bovie movie

Bovie Movie

Ultimate movie library

 
 
 
 

Movies starring Curtis Armstrong

Van Wilder

Van Wilder
Genres: Comedy | Romance
Year: 2002
Actors: Ryan Reynolds | Tara Reid | Tim Matheson | Kal Penn | Teck Holmes | Daniel Cosgrove | Deon Richmond | Alex Burns Alex Burns | Emily Rutherfurd | Paul Gleason | Erik Estrada | Curtis Armstrong | Jason Winer | Chris Owen | Simon Helberg
Directors: Walt Becker
Download: DivX iPhone & iPod 

The National Lampoon franchise continued its nosedive into mediocrity with this lacklustre teen comedy. A spiritless melting pot of fratboy high jinks and syrupy sentimentality, director Walt Becker’s first film doesn’t seem to know whether it’s a cheeky romance or a moralistic farce. Feebly mimicking American Pie and its ilk (even casting Tara Reid as love interest Gwen), this tale of world-shy student Van Wilder, who will do anything to maintain his indefinite college stay, is just too bland to leave more than a fleeting impression. US TV star Ryan Reynolds lacks the personality and colour to play Wilder, while the humour is so weak that almost every gag falls flat. Even the attempts at “fashionable” gross-out tactics are distinctly third-rate, with the usual scatological and sexual themes hardly raising an eyebrow. This is a pitiful failure. 

Shanghai Noon

Shanghai Noon
Genres: Action | Adventure | Comedy | Western
Year: 2000
Actors: Curtis Armstrong | Jackie Chan | Owen Wilson | Lucy Liu | Brandon Merrill | Roger Yuan | Xander Berkeley | Rongguang Yu | Ya Hi Cui | Eric Chen | Jason Connery | Walton Goggins | Adrien Dorval | Rafael Báez | Stacy Grant | Kate Luyben
Directors: Tom Dey Tom Dey
Download: DVD DivX PDA 

Visually authentic yet with a deliciously anachronistic script, this period western starring martial arts maestro Jackie Chan is a hugely enjoyable combination of buddy comedy and adventure. Sent to the States to rescue a kidnapped princess (Lucy Liu), Chan’s Imperial Palace guard hooks up with laconic outlaw Owen Wilson, who proves to be his equal in the fish-out-of-water stakes. Whether using antlers, sheriff’s badges or horseshoes to prise himself out of a tight corner, Chan is pure slapstick poetry in motion, falling off horses, getting riotously drunk and confusing slave-owning louse Roger Yuan and corrupt sheriff Xander Berkeley. This fast-moving caper gently sends-up a well-loved genre and will provide a couple of hours of unrestrained entertainment.