
Danny DeVito’s message on the theme of divorce goes from a romantic Hollywood comedy to a dark raven comedy thriller.
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Michael Douglas | Oliver Rose |
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Kathleen Turner | Barbara Rose |
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Danny DeVito | Gavin D'Amato |
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Marianne Sagebrecht | Susan |
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Sean Astin | Josh at 17 |
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Heather Fairfield | Carolyn at 17 |
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G.D. Spradlin | Harry Thurmont |
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Peter Donat | Jason Larrabee |
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Dan Castellaneta | Man in Chair |
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Gloria Cromwell | Mrs. Marshall |
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Harlan Arnold | Mr. Dell |
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Mary Fogarty | Mrs. Dell |
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Rika Hofmann | Elke |
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Patricia Allison | Maureen |
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Peter Brocco | Elderly Mourner |
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Philip Perlman | Bidder at Auction |
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Susan Isaacs | Auctioneer's Assistant |
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Trenton Teigen | Josh at 10 |
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Bethany McKinney | Carolyn at 10 |
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Shirley Mitchell | Mrs. Dewitt |
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Ellen Crawford | Nurse #1 |
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Michael Adler | Dr. Hillerman |
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Lisa Howard | Nurse #2 |
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Jeff Thomas | Orderly |
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Jacqueline Cassell | Gavin's Secretary |
Director | Danny DeVito |
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Writer | Warren Adler, Michael Leeson | |
Producer | James L. Brooks, Doug Claybourne, Michael Leeson, Arnon Milchan, J. Marina Muhlfriedel, Polly Platt | |
Musician | David Newman | |
Photography | Stephen H. Burum |
Nr Discs | 1 |
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Watched | |
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Quantity | 1 |
Index | 407 |
Added Date | Mar 10, 2012 13:58:33 |
Modified Date | Jun 12, 2022 00:34:03 |
Story Synopsis:
The War Of The Roses tells the story of a once happy marriage that disintegrates into an escalating war as Barbara Rose (Kathleen Turner) decides to divorce Oliver (Michael Douglas) who doesn’t want a divorce. The proceedings turn into something genuinely frightening and genuinely funny. This is Danny DeVito’s second feature motion picture effort (after Throw Momma From The Train) and was shot almost entirely on studio sound stages except for a rain scene shot in Seattle.
LaserDisc Picture:
The picture quality suffers on this transfer from a slight haze throughout and a reddish-orange cast which makes the fleshtones unnatural. While the theatrical projection was 1.85:1 this transfer has been matted at 1.66:1.
LaserDisc Soundtrack:
The soundtrack is generally good with excellent dialogue intelligibility although with a distinctive mono presence. The surrounds are subtle which restricts the sense of dimensionality.