HOME
Archives A - E      F - N    O - Z     Posters          Who We Are and Why We Do What We Do

Your Donations support the Site

amazon.gif
Top Selling DVD     Books

  BLU-RAY DVDs:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Happy Feet Two
Footloose (2011)
Tower Heist
Angels and Demons
The Rum Diary
Avatar
Batman Begins
Dark Knight
Fifth Element
The Hangover
James Bond 11 disc coll.
Lord of the Rings
trilogy
Mission Impossible GP
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Star Wars Saga
Ultimate Matrix coll
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Wolverine

 BLU-Ray for Family DVDs 
Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Bambi
A Bug's Life
Cars
Chronicles of Narnia set
Coraline
Ghostbusters
Harry Potter 1-8 collection
Iron Man 2 combo
Kung Fu Panda
Lord of the Rings Trilogy Pinocchio
Pirates of Caribbean trilogy
Pixar short films
Ratatouille
Shrek the Whole Story
Sleeping Beauty
The Smurfs
combo
Snow White & 7 Dwarfs
Star Trek motion pictures set
Star Wars Saga (1-6)
Toy Story combo
Toy Story 2 combo
Toy Story 3 combo
Wall-E SE

Labelled with ICRA
We're Kidlet Safe

Search engine by FreeFind
Click to add search to YOUR web site!
click to search site

DVDs on Sale:
The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo
Hop
Footloose (2011)
Hugo
Tower Heist
Jack and Jill
Tower Heist
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
The Three Musketeers
J. Edgar combo
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows combo
My Week With Marilyn
Abduction
Contraband
The Iron Lady
Angels Demons,
Joyful Noise
The Rum Diary
The Bodyguard
Moneyball
Adjustment Bureau
Avatar
Batman Begins
Blade Runner
Harry Potter 1-8 box set
The Help
Indiana Jones trilogy
Jurassic Park box set
Mission Impossible GP
Rango combo
Shrek 1-3 trilogy
Sherlock Holmes AGOS
Simpsons Movie
Star Trek I - VI box set
Star Trek 2010 (1 disk)
Star Wars Trilogy (1-3)
Star Wars Trilogy (4-6)
Thor
Transformers Dark Moon
X-Men First Class
X-Men Trilogy
X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Buy Movie collectibles
TV/Movie Collectibles

movie review query engine

Privacy Policy

OFCS

My Giant

Starring Billy Crystal, Gheorge Muresan; Kathleen Quinlan
Screenplay by David Seltzer
Directed by Michael Lehmann
Website www.castle-rock.com/mygiant/

IN SHORT:  Crystal-line Perfection.

Once Upon A Time, when television was in black and white, a producer named Ralph Edwards hit it big with a biographical show called "This is Your Life". The featured celeb would be surprised by friends and family and it usually wound up all sentimental and mushy. There'll by no such surprise for Sammy Kamen (Billy Crystal) who tells us his life story, Catskills comic style, as he tools through the Romanian countryside in the first few minutes of My Giant, a terrifically touching and funny flick.

As Sammy, the agent to a motley collection of not-even-close-to stars, Crystal pushes buttons both comic and sentimental and creates a yuppie who, like most of us near his age, realizes that work means nothing without family. That family, wife Serena (Kathleen Quinlan) and son Nick (Zane Carney), have left his humble New York City abode for a more structured life in Chicago.

Sonny needs only one big client to strike it rich, and he thinks he's found it in some kidlet star. The kid, making a movie in Romania, fires him thus putting Sammy on the road to his Destiny. Destiny, in this case, stands nearly eight foot tall and is named Max (Gheorge Muresan). Max, abandoned by his parents and raised by monks wants nothing more than to be left alone. He's never seen a movie, indeed he doesn't believe people would get paid for "acting". He's terrified to go into town, where the people throw rocks at him and call him "Diablo Grotesque".

As Sammy puts it, he stopped growing sometime in the Fifth Grade. The physical differences between the two men alone are funny. The self-deprecating nice Jewish boy character that Crystal has perfected to a tee is perfectly matched by the gargantuan giant who, by example, teaches Sam to be more than a character. Lest his looks fool you, Max speaks five languages, quotes Shakespeare and has an burning unrequited love for a woman he kissed once, twenty years earlier. Watching these two men becomes friends is and watching what Sam will do for his client (smelling the potential of big bucks) and then for his friend (realizing the true meaning of life) pushes the flick into the inevitable heart wrenching sentimentality which I'm supposed to hate.

It is not that the story is unique -- it knows and acknowledges the fairy tale it draws from. As well, those of you who remember the World Wrestling Federation star Andre the Giant (co-star of Crystal's The Princess Bride) may recognize stories from that man's life woven into Max's character as well. Crystal is not telling his friend Andre's story, but enough elements are there that you can feel the truth of the tale seep through. The comedy comes from the combination of size and culture and life expectations and though you'll see it coming, you won't mind getting buried in the avalanche of warm fuzzies that whack you upside the head and heart as the picture comes near its end.

Honest truth-time, folks: Here in the office, we received lots of freebies to various sneak previews of this flick. Because of the television commercial, featuring the one and only lewd joke in the movie, no one in the office wanted to see this flick. Cranky was the only one who shlepped uptown 'cuz, the fact of the matter is that it's my job. I sit through a hundred and fifty or so movies every year, of which I'd guess about a hundred and twenty five or so are crap. Every once in a while there comes a movie like My Giant, which makes sitting through all the garbage worthwhile.

Damn thing made me cry. I hate that. I loved My Giant.

On average, a first run movie ticket will run you Eight Bucks. Were Cranky able to set his own price to My Giant, he would have paid . . .

$7.00

There's may be an unwritten rule that critics are supposed to hate sentimentality; then again, I've never followed the rules. I've also not plugged the star cameo that becomes the focus of the flick, 'cuz you should enjoy the guy making fun of his rep.

My Giant comes highly recommended.


The Cranky Critic® is a Registered Trademark of, and his website is  Copyright © 1995  -  2012 by Chuck Schwartz. Articles by Paul Fischer are Copyright © 1999 - 2006 Paul Fischer. All images, unless otherwise noted, are property of,©, ®, their respective studios and are used by permission. All Rights Reserved. Not to be used or copied for any commercial purpose. Academy Award(s) and Oscar®(s) are registered trademarks and service marks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.