Mystery, Alaska

BUY > MOVIES > STUDIOS > HOLLYWOOD PICTURES

Mystery, Alaska (1999)

Mystery, Alaska
R


$9.95BUY
Viewing Period:
Unlimited (more info)
Run Time:
1 Hour, 59 Minutes
Starring:
Director:
Writer:
Producer:
Released in:
1999
Synopsis:
With Russell Crowe (THE INSIDER, A BEAUTIFUL MIND), Hank Azaria (GODZILLA, THE BIRD CAGE), and Burt Reynolds leading an incredible all-star cast, here's a fun, uplifting, action-packed story that everyone will love! A remote hockey-obsessed town populated by 633 of the most eccentric characters you'd ever want to meet, Mystery is the kind of place where nothing ever changes. But then life as they know it gets turned completely upside down! When a publicity stunt brings the world-famous New York Rangers -- and the national spotlight -- to Mystery for a game with the local team of weekend warriors, the whole town rises to meet the challenge of a lifetime! Also starring Mary McCormack (TRUE CRIME, DEEP IMPACT) and Lolita Davidovich (PLAY IT TO THE BONE, JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE) in another critical favorite from the hit-making director of AUSTIN POWERS 1&2 -- you'll stand and cheer as this ragtag bunch shows that nothing can melt their dreams of a miracle on ice!


Copyright:
© Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Inc.


Will Your Device Play this Video?
  1. Computer
  2. TV
  3. Phone/Portable
    • Browse the CinemaNow store by pointing your mobile phone here: mobile.cinemanow.com. Purchased movies can be downloaded to your PC for playback. Find out more.
  4. Gaming Systems


CRITIC REVIEWS
Lesley Jacobs
RATED 1 STARS


Ally McBeal creator David E. Kelley trips on this ice with this pointless yawn fest. Instead of a movie, this small town hockey tale plays like a mid-season episode of a television series that won't be around next year.





Lesley Jacobs

RATED 1 STARS

A Buena Vista release of a Hollywood Pictures presentation of a Baldwin/Cohen-Rocking Chair Production; Produced by David E. Kelley and Howard Baldwin; Executive Produced by Dan Kolsrud ; Co-Produced by Karen Baldwin, Richard Cohen and Jack L. Gilardi Jr.; Written by David E. Kelley and Sean O'Byrne; Directed by Jay Roach

Opens October 1, 1999

The opening shot of Mystery, Alaska is exquisite, seemingly promising some sort of majesty to come. We stare at a frozen river that cuts through miles of icy white tundra as young hockey player Stevie Weeks (Ryan Northcott), his eyes shining, glides along on his skates. It's a spiritual moment as boy communes with nature in a ballet of motion. Okay, now snap out of it. You might as well just leave the theater at this point because, after this elegant moment, the film goes downhill fast. Very fast.

Now, I am self-admittedly not a hockey fan. Maybe, the female side of me just doesn't get the idea of a bunch of macho guys skimming the ice in order to beat each other up. Still, I'm a sucker for the sort of sports story that brings home Americana and celebrates the indomitable human spirit. Mystery, Alaska should have all the makings of such a film, so where did David Kelley go wrong? Well, picture this: Imagine turning on an episode of Northern Exposure in the middle of the season, having never watched the show. Then, sit through two hours of wacky antics that feel like in-jokes. Add a dose of whimsical but stock characters that spout, by turns, perky, inspirational and dramatic dialogue. You getting the picture? The movie plays out like the eighth or ninth episode of a television dram-edy that won't be around next season.

For his trademark confined setting, Kelley settles on the small town of Mystery, Alaska. Mystery is a not-so-picture postcard burg that looks like a set built on the backlot. Maybe that's because production designer Rusty Smith did build it from scratch in Alaska. One can only wonder if there wasn't some quaint undiscovered town where they could have filmed; at least it would have looked real and not like something that belonged at Disneyland. So, every weekend in Frontierland -- I mean, Mystery -- the townsfolk turn out to see their men and boys strut their stuff in the Saturday Game, the players of which are hand chosen by the town elders headed up by Mayor Scott Pitcher (Colm Meaney) and local lawyer Pruitt (Maury Chakin). See, hockey is this hamlet's singular, defining and very masculine passion, so much so that Donna (Mary McCormack), the wife of local sheriff and hockey player John Beibe (Russell Crowe), claims that she's glad she had boys, not girls.

No one can skate on a pond like these guys and that fact lures former hometown boy turned big city producer Charlie Damer (Hank Azaria) back to town. Charlie has set up an exhibition game with none other than the New York Rangers, and, after much discussion, the town votes to go for the gusto and show the world that they're #1. Now pay attention, because this is where things get murky. Instead of jumping into the expected go for the glory/America and apple pie approach, Kelley and O'Byrne decide to write a TV episode. Indeed, so much time is spent giving every character a back story and a personal conflict that we start pulling our hair out over all the humanity thrown at us. We don't want humanity, damn it, just give us some action. This is, after all, a hockey movie, isn't it?

Kelley and O'Byrne seem to have forgotten that, relying instead on their quirky charm and their penchant for melodrama to drive the story. Beibe and his wife Donna start locking horns about the return of Charlie, who was Donna's high school love. Beibe pouts when he is cut from the team and is asked to be the coach. A sample of clever dialogue: Donna tells Beibe that all former hockey players claim they like coaching better. Beibe replies that it's because t






Mystery, Alaska has 2 user ratings.


Customer Reviews for Mystery, Alaska



System Requirements
  • Windows Media Player 10 or higher
  • Windows XP or Vista
  • Internet Explorer 6.0 or higher
  • Firefox 2.0 or higher
  • High-Speed Internet (DSL or better) connection


Download it Free

Download it Free




Video File Info:
  • Premium (1500K) Download
  • Approximate file size: 1.5GB
  • Sound: Stereo
  • Premium movies are of superior playback quality. This is a larger file. A higher speed broadband connection is recommended and the ability to Play the movie while it is downloading may take longer.

MORE INFORMATION:

Screen Format: Color
Language: English
 

YOU RECENTLY VIEWED...
Loading...