Hanks - Mare Winningham 
    Director(s): Roger Spottiswoode 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 02 April 2002
    Usually ships in 24 hours

    List Price: $14.99
    Your Price: $11.99  YOU SAVE $3!   Buy it


    Previous Page





    2004 DVD-Today.com    Privacy Policy