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Actor & Director :
DVD Brubaker:

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  • Actor(s): Robert Redford - Yaphet Kotto - Morgan Freeman 
  • Director(s): Bob Rafelson - Stuart Rosenberg 
  • Editor: Fox Home Entertainme
  • Category: Feature Film-drama
  • Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours

    List Price: $14.98
    Our Price: $13.48  YOU SAVE $1.5!   Buy it





  • DVD Brubaker


    Through solid dramatic impact and global exposure on cable TV, Brubaker gradually joined the ranks of all-time best prison movies. While preparing to direct Ordinary People, Robert Redford brought his considerable star power to bear on his title role as a prison reform warden, in an unnamed Southern state, who poses as an inmate to expose corruption, violence, and administrative abuse in Wakefield, a prison farm where trustee inmates are armed and encouraged to shoot at would-be escapees. Originally developed for director Bob Rafelson and ultimately filmed by Stuart Rosenberg, this rugged exercise in social commentary has undeniable power, even if some its characters--including Redford's--seem more like stick-figure ethicists than real human beings. It's also got a dynamite supporting cast including Yaphet Kotto, Jane Alexander, and Morgan Freeman in one of his earliest films. Bolstered by his Oscar-winning directorial debut, Redford didn't star in another film until The Natural ended his four-year hiatus. --Jeff Shannon
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    Review(s): DVD Brubaker
    Excellent Movie!


    This was another vintage Robert Redford movie.In this movie he
    plays the role of Brubaker, who is sent into Wakefield prison.
    Here he finds all kinds of corruption.It is especially shocking
    when he unearths a huge graveyard of dead prisoners.You have some
    excellent acting jobs from Yaphet Kotto and David Keith in this
    movie.You will find some of the things that Brubaker finds to be
    shocking.This is Redford at his best. You will enjoy this movie.
    Buy it and watch it.

    Dark but incomplete tome on corrections reform


    Robert Redford is Brubaker, an honest expert in corrections sent to clean up a trouble-plagued penitentiary. Sent to Wakefield Brubaker enters undercover, living his first few days as a prisoner. We learn that for its brutality, Wakefield was conceived along the lines of a noble experiment - one that gave the prisoners unusual autonomy, and was intended to actually correct those imprisoned there. Instead, the experiment has carved a super-class of prisoners who rule over the rest of the prisoners as Trustees. Unafraid to use force, they skim off books while stealing supplies already paid for. Brubaker, once revealed as the new warden, slowly but surely turns the system upside down - he can't move too quickly because those prisoners or administrators who are most guilty are also the only ones who can tell him what's wrong. Eventually discarding the old guard, Brubaker soon learns that Wakefield has an even darker secret, one whose discovery threatens the Wakefield's future.

    This was a good movie, although it's hard to understand the first time around. The sophisticated system of prisoner autonomy is somewhat hard to believe unless you've already seen the movie before. The setting is interesting - a dessicated prison, complete with an antique electric chair (which emerges from the shadows like the monster from "Alien" - quite yet terrifying). That said, the movie has no surprises (comparisons to "Last Castle" are incorrect). Brubaker is an utterly honest and incorruptible soul. Once we see how he uncovers grafters among the prison administration and trustees, there's little more for him to do. We know that outside businessmen will be corrupt croneys and that even well meaning corrections bureaucrats will try to rein Brubaker in for the good of the system. The movie blows what should be its focus - having Brubaker connect with the prisoners - something he does too easily, too much so considering that his first speech reminds them that they are prisoners and that they are there for a reason. There also aren't enough really supportive roles - as if Yaphet Kotto was the only reliable prisoner. Still worth a look.

    A+!! One of Robert Redford's best films.


    This ranks right up there with ... as one of the great "hero with integrity goes up against the corrupt system" movies of all time.

    I used to teach American Government and would show this and Redford's ... Two of the best political films of all time.

    This movie brings up many important and insightful issues involving prison reform/management.


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