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Sam Shepard - Filmography & Photos
 

Sam Shepard

Also known as:  Samuel Shepard Rogers, VII:Samuel Rogers Shepard
Born:  November 5, 1943 in Fort Sheridan, Illinois, United States
Nationality:  American
 
 
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Reviewed by Targann47 for The Notebook at 2011-03-03 14:04:39
Guys, if you wanna get laid, just tell your chick you like this film. ALL women love this stupid movie.
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A great movie based on a Nicholas Sparks novel!
Reviewed by LeoTs3181983 for The Notebook at 2010-11-12 10:41:15
This is a great movie based of One Of Nicholas Sparks' best novels. DON'T MISS IT!
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Thoughtful, Superbly Acted
Reviewed by criddic2 for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford at 2010-04-01 03:24:07
Lushly photographed by Roger Deakins, Andrew Dominik has directed a fine psychological Western meditation on criminal fame and legend. It features career-best performances from Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck, as the outlaw Jesse James and his intended assassin Robert Ford. Long, yes, but well worth the time. Where Terence Malick's films are often maddeningly slow and sometimes without much purpose ("New World"), Dominik's film is always watchable and even compelling.
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superb action in a lackluster film
Reviewed by Axellion for Brothers at 2010-03-09 16:08:02
The bond of brotherhood runs deep; a bond that is nearly unshakable. One brother returns from prison to a future uncertain a past to forget, one brother is sent to war, leaving his wife and family. Brothers is about the changes that happen, the uncertainty of emotions, the strength of Brotherhood. One brother is lost, declared dead. His brother finds the connection that was lost in him, finds a family to protect, to love, building powerful connections with the family he never had, through their grief and morning. A lost brother surviving the odds, taking extraordinary steps to see his family again, the dead returns, himself altered, his family not the same. No one truly survives war; no one can be trained to watch another die. Murder can not be taught. The ravages of war are those of the soul. A brother returns and comes face to face with who he was and what he has become. Brothers is a small film, this is not a grand production, despite the presence of three extraordinary young actors, the story failed to enthrall me. Natalie Portman gives another great subtle performance as the grieving war widow, she struggles with the loss of her husband, and fights with her own mixed feelings over her brother in law, finally finding her life turned on its head once again by the unlikely return of a changed man. Jake Gyllenhall plays the brother returning from prison to a life unlived, he finds new meaning in the adopted family of his missing brother, in this family he sees what he has missed, and the difficult feelings that develop with his sister in law. Tobey Maguire?s loving father turned victim of war is very moving, his being is warped my conflict and violence, the life he lived no longer makes sense in light of his actions on the battlefield, Under attack by feelings of jealousy, regret, and anger. His transformation from a loving honorable father into a tortured emotional wreck is worth of praise. As a whole I found the film to be slightly disappointing, it never rose from the shadows of the actors it presented. There performances were powerfully, giving gravity to the parts they played, but the film suffers with a lack of development. The plot is simple, minor characters are not well defined, the entire film seemed focused on its actor to a fault. Outside of my admiration for the talent on display I was not captivated. Worthy of viewing to witness the future of Hollywood on display, the film was lackluster beyond its talent.
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Chic Flick
Reviewed by SmartChic for Steel Magnolias at 2008-08-07 14:46:06
It what it is. It was made for women, and women love it.
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get out of box of kleenex...
Reviewed by oskeebow-wow for The Notebook at 2008-03-10 17:07:41
great love story.
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Beautiful to watch, but not typical
Reviewed by KHL for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford at 2008-03-10 15:47:27
If you're looking for a typical western with lots of action and quick plot development, this movie will disappoint. Andrew Dominik's script and style is like Terrence Malick (The Thin Red Line, Days of Heaven, The New World), long, ponderous with lots of silences but stunning photography more than makes up for plodding plot. Veteran DP Roger Deakins mans the camera (first cinematographer in Oscar history to be nominated for two films in the same year). Based on an adaptation by the novel by Ron Hansen. Worth watching if you can stand the slow pace. Affleck
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So much potential...
Reviewed by mfaerber for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford at 2008-03-10 12:09:30
This was a movie I would have very much liked to love, but it is so very long and seems to lose its way in the middle. Rather than try to focus & sharpen the film, or try to keep audience's interest by interjecting some action or other distraction, it simply continues to pound away at the psychological drama - just doesn't pull it off. Good storyline, premise and acting, but overall it seems to be wasted potential.
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Community lists with Sam Shepard
 
Academy Awards(1983) Nominated
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role
(1983) PG