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wordmonk
Reviews
Back Up, Please (2003)
Lives up to its billing
Douglas Horn has put out a fine piece called Back Up, Please which fulfills his desire to impart a good story, with strong characters and the pull of emotions. As a Director who shows he knows his stuff, he presents this tale of two vehicles, each with two occupants destined to meet in a crisis. Douglas delivers what we all want in film making: great collaborative effort. The writing is good; his directing excellent, great cinematography, editing, music scoring...the whole package. It is also apparent that he has the ability to pull together a great crew to deliver a quality movie...much higher in quality than what I originally expected. I keep watching it because it is good, and like any good movie, you learn more each viewing. Full of nuances.
Back Up, Please (2003)
Lives up to its billing
Douglas Horn has put out a fine piece called Back Up, Please which fulfills his desire to impart a good story, with strong characters and the pull of emotions. As a Director who shows he knows his stuff, he presents this tale of two vehicles, each with two occupants destined to meet in a crisis. Douglas delivers what we all want in film making: great collaborative effort. The writing is good; his directing excellent, great cinematography, editing, music scoring...the whole package. It is also apparent that he has the ability to pull together a great crew to deliver a quality movie...much higher in quality than what I originally expected. I keep watching it because it is good, and like any good movie, you learn more each viewing. Full of nuances.