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Movies starring Mark Harmon

Freaky Friday

Freaky Friday
Genres: Comedy | Drama | Family | Fantasy
Year: 2003
Actors: Jamie Lee Curtis | Lindsay Lohan | Mark Harmon | Harold Gould | Chad Michael Murray | Stephen Tobolowsky | Christina Vidal | Ryan Malgarini | Haley Hudson | Rosalind Chao | Lucille Soong | Willie Garson | Dina Spybey | Julie Gonzalo | Christina Marie Walter
Directors: Mark S. Waters | Mark Waters
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Prolific television director Gary Nelson made the Walt Disney live-action comedy Freaky Friday, based on the novel by Mary Rodgers. Barbara Harris stars as suburban housewife Ellen Andrews, the wife of Bill (John Astin) and the mother of Annabel (Jodie Foster) and Ben (Sparky Marcus). Ellen just can’t understand what’s going on with teenaged Annabel, who hangs around the house making snappy remarks, eating ice cream for breakfast, and calling her brother Apeface. They each make a separate wish to be in the other’s place, and they get their wish on Friday 13th. Ellen has to go through the day as a kid, playing on the field hockey team and dealing with typing class. Annabel has to deal with grown-up problems like getting appliances fixed and preparing a banquet. The whole silly story ends with a wacky car-chase/water skiing/hang-gliding conclusion in keeping with other Disney movies of the day. Freaky Friday was remade twice with the same title, and spawned a whole subgenre of body-switching movies in the 1980s.

The Last Supper

The Last Supper
Genres: Comedy | Crime | Drama | Thriller
Year: 1995
Actors: Cameron Diaz | Ron Eldard | Annabeth Gish | Jonathan Penner | Courtney B. Vance | Bill Paxton | Nora Dunn | Ron Perlman | Dan Rosen | Amber Taylor | Matt Cooper | Charles Durning | Mark Harmon | Gil Segel | Rachel Chagall
Directors: Stacy Title
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If you met Adolph Hitler when he was just a struggling cartoonist, wouldn’t you have done the world a big favor by murdering him? That philosophical question provides the linchpin of this black comedy. Jude (Cameron Diaz), Pete (Ron Eldard), Paulie (Annabeth Gish), Marc (Jonathan Penner), and Luke (Courtney B. Vance) are five graduate students who are confirmed members of the political left, participate in small-scale activism, and share a house together. One night, Pete is stuck in the middle of nowhere, and Zack (Bill Paxton), a truck driver, gives him a lift home. The housemates are just about to sit down to dinner, so to show his gratitude, Pete asks Zack to join them. However, it soon becomes obvious that Zack doesn’t share the group’s political views, and when he states that he thinks Hitler had the right idea, the argument turns into a fight, with Zack brandishing a knife. The trucker is accidentally killed in the scuffle, and rather than report the death to the police, his body is buried in the backyard vegetable garden. However, the event prompts much discussion among the housemates — if Zack was a hateful bigot, isn’t the world better off without him? And wouldn’t killing other ignorant hatemongers improve society all the more? Before long, the group is having a weekly dinner party in which they invite a special guest — including an anti-environmental activist (Jason Alexander), a right-wing religious leader (Charles Durning), a sexist who doesn’t believe there’s such a thing as rape (Mark Harmon), and a teenager campaigning against sex education in schools (Erin Bryn) — and serve them some wine, which happens to be laced with arsenic. While the group’s attempt at community improvement does wonders for their tomato plants, the recent disappearances eventually attract the attention of the local sheriff (Nora Dunn). The Last Supper was the first feature for director Stacy Title, who won an Academy Award for her short subject Down on the Waterfront; screenwriter Dan Rosen appears in a supporting role as a police deputy.

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
Genres: Adventure | Comedy | Crime | Drama
Year: 1998
Actors: Johnny Depp | Benicio Del Toro | Tobey Maguire | Ellen Barkin | Gary Busey | Christina Ricci | Mark Harmon | Cameron Diaz | Katherine Helmond | Michael Jeter | Penn Jillette | Craig Bierko | Lyle Lovett | Flea Flea | Laraine Newman
Directors: Terry Gilliam
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Terry Gilliam (Brazil, Twelve Monkeys, The Fisher King) directed this colorful, stylized, pseudo-psychedelic $21-million adaptation of the 1971 Hunter S. Thompson classic, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey into the Heart of the American Dream, about stoned sportswriter Raoul Duke, Thompson’s alter ego, on a wild drug-crazed road trip, a paranoid plummet into the belly of the beast, with his pal, lawyer Oscar Zeta Acosta. Originally serialized in Rolling Stone (November 1971), the book catapulted Thompson headfirst toward the Kerouac-Mailer-Capote pantheon and jump-started the entire movement of “gonzo journalism.” Carrying a suitcase of drugs, Raoul Duke (Johnny Depp with shaved pate) and his attorney Dr. Gonzo (Benicio Del Toro) drive a red convertible across the Mojave from L.A. to Vegas, where Duke has an assignment to cover the Mint 400 desert motorcycle race. As the drugs kick in, Duke ventures into voiceover, filling in the blank spots and narrative gaps. “This is not a good town for psychedelic drugs,” says Duke, but even so, they consume vast quantities, eventually escalating to ether. Duke notes that with ether “you can actually watch yourself behaving this terrible way, but you can’t control it.” The two trash their hotel room, and Gonzo goes back to L.A. Thinking the hotel room holocaust will lead to an arrest, Duke begins a drive back to L.A., but after an odd encounter with a highway patrolman (Gary Busey) and a telephone conversation with Gonzo, he returns to Vegas to cover the District Attorney Convention on Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in the glitzy Flamingo Hotel. This time the drugged-out duo trash their Flamingo room. The crazed carnival atmosphere segues into a carney casino, Bazooko’s Circus, where a barker (Penn Jillette) spiels amid aerialists, clowns, and a rotating carousel bar. Gonzo worries over runaway teen Lucy (Christina Ricci), who paints portraits of Barbra Streisand. Soon the hallucinations begin: Duke sees Gonzo transmogrify into a demon with breasts on its back, and an acid vision of a Vegas bar features large legit lounge lizards (courtesy of monster makeup man Rob Bottin). Flashbacks depicting Duke’s intro to the drug scene jump back to love-Haight relationships in San Francisco’s Summer of Love. Cameos and guest stars include Mark Harmon, Cameron Diaz, Flea, Lyle Lovett, Harry Dean Stanton, Ellen Barkin, Tobey Maguire, and Hunter S. Thompson himself. The film features a Geffen Records soundtrack mixing rock of the period with Vegas lounge tunes. Over the years, various script adaptations came and went as did numerous talents; people connected with past efforts to film Thompson’s book include Martin Scorsese, Jack Nicholson, Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, and writer-director Alex Cox. Shown in competition at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival.

Genres

Action(490), Adventure(289), Animation(71), Biography(36), Comedy(561), Crime(295), Documentary(8), Drama(713), Family(142), Fantasy(177), History(33), Horror(205), Music(27), Musical(28), Mystery(125), Romance(242), Sci Fi(165), Short(6), Sport(43), Thriller(591), War(53), Western(29)

Actors

Anthony Hopkins(18), Arnold Schwarzenegger(15), Bill Murray(14), Brad Pitt(15), Bruce Willis(26), Christopher Walken(18), Danny DeVito(15), Donald Sutherland(15), Eddie Murphy(16), Ewan McGregor(14), Joe Pantoliano(14), John Travolta(15), Johnny Depp(15), Keanu Reeves(14), Keith David(15), Mel Gibson(16), Michelle Pfeiffer(14), Morgan Freeman(15), Nicolas Cage(18), Robert De Niro(25), Samuel L. Jackson(19), Stephen Tobolowsky(14), Tom Cruise(17), Val Kilmer(17), Willem Dafoe(16)

Years

2007(113), 2006(189), 2005(181), 2004(128), 2003(112), 2002(108), 2001(91), 2000(70), 1999(62), 1998(59), 1997(43), 1996(26), 1995(33), 1994(32), 1993(20), 1992(26), 1991(18), 1990(25), 1989(23), 1988(17), 1987(22), 1986(15), 1985(9), 1984(14), 1982(8), 1971(6)