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Reviewed by: The Robert Cray Collection Michael Adams The Robert Cray Collection. DVD. Directed by Bill Bowman. London: Cherry Red Films and Pearson Productions Limited, 2009. PPCR025. $19.95. The Robert Cray Collection, originally released on VHS in 1991, consists of nine music videos, with the singer-guitarist offering brief, mostly banal comments between each number. Cray was one of the first in a short line of younger blues musicians, which later included such performers as She mekia Copeland and Keb' Mo', who have tried to keep alive the traditions of Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Jimmy Reed, and Koko Taylor. While traditional blues is gritty and bawdy, full of sex, violence, and the laments of loneliness, Cray offers a much more polished approach, which some might label slick.


Cray's blues lends itself well to the music video format, especially that of the easygoing, non-threatening 1980s. The Robert Cray Collection offers a microcosm of music video styles from that era, a mixture of unadorned performances and those attempting to illustrate what Cray is singing about, as with the feeble dramatizations in "Conse quences" and "The Forecast (Calls for Pain)." Much better is the animation of Cray and his beloved in "Acting This Way," featuring primitive efforts to blend animation with live action. The enjoyable "Nothin' But a Woman" features another cliché of the period: the very attractive woman, obviously a model, prancing about to make the music seem sexier and even pretending to play a music instrument, that phallic favorite the saxophone in this instance.


Four of the videos, including "The Forecast (Calls for Pain)" were directed by Oley Sassone, who has gone on to an undistinguished career making direct-to-video [End Page 647] movies and directing episodes of such television series as Xena: Warrior Princess. The no-frills treatment, beyond tilted camera angles, of "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" is by the more accomplished Dominic Sena, auteur of the sublime guilty pleasure Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000).


The best of the videos is Peter Care's "Smoking Gun," Cray's most widely known, song because it captures the vitality of Cray's stage performances while having him sing and play in several locations. Unfortunately, most of Cray's comments between the videos are along the lines of "If you're into it, do it" and "Young folks don't hear much blues." Why is that, Robert, and what can be done about it? He mentions his bandmates only briefly and says nothing about the musicians who influenced him. No direct connection is made between his comments about gospel and rhythm and blues and what is heard in the videos.


This forty-one-minute compilation will serve, nevertheless, as an adequate introduction to Cray's music, though it focuses on only a portion of his career. The videos may also be of interest to students of the stylistic development of the genre.


Co-starring:P.J. Soles, Sean Young, John Larroquette,John Diehl, Lance LeGault, Roberta Leighton,Conrad Dunn, Judge Reinhold, William Lucking,Fran Ryan, Joe Flaherty, Dave Thomas,Robert J. Wilke, Timothy Busfield, Bill Paxton,Donald Gibb (uncredited) Dennis Quaid (uncredited extra)Director Ivan Reitman admits to being embarrassed by the third act of the film. But Reitman had determined that a film about the Army needed to have a war and created a conflict with Czechoslovakia, his birthplace. Bill Murray and Sean Young did not get along. Young did not like Murray's method of ad-libbing during scenes. Murray vowed to never work with Young again. Lance LeGault and William Lucking were both in "The A-Team" as the team's adversaries Col. Decker and Col. Lynch respectively. Cameo: Timothy Busfield as 'soldier with mortar.' It was also his film debut.The Basic Training scenes were filmed at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Fort Knox is home to the U.S. Army Armor Center, which trains new tank crewmen and armored cavalry troopers. The barracks in the film are still at Fort Knox, but they've been gutted and converted into an urban warfare training course. As of 2010, the United States Army Armor School is being moved to Fort Benning, Georgia as part of the United States' BRAC program. Part of a mini-cycle of Hollywood movies made during the early 1980s centering around military cadet training. The pictures include Taps (1981), Stripes (1981), Private Benjamin (1980), Up the Academy (1980), The Lords of Discipline (1983) and An Officer and a Gentleman (1982). Then the mid-late 1980s saw a few more: Cadence (1990), Biloxi Blues (1988), Heartbreak Ridge (1986) and Full Metal Jacket (1987). Final film of the late great character actor Robert J. Wilke. He had trouble remembering his lines. His shots took longer to shoot than the soldiers' graduation drill routine.John Winger states, after doing push-ups in his apartment, "I gotta get in shape or I'll be dead before I'm 30". Bill Murray turned 30 two months before the filming of this movie. Hulka was originally supposed to be killed in the mortar accident and replaced by his twin brother, also played by Warren Oates. But idea was discarded before filming. Reitman requested Joe Flaherty for the part of the border guard. But due to a mix-up, Joseph X. Flaherty was accidentally cast in the role. Reitman was able to contact the Flaherty that he originally wanted. The other Flaherty was given a small role as Sgt. Crocker.The last sentence the platoon shouts during their performance at graduation, "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", is a sentence that was popularly used to test typewriters and telegraph machines because it contains every letter of the alphabet at least once. The character nicknamed "Psycho" is actually named "Francis". Francis is Norman Bates' middle name in Psycho (1960).Harold Ramis was initially reluctant to play the role of Russell Ziskey and Dennis Quaid auditioned for the role but Bill Murray was adamant about Ramis appearing in the film and said he would not do the film without him. Quaid, who was married to co-star P.J. Soles at the time, appears as an extra during the graduation scene. P.J. Soles, who plays the role of Stella, also played Pvt. Wanda Winter the year before in Private Benjamin (1980). Coincidentally, she wore the same costume in both films. According to Ivan Reitman in the DVD Commentary, Kim Basinger was offered the part of MP Officer Stella Hanson but she was turned down when her agent asked for too much money. According to the DVD special features, the film was originally conceived as a vehicle for Cheech & Chong; Ivan Reitman has also stated that the reason this fell through was because their manager insisted (without the pair's knowledge) on a 25% share of Reitman's next five films, which he wasn't willing to give up. The script was then rewritten for Bill Murray and Harold Ramis, and most of the "stoner" humor was shifted to the "Elmo" character played by Judge Reinhold. Winger throws the keys to his cab into the Ohio River from the same bridge where boxing great Muhammad Ali claims to have thrown his Olympic gold medal. John Larroquette broke his nose while shooting an additional take of a scene of him running through a door. The shot shown in the film is the first take. Heavy makeup was applied to Larroquette's nose for the rest of filming. An Ivan Reitman prank to have some of the characters drag Warren Oates' character into the mud during the obstacle course scene, led to Oates chipping a tooth and Reitman getting a tongue lashing from Oates.The scene the morning after John Winger and MP Officer Stella Hanson had sex in General Barnicky's house, when they emerge from the trunk, is actually a lift from a cut scene when the guys and girls meet up in Germany. This lift is now something of a continuity error in the Special Edition DVD where those cut scenes in the German Hotel are now restored. You can tell this because if you watch the decor of the General's bedroom and Winger and Hanson's wardrobe, it's the same clothing they're wearing in their German Hotel Suite and the General's decor and the suite are the same. A nine-minute sequence was filmed in which John and Russell take LSD and accidentally end up on a mission to fight rebels in the Colombian jungle. Columbia Pictures thought it was the best scene in the film but Ivan Reitman deleted it because he felt that it did not fit the film's tone.According to Ivan Reitman in the DVD Commentary, Columbia Pictures wanted to cut out the scene where Sgt. Hulka and John Winger have a confrontation in the latrine. They felt the scene was 'too serious'. But Reitman insisted that it be left in to truly establish Sgt. Hulka's strength and authority.'Do Wah Diddy Diddy', a central theme performed by cast members, was originally recorded in the US by The Exciters in late 1963. During "The British Invasion" it was covered by Manfred Mann and rose to #1 US Pop in July 1964. The song has become a popular cadence in the US military. According to Ivan Reitman in the DVD Commentary, the scene where Bill Murray is loading the rich woman's suitcases into the trunk and he hits himself in the crotch was accident. Murray really did hit himself in the crotch with the case, thus his very real line "Oh, my balls." Basic training in Stripes takes place at the fictional "Fort Arnold" which was actually a fort during 18th century. It was named for General Benedict Arnold. After General Arnold was branded a traitor "Fort Arnold" was renamed "West Point". The kitchen scene between Bill Murray and P.J. Soles was completely improvised. The cast improvised virtually all of the dialog where they sit around and tell their back stories. This includes Bill Murray's lines about 'Lee Harvey' making out with a cow and calling Sgt. Hulka a 'big toe'. According to Ivan Reitman, Bill Murray insisted 'Harold Ramis (I)' be cast as his friend for two reasons: 1. They were long time friends in real life. 2. So Ramis could help Murray re-write his dialog or help him improvise. 2ff7e9595c


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