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Features
• Anamorphic
• Closed-captioned
• Color
• Dolby
• DVD-Video
• Full Screen
• Widescreen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 17 February, 1983
DVD Release : 21 September, 1999 |
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Local Hero description
When Mac MacIntyre (played with deadpan perfection by Peter Riegert) is sent by his star-gazing, slightly insane Knox Oil and Gas boss (Burt Lancaster) to Scotland's West Coast to buy the rights to a seaside town slated to be the site of an oil refinery, Mac embarks on his journey reluctantly. "Why do I have to go to all the way to Scotland?" Mac complains to a coworker. "I'm really more of a Telex man." But on the way to closing the deal, a funny thing happens: the place takes root in Mac. The town's eccentric inhabitants, eventful night sky, and stunning scenery soak into his psyche and combine to bring a very different Mac to the surface, a Mac who collects seashells, walks on the beach in his jeans instead of his suit, and throws his calendar watch, beeping "meeting time in Houston," into the sea. Mac eventually vies to switch places with Gordon Urquhart--accountant, bartender, innkeeper, and community representative in the land deal. After an evening spent drinking 42-year-old scotch ("old enough to be out on its own," Mac chirps, and then laughs smugly at his own joke) and negotiating the real estate deal, Mac tries to negotiate a deal for himself--to trade his high-rise Houston apartment, Porsche, and oil-company job for Urquhart's less traditional, but more fulfilling, life. The plot runs along almost as if behind the scenes, and the characters are intriguing, but the real appeal here is the incisive yet gentle humor. During a visit to a Knox Oil lab, Mac is shown into a room that contains a miniature of the town he has been sent to purchase. The head of the lab says, "Welcome to our little world," and then gives Mac the plastic replica of the town as a souvenir. "Dream large," he intones. The irony's easy to miss and is just one example of the intelligent presence--in the form of writer and director Bill Forsyth--working behind the scenes here. Mark Knopfler's delicate, haunting soundtrack complements the sometimes melancholy, sometimes hilarious currents of Local Hero to perfection. --Stefanie Durbin |
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Local Hero Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥
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Scotland The Brave
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In my carefree 20's I took my bicycle over to the British Isles and rode all through England, Wales, and Scotland. I spent almost all that summer of '77--Queen Eliz' silver anniversary year--on my red Swallow ten-speed "pushbike", as the Brits called it, slogging it up and down and all around that sceptred isle. Though I saw a ghost in a lonely churchyard above Lynton, hit a sheep outside of Chester, saw authentic gypsies near Malton, and heard a concert in the King's College chapel in Cambridge, my fondest memories of the entire trip remain my rambles through the highlands and isles of northern Scotland. They say that many a wistful Scot longs for his homeland, as he drinks a toast in a bar somewhere in the US, or Australia, or Spain, or anyplace that's got a bit less rain and wind than Scotland! Takes a stout heart to survive the rugged weather and harsh terrain of that wild and lonely place!
If you've ever been there, or want to go there, then you should see this movie. It's got everything I love in a film: humor, quirkiness, romance, unexplained actions and unresolved situations, lovely music, magnificent scenery, magic, diversity of all types and the magnanimity and acceptance that must accompany it. You cannot put this film in any easy category; it's totally unique. For that alone it deserves five stars. Knopfler went on to do many soundtracks, but this is still his best. His music is so perfectly evocative of the true nature of Scotland and indeed, this film itself: defiantly independent, far-reaching, fiercely proud, deliberately out of step with the fads and trends. |
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