Today’s song of the day comes to use from 1959’s Ben-Hur. Here is the Overture, composed by the great Miklós Rózsa.
Today’s song of the day comes to use from 1959’s Ben-Hur. Here is the Overture, composed by the great Miklós Rózsa.
Since both Eric Roberts and James Woods are celebrating a birthday today, it seems only appropriate that today’s scene of the day should feature both of them. In this scene from 1994’s The Specialist, Woods, Roberts, and Rod Steiger all compete to see who can steal a relatively simple conversational scene.
Today is the 78th birthday of James Woods, one of the great actors of his generation. Capable of completely disappearing into his roles, Woods is known for his unmatched intensity and diversity. He can play anything from a badass action hero to the most evil scum of society, from a mentally handicapped adult to the most intelligent man in the room. He’s been one of my favorite actors since I first discovered him in the late 80’s in the movie BEST SELLER (1987). While he’s won multiple Emmy awards and Golden Globes, the fact he’s never won an Oscar for his acting skills is beyond my comprehension. As he was an Executive Producer of OPPENHEIMER (2023), I particularly enjoyed that film’s Oscar success! Happy Birthday Mr. Woods! Thanks for the countless hours of entertainment you’ve brought into my life!
ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA (1984)

SALVADOR (1986)

THE HARD WAY (1991)

GHOSTS OF MISSISSIPPI (1996)

It’s Die Hard On A Submarine in 2008’s Depth Charge!
Dying of a brain tumor and passed over for a promotion (and wow, you thought your week sucked), Commander Krieg (Eric Roberts) and a band of mercenaries take over a nuclear submarine. They force off all of the actual crew of the sub but they somehow miss the doctor (Jason Gedrick) and an electrician (Chris Warren). The mad commander announces that unless he is sent a certain amount of money, he will launch the nuclear missiles. While the President (Barry Bostwick) dithers and an admiral (Corbin Bernsen) searches for the sub, the doctor and the electrician beat up mercenaries and work their way to the bridge.
“Get off my boat!” Gedrick growls several times.
Yeah, dude, we get it. Air Force One. Good movie.
This on the other hand …. well, let’s be positive here. This movie provides Eric Roberts with a substantial role and he does a good job as the villain, even if his motives never quite make sense. (He’s got a year to live so what exactly would he have done with a promotion or any of that money that he’s demanding?) But this movie asks us to believe that a bunch of mercenaries could not only sneak onto a submarine but also defeat almost the entire crew without a single bit of trouble. And then for submarine’s doctor to just happen to turn out to be a former boxer or UFC fighter or whatever he’s supposed to be (“He was a fighter,” a presidential aide explains) is just a bit too much of a coincidence.
That said, you get Eric Roberts, Corbin Bernsen, and Barry Bostwick, all in the same movie. All three of them deserve better but at least they all gave it their best here!
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
4 Shots from 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots from 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Happy birthday, Eric Roberts!
4 Shots From 4 Eric Roberts Films
2004’s Border Blues features Gary Busey as a wild-haired LAPD police chief who has psychic visions that enable him to track down a mad bomber.
Wow, that sounds great!
Well, believe it or not, that’s really only a minor subplot in this film. The majority of the film is about Andrei Samurov (Rodion Nahapetov), who was the greatest detective in Moscow before he immigrated to the United States. Now, he works in a restaurant and dreams of being the greatest detective in the LAPD. During a trip to Mexico, Andrei meets Larry (Eric Roberts), an American who now helps people sneak across the border. Larry is helping a Russian woman (Anna Nakhapetova) and her daughter make their way across the desert. Larry seems to take a special interest in the woman’s daughter. Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that Larry’s own daughter died under tragic circumstances.
Oh, and Erik Estrada’s in this too! He plays a Mexican cop named Morales and he yells a lot.
Gary Busey, Erik Estrada, and Eric Roberts!? How could this go wrong? Well, you could stick them all in a film that doesn’t make much sense and which has a plot that is next to impossible to follow. This is one of those movies where you get the feeling that the names were cast first and then a story was built around them. On the plus side, Eric Roberts actually gets a good deal of screentime and turns Larry into a rather interesting character. Larry is menacing but, there are times when he’s almost sympathetic. Roberts gives a good performance but, unfortunately, the majority of the film is focused on Rodion Nahapetov’s unconvincing turn as the greatest detective in the world. Nahapetov both directed and starred in this film and the end result is a vanity project that doesn’t seem to lead to anywhere in particular.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
I’m going to guess that there’s quite a backstory to the production of the film …. well, I’m really not even sure what to call the film.
The version that I just watched on Tubi was called 69 parts and it clocked in at a little over 90 minutes. It’s the story of gangsters, cops, and one hapless law student in 1979 New York. Jack (Ryan O’Callaghan) needs money to go to law school. His best friend, gambling addict Gino (Johnny Solo), arranges for Jack to get a loan from his uncle, Dennis (Aidan Redmond). However, Gino swears that he can double the loan if Jack goes with him to the tracks. Unfortunately, Gino’s hot tip turns out to be a bust so now Jack is broke and can’t pay back the money. So, Dennis forced Jack to marry Dennis’s mistress so that she can get her green card but then Dennis gets jealous and decides to kill Jack but then he discovers that Jack is the son of an imprisoned criminal associate (Eric Roberts). It’s all a bit too complicated for its own good and the use of multiple narrators, many of whom sound exactly alike, doesn’t make the film any easier to follow.
Tubi claims that 69 Parts was released in 2022. However, on the IMDb, there’s a film called 79 Parts, which is listed as being a few minutes shorter than 69 Parts but it has the exact same cast and the exact same plot. This version was released in 2016, six years before 69 Parts. And then there’s 79 Parts: The Directors Cut, which clocks in at over two hours and which was released in 2019. In short, there appears to be multiple versions of this film and really, I have to be a little bit impressed by the determination necessary to keep re-editing, re-titling, and re-releasing the film.
As for the film itself, the version I saw was a bit too busy and difficult to follow but I appreciated the work that went into recreating the 70s. That obviously take some effort. Aidan Redmond was properly avuncular and menacing as Dennis but Jack was such a wimpy character that it was difficult to really care about him. As for Eric Roberts, he appears for about five minutes and is even less impressed with Jack than I was. Maybe Eric gets to do more in the director’s cut.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
Today, we wish a happy birthday to Eric Roberts!
In our music video of the day, Roberts nearly marries Mariah Carey, just for her to leave him for Wentworth Miller. This video is a sequel to the video for It’s Like That and Mariah wears the same wedding dress when she married music exec Tommy Mottola. (Make of that, what you will.) Personally, I think Eric dodged a bullet here because everyone knows that he and Eliza were meant to be.
Enjoy!
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:

I’m on a 2 day Vacation from my DayJob, for a four day Easter Weekend. I caught Sinners earlier Thursday afternoon, having purchased a ticket the Sunday before. That I stood up and slow danced with the credits and mid/post credit scenes of the film says a lot for me. It says I need to frequent more packed showings so that I don’t do such things. More importantly, it says the blues was as seductive as most of the movie, playing a crucial part in every scene. I dare say that Sinners could almost be a musical in the same way that the Coen Brothers’ O Brother, Where Art Thou? was. There was not a musical moment in this movie where I wasn’t bobbing my knee or nodding my head (thanks to either Academy Award Winner Ludwig Goransson or whoever had the vocals at any particular moment). I even sang along at one point with a song I recognized. I’m kicking myself in the pants for not staying at the movie theatre for another showing. I really should have. That just felt so good.
I like to think I knew a lot about Vampires. I mean, I’ve been a fan for like 3 decades now, but Sinners puts a spin on the genre through myth and music that caught me off guard. Granted, if you’ve watched all of the trailers, you’ve seen most of the film already (trailers being what they are these days), but I’ll try to keep it as vague as possible. Despite what’s shared, there’s a lot left out.
Ryan Coogler’s Sinners takes us to Mississippi in 1932, where two brothers, Smoke & Stack (both played by longtime Coogler associate Michael B. Jordan) return home with a plan to open up a juke joint. It involves picking up a few friends and associates along the way, particularly their guitarist cousin Sammie (Miles Caton, in his Introductory role). Sammie’s father, a Preacher, wants him to turn away from the music he makes and join the Church, proclaiming that the blues will lead to the Devil. Sammie, however, loves what he does and he’s damn good at it.
The brothers are smooth talkers and quick dealers, a pair of gangsters working off the notion that anything’s possible at the right price. They also have some unresolved relationships with the women in their lives. Grief drove a stake through Annie (Wunmi Mosaku, Deadpool & Wolverine) and Smoke’s relationship, while Stack can’t seem to get rid of Mary (Hailee Steinfeld (Spider-Man: Through the Spider Verse), no matter how hard he tries. Take all that and add living in Mississippi as a person of color in the 1930s, and things are kind of rough all around. There’s a scene that suggests life in Chicago could be brighter, but “better the devil you know”, suggests otherwise.
Granted, Coogler isn’t shy in showing the effects of racism (as Fruitvale Station showed), and Sinners doesn’t detour from that. For it to be historically accurate (even if fictional), shades of that darkness have to exist in the film, though it may not seem as heavily showcased at first. At best, one could say that any racism or segregation elements take a back seat to the bloodsuckers prowling the night.
Jordan’s twin set up is really good. Both Smoke and Stack have their distinctive styles, though there are a few moments where you may get lost in figuring who’s who. Jayme Lawson (The Batman‘s Bella Real, who I didn’t even realize until this write up) also did well here. Li Jun Li (Babylon) and Delroy Lindo’s provided some the more comedic moments than anything else. Although every actor does well in Sinners, it wouldn’t be half as powerful as it was without Miles Caton’s Sammie. He felt like the audience’s lens through all this, and when he sings, it’s rich, kind of reminiscent of Aloe Blacc’s style a decade ago. Another stand out is Jack O’Connell (Ferrari, 28 Years Later), whose character has all the best of intentions, yet may not have everyone’s best interests at heart.
I unfortunately didn’t get a chance to see the film in the Panavision 70 or IMAX formats it was filmed in. To do that means a trip into Manhattan, which I simply don’t really do much anymore since moving out (though I may make an attempt before the weekend’s out). Coogler makes some fantastic use of space, framing the camera for some beautiful wide shots when needed, along with a nice one shot, but the real magic happens during the 2nd half. The party sequence itself is worth the price of admission, possibly rivaling the one in Damian Chazelle’s Babylon. The camera flows just as well as did during the fight sequences of the Black Panther films. I’d imagine those sequences must look really awesome in those formats.
The only real complaint I have over Sinners is that I felt that some of the decisions made in the 2nd half didn’t fully make sense to me, which ironically was some of the same issues I had with Robert Rodriguez’ From Dusk Till Dawn, which moves along similar lines. I get why the decisions were made, but at the same time, I kind of hoped for a little more there. That might be more of a nitpick than anything else. It’s has horror, someone’s bound to make a decision that threatens everyone else. Additionally, not every loop is closed. Most of the important ones were from a story standpoint, but there were one or two elements I would have like to have found out about. It’s not a total loss.
Oh, while you’re going to watch this, it may be best to send the little ones off to watch Minecraft. Sinners is seductive in a number of ways, and there are a few steamy scenes that aren’t for their eyes. Additionally, there’s also a copious amount of blood, that may also be a little off putting. Parental Guidance suggested, indeed.
Overall, I loved Sinners. I’ve already scooped up Ludwig Goransson’s Score (which should be be available in about an hour, as of this writing) and would happily watch it again. Note that if you are going to see it, there is an extended Mid Credits scene that is longer that I expected it to be. Really, when it starts, you might as well sit back down if you stood up to go. There’s also a post credit scene as well, which isn’t as impactful, but fun to watch, all the same.