 | |  |
| Cujo (Sp) | 
enlarge | List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $1.25 You Save: $8.73 (87%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $0.75
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 75 reviews) Sales Rank: 13014 Category: Video
Actors: Dee Wallace (ii), Danny Pintauro, Daniel Hugh Kelly, Christopher Stone, Ed Lauter Director: Lewis Teague Publisher: Republic Pictures Studio: Republic Pictures Manufacturer: Republic Pictures Label: Republic Pictures Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 95 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 6303159966 UPC: 726697060164 EAN: 9781563353499 ASIN: 6303159966
Release Date: August 17, 1994 Theatrical Release Date: August 12, 1983 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com This 1983 adaptation of the Stephen King horror novel is the anti-Beethoven, the story of a rabid St. Bernard that terrorizes a community, tears up a few folks, and goes after a woman and her son. Once the point has been made that big, lovable Cujo has been bitten by a rabid bat, there isn't much more to say. The film is essentially a linear progression of doggy violence, though director Lewis Teague (The Jewel of the Nile)--building on King's implication that we all know what it's like to be afraid of a big, scary pooch--succeeds at making the fear almost primitive for an audience. --Tom Keogh
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 70 more reviews...
  Terror In A Yellow Pinto May 25, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Most people know the basic plot of Stephen King's CUJO. The title character, a gentle but huge St. Bernard is bitten by a rabid bat, contracts rabies and becomes a frothing maniacal monster that terrorizes some people most famously a mother and her young son stuck in a stalled yellow Pinto at a remote farm house. The mother, Donna, played by Dee Wallace is not particularly sympathetic. She's got a nice good looking husband who is apparently a good provider, a lovely waterfront house, a cute son and apparently nothing to do but run errands and have an affair with a not particularly attractive handyman. Maybe her gripe with her husband is he runs around in a cute red convertible while she's stuck with this lemon of a Pinto? Anyway the first half of the movie sets up Donna and her husband's family life and more briefly we get a look at Cujo's family - a mean car mechanic, his downtrodden wife and their son who seems like a nice enough kid. Oh and we get to see poor Cujo bitten on the nose by the bat while he is chasing a rabbit.
Events conspire so that Donna is caught by her husband with her boyfriend just as she is breaking the affair off. Her husband is called away on business to Boston and goes off in a bit of a huff things being as they are. The wife and cute son are left with the always breaking down Pinto and she with the little boy in tow drive it out to the remote farm where Cujo's owner, the mechanic, lives and the terror begins.
I read King's novel years ago and I thought I remembered quite a different ending from the one the movie depicts. After reading some of the reviews on Amazon I see I remembered correctly. One annoyance I had with the film it is supposed to be set in Maine but it is rather obviously filmed in Northern California. And of course though I realize rabid animals are very dangerous would a dying dog really become a single minded killing machine like Cujo? This is a decent movie that does have some really gripping scenes though I'd call it more of a thriller or suspense film than real horror and there really isn't anything overtly supernatural. And if nothing else it might make you realize why they had to shoot Old Yeller.
  Please, Don't get mad, this is worse than "The Shining" August 7, 2007 3 out of 10 found this review helpful
Oh man do people get mad at me when I say that, but it's true. At no time was I ever scared or even creeped out, just bored and ready for it to end. Once again Mr. King eludes the big screen's grasp!
  Dog Lover Having Second Thoughts July 23, 2007 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
I am a huge dog lover, but this movie had me looking at canines in a different light for quite some time while I was little. For some reason, I always relate this movie to "Sandlot," but this dog really was ridiculously mean. The scene in the junkyard made my eyes widen a couple times, and I'd give this movie four stars for being entertaining. Scary? Not at all. The book was even more grotesque, and I enjoyed every minute of it. All I kept thinking through the book and the movie was "What is taking so long for someone to shoot this dog?!"
  Dog obviously happy during acting... June 1, 2007 2 out of 7 found this review helpful
This movie looses it's scary factor when you have a dog yourself and read their bodylanguage. The dog is not mean, evil or dangerous, like in the scene where Cujo jumps onto the car, the dog is obviously searching for a ball inside and tries to "dig inside" to get it. But by adding roars and growlings this scene is supposed to look like a rabid dog trying to kill a mother and her son. The dog also wags it tail when it sees the actors = happy dog. However, I do like the story, so I wish someday they'll remake it and make Cujo computer-animated, making him scary.
  good movie February 23, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
the movie was good and all bu their were a couple let downs,
1. the ending was WAY different then the book (not going to spoil it) 2. wasn't as scary as you would think 3. boring at times
i would recomend the book over the movie any day
|
|
| Included with most items on sale are editorial reviews and customer reviews |  | |