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DVD Search:
Actor & Director :
DVD Short Eyes:

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  • Actor(s): Bruce Davison - José Pérez (II) 
  • Director(s): Robert M. Young 
  • Editor: Wellspring Media, In
  • Category: Feature Film-drama
  • Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours

    List Price: $24.98
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  • DVD Short Eyes


    Though time and HBO's Oz have eclipsed its ground-breaking impact, Short Eyes remains a milestone of American independent film, and a vital entry in the prison-film genre. Adapted by Miguel Piñero from his acclaimed play, this gritty drama was filmed in Manhattan's infamous Men's House of Detention (better known as "the Tombs"), giving a rough, authentic edge to Piñero's unflinching portrait of men trapped in legal-system limbo. Inmate tensions intensify when an alleged pedophile ("Short Eyes" in prison slang, played by Bruce Davison) is dropped into detention, and instantly ostracized by white, Latino, and black inmates alike. Under the documentary-like direction of Robert M. Young, this claustrophobic, emotionally raw study of hopelessness was a real eye-opener for its time (1977), revealing depths of anguish, danger, and cruelty that had never before been dramatized on film. Paving the way for harsher prison dramas that followed, Short Eyes features Piñero in a supporting role, and look closely for Traffic's Luis Guzmán in his screen debut. --Jeff Shannon
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    Review(s): DVD Short Eyes
    Short Eyes


    I have been looking for this movie for years. I was so glad when it was finally released on DVD. This is a powerful story with a strong cast. I would highly recommend to anyone who enjoyed OZ or other prison shows. And also to anyone who understands that the judicial system is sometimes flawed.

    Reinvented the prison genre


    I was introduced to Short Eyes purely by chance while flipping through Leonard Maltin's movie guide which gives the film ***1/2 stars. After tracking down an out-of-print VHS tape of it, I finally saw this powerful 70's prison drama based on the play by the newly appreciated latino playwrite Miguel Pinero. Pinero's vision is so pure because it's clearly the work of a man who'd been behind bars often himself. The dialogue is amazingly real (and very profane for its time) and the overall feeling of the film is dark, gritty and stark, very much like an episode of Oz, only twenty years before that TV show aired. Shot on location at an abandoned men's prison in New York it's stage origins are only really apparant during one brief dialogue scene between Pinero (acting in his own work) and Davis (the incarerated child molestor who inflames the hatred of the other inmates).

    For me the comparison that really makes me appreciate this film is with The Shawshank Redemption. That is a good film but it's also clearly the work of a man (Stephen King) who had never been behind bars for any length of time. While in that film there are two or three stereotyped baddies in the entire prison who force the hero into sex, in Short Eyes it's made very clear how long, long periods behind bars with no access to women begins to grind on many of the inmates and their desires, even men who wouldn't consider themselves to be "gay". The scene where the youngest, "prettiest" inmate Cupcake is harrased in the showers by an older guy who all but forces him into sex feels completely real, like it's the way something like that would really happen. The fact that Pinero himself (who wrote the original play) was bisexual certainly accounts for the films (virtually unique) honesty in this area.

    Benjamin Bratt played Pinero in a pretty good film of the writers life the other year. That's definitely work a look but it's Short Eyes that will make you realize why he was the talk of New York at the time.

    Short eyes has true vision


    Miguel Pinero is the most underated playwright of modern American theater. His play short eyes shows us the ugly underbelly of American society through the eyes of convicts. It is a play filled with ethnic anomosity racial rivalaries and a rigid moral code which allows no devation. Truly this film version of the stage play is worth looking at. Bruce Davidson performace is complelling and the rest of the cast never miss a beat. It is not for the faint hearted.
    Most unfortunate is that Mr. Pinero is no longer with us but some might remember the Miami Vice episodes he penned


    Related DVD's Short Eyes 


    Piñero DVD

    The euphoria of controlled chaos that courses through Benjamin Bratt's portrayal of poet, playwright, and actor Miguel Piñero comes as a welcome surprise. Known primarily as a television actor, Bratt burns his way through what could have easily been an overwrought performance with the surety of a skilled improviser. Piñero begins with the sudden success of the playwright, whose play goes from a prison workshop in Sing Sing to the toast of 1970s New York seemingly overnight, and the requisite fall from grace is expected (Piñero died in 1988 of cirrhosis of the liver). Yet the self-aware cool of Bratt's Piñero--who helps found the still vibrant Nuyorican Poets Café and pens highly successful film and television scripts, all the while ingesting a suicidal dose... More Info about this DVD
    Actor(s): Benjamin Bratt 
    Director(s): Leon Ichaso 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 01 December 2002
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    List Price: $19.99
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    The Glass House DVD

    This is WOW...Good Job Alan Alda!! I recommend this to anyone wanting to have an understanding of prison...and yes this is realistic!! More Info about this DVD
    Director(s): Tom Gries 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 03 July 2001
    THIS TITLE IS CURRENTLY NOT AVAILABLE. If you would like to purchase this title, we recommend that you occasionally check this page to see if it has become available.

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