10 Films For The Week (9/22/25)


With the passing of Robert Redford last week, I want to start things off by recommending one of his last films, 2013’s All Is Lost.  Redford gives a great performance as a nameless man trying to survive on a damaged boat.  The film opens with a brief Redford voice over and then, towards the end of the film, Redford utters one other line.  Even without dialogue, Redford dominates the screen and shows why he was one of great movie stars.  All Is Lost is streaming on Tubi.

Also streaming on Tubi is 1972’s Jeremiah Johnson, starring Redford as a mountain man who is trying to escape from civilization.  Jeremiah Johnson is today probably best-known for giving the world the nodding Redford meme but it’s also a strong film in its own right and it features Redford at his best.  Jeremiah Johnson can be viewed here.

I was very happy to recently see that one of my favorite films, 1982’s Split Image, is now streaming on Tubi.  Split Image is one of those films that I am always recommending to anyone who hasn’t seen it.  Michael O’Keefe plays a college athlete who is brainwashed into joining a cult led by Peter Fonda.  O’Keefe’s father (Brian Dennehy) hires a sleazy cult deprogammer (James Woods) to rescue his son.  This is an intelligent and well-acted film.  It was also shot in my part of the world.  If you watch it, pay attention to the scene in which O’Keefe is abducted from a college campus.  The scene was shot at Richland Community College.  It’s a lovely campus that still looks the same in 2025 as it did in 1982.  Split Image is on Tubi.

James Woods and Brian Dennehy also teamed up in 1987’s Best Seller, a smart thriller that was written by Larry Cohen and directed by Rolling Thunder’s John Flynn.  Dennehy plays a cop-turned-writer.  Woods plays the hitman who has decided that he wants Dennehy to write his life story.  Best Seller can be viewed here.

2013’s The Spectacular Now is listed as “leaving soon” over on Tubi so now is as good a time as any for you to watch this well-written and surprisingly poignant coming-of-age story.  Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley both give strong performance as teen lovers.  Kyle Chandler steals the film as Teller’s alcoholic father.  The Spectacular Now is streaming here.

In a world where politics is becoming increasingly violent, 2008’s The Baader Meinhof Complex feels as relevant as ever.  This film takes a look at the group of middle and upper-class activists who decided to play at being revolutionaries and how their actions spiraled out of-control.  This film is a powerful portrait of a group of people who some proclaimed to be heroes and who some (correctly) portrayed to be political LARPers.  It can be viewed on Prime.

Follow up The Baader Meinhof Complex with 1988’s Patty Hearst, Paul Schrader’s film about the kidnapping and subsequent brainwashing of heiress Patty Hearst.  The film’s first half is especially harrowing.  By the end of the film, Patty has almost become a powerless bystander as she watches her own story unfold in front of her.  Patty Hearst can be viewed on Tubi.

1974’s Big Bad Mama is a Roger Corman-produced Depression epic, in which Angie Dickinson and her daughters rob banks and shoot guns.  This one is worth watching not just for Dickinson’s performance but also for the supporting turns of two very different actors, William Shater and Tom Skerritt.  It can be viewed on Prime.

William Shatner is also present in The Kidnapping of the President (1980), a Canadian-made and -set film in which President Hal Holbrook is taken hostage while visiting Toronto.  William Shatner is the Secret Service agent negotiating for the President’s release.  Van Johnson is the Vice President and Ava Gardner is his wife.  Maury Chaykin appears as one of the kidnappers.  With a cast like that, you can be assured that there’s not a piece of unchewed scenery to be found in this slight but entertaining thriller.  It is streaming on Tubi.

Finally, it doesn’t get more 70s than 1973’s The Harrad Experiment, in which a group of students enroll at Harrad College, a progressive school where everyone is encouraged to lose their clothes, hug trees, and have open relationships.  James Whitmore and Tippi Hedren play the unlikely founders of the college.  Don Johnson, Laurie Walters, and Bruno Kirby are students.  Fred Willard has a brief cameo as himself.  It’s not necessarily a good film but it’s such a product of its time that it’s interesting from a historical perspective.  It’s streaming on Prime.

Click here for last week’s films!

 

 

Embracing the Melodrama Part II #67: Split Image (dir by Ted Kotcheff)


Split_Image_VHS_coverUnlike Desperate Lives, the 1982 melodrama Split Image is available to be viewed on YouTube.  In fact, you can watch it below and I suggest that you do so.  It’s a pretty good film and, apparently, it’s never been released on DVD or Blu-ray and it’ll probably never be available on Netflix either. So, if you’ve ever wanted to see Peter Fonda play a cult leader, your best bet is to watch the video below.

But before you watch the video, here’s a little information on Split Image, one of the best films that you’ve never heard of.

Essentially, the film follows the same plot as the Canadian film Ticket To Heaven.  A college athlete (played by Michael O’Keefe) starts dating a girl (Karen Allen) who is a member of a sinister religious cult.  Soon, O’Keefe is a brainwashed member of the cult and only answering to the name of Joshua.  (The head of the cult is played, in an appropriately spaced-out manner, by Peter Fonda.)  His parents (Brian Dennehy and Elizabeth Ashley) hire a cult deprogrammer (James Woods) to kidnap their son and break Fonda’s hold on him.  However, it turns out that Woods’ methods are almost as psychologically destructive as Fonda’s manipulation.

Even if it’s not quite as memorably creepy as Ticket To Heaven, Split Image is still a well-made film, featuring excellent performances from Dennehy, Woods, O’Keefe, and Fonda.  However, for me, the most interesting thing about Split Image is that it was largely filmed and set down here in Dallas.  Just watch the scene where Woods and his men attempt to kidnap Michael O’Keefe.  It was shot on the campus of Richland Community College, which is one of the places where I regularly go to run.

(Interestingly enough, 33 years after the release of Split Image, Richland still looks exactly the same!)

You can watch Split Image below!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKWYuJyZ9X8