Side Out
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #27700 in DVD
- Released on: 2004-07-06
- Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Dolby, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
- Running time: 100 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
When Milwaukee college student Monroe Clark (C. Thomas Howell) takes a summer job evicting his wealthy uncle's Los Angeles tenants, he ends up befriending one of the deadbeats, ex-volleyball pro Zack Barnes (Peter Horton), and the two join up together to compete in an important volleyball match. ~ Iotis Erlewine, All Movie Guide
DVD Menu
- Side #1 --
- Play Movie
- Scene Selections
- Play Previews
DVD Chapters
Side #1 --
1. Start
2. Weasel in Training
3. Poor Performance
4. Zack on the Edge
5. Trouble With Honesty
6. Coach
7. Integrity
8. Partners
9. Side Out
10. Backstabbing
11. Head Not in It
12. Zack Is Back
Customer Reviews
An Absolutely Brilliant Piece of Filmmaking
Side Out is just an incredible film. From the moment Monroe Clark steps off the plane from Milwaukee and onto the hot sandy beach volleyball scene, the action just never stops. When Zack Barnes speaks you listen. Peter Horton's finest hour. C. Thomas Howell's career had nowhere to go but, downhill from here. How he got sunbbed by the Academny, I will never know. This is just a true classic and must have for any respectable movie collector.
Laughable, yet, enticing
OK, for so many different reasons I could easily pan this. The volleyball action by a certain duo, namely horton / howell, really stinks! The acting is out and out crap, Stoklos and Smiths final film for a reason.
HOWEVER, I love this movie, if for no other reason that you get to see some of the classic players; Timmons, Stoklos, Smith, Mootheart, and of course OB. It is a fun romp through a sillier time, when anyone without a sponsorship deal could dream. Just don't expect too much.
Full of Spalding tatoos and downright great music
Side Out is a perfect example of how acting alone doesn't make a movie good. Side Out shows that a movie can survive through decades alone; by having good plot and intensifying action, that is accompanied by awseome music that seems to fit the occuring event or mood just so perfectly. So what if the acting isn't up to par, it's the action that makes us hold our breath and squinch our eyes, not the acting, and if I'm wrong, then how is Arnold Shwartzenager still in the business?
