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Melting Pot, also known as Race, is a 1998 feature film directed by Tom Musca, [1] [2] ... Reviews. It was reviewed with 2,5 stars in Chicago Tribune. [3]
Race is a 2008 Indian Hindi-language neo-noir action crime film directed by Abbas–Mustan and written by Kiran Kotrial and Shiraz Ahmed. Reportedly inspired by the 1998 Hollywood movie Goodbye Lover, [2] it is the first installment in the Race franchise and stars Anil Kapoor, Saif Ali Khan, Akshaye Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Katrina Kaif, and Sameera Reddy.
The third film, Race 3 was a sequel directed by Remo D'Souza. Kapoor returned once again, this time in a new role with Salman Khan and Bobby Deol joining the cast. Race 3 (third film) received negative reviews and didn't perform well as previous films at the box office. The first film is loosely based on the 1998 Hollywood movie Goodbye Lover. [1]
[9] On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a rating of 47% from seventeen reviews. [ 2 ] New York Times reviewer A. O. Scott commented that the theme of an "ordinary, tolerant white person going undercover into a world of extreme race-hatred" was a promising one and adds that the movie opens with a voiceover of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr ...
Silent film about a lord who tries to interfere with a lady's horse. Desert Gold: 1919 Drama Australian film starring the famous racehorse Desert Gold: A Dead Certainty [4] 1920 Drama A British film about a rider pressured to fix a race. The Sport of Kings [5] 1921 Drama A man (Victor McLaglen) looks out for his young ward and her racehorse.
"Gran Turismo," his first feature in eight years, is easily Blomkamp’s best film. It’s made with a spontaneous humanistic grace, and the racing sequences, which dominate the movie because they ...
I kept going back because I am amazed by a movie this overtly left wing, fearless and eccentric." She added: "Bulworth isn't about race alone; more specifically, it's about racism's intersection with America's deep, and growing, class divide." [4] The Washington Post rated the film 19th on a list of "The 34 best political movies ever made". [16]
Without Limits is a 1998 American biographical sports film.It is written and directed by Robert Towne and follows the relationship between record-breaking distance runner Steve Prefontaine and his coach Bill Bowerman, who later co-founded Nike, Inc. Billy Crudup plays Prefontaine and Donald Sutherland plays Bowerman.