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Rainmaker (Widescreen)
 
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Rainmaker (Widescreen)

 PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)   DVD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)

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Amazon.com Essential Video

When viewed from a cranky perspective, this by-the-book David vs. Goliath story doesn't offer any surprises, and it's a bit sad to watch director Francis Coppola (who also adapted John Grisham's bestseller) squandering his once-glorious talent on such conventional Hollywood fare. In a more charitable light, however, there's great pleasure to be found in Coppola's intelligent, no-nonsense handling of a plot that's every bit as involving as it is formulaic. Coppola also knows how to bring out the best in a stellar cast, and this is the movie (released in November 1997, just a few weeks before Good Will Hunting) that signaled Matt Damon's arrival as a major-league star. Damon plays Rudy Baylor, a young rookie lawyer in Memphis (location of many Grisham stories) who takes on a powerful insurance company (led by a sharklike lawyer played by Jon Voight) by representing the family of a boy who was denied potentially life-saving treatment for leukemia. Rudy also comes to the rescue of an abused wife (Claire Danes) and learns the tricks of the legal trade from a seasoned paralegal (Danny DeVito), who sees Rudy as his ticket out of the sleazeball practice run by a shady lawyer (Mickey Rourke). There's no mystery about where this plot is going, but Coppola takes us there in high style with a sharp script, and Damon strikes just the right note of naivete and strategic intelligence. When Goliath inevitably falls, this courtroom David wins fair and square. --Jeff Shannon

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57 Reviews
5 star:
 (24)
4 star:
 (16)
3 star:
 (11)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (57 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Great Grisham adaptation, Mar 5 2002
This review is from: The Rainmaker (VHS Tape)
Matt Damon is Rudy Baylor, a law school grad with few employment prospects (any prospects actually) in this screen-daptation of the Grisham novel. Even if you've read the book (I'm no Grisham fan, but this book kept me reading) the film is still loads of fun. The book was a patchwork of plots that couldn't carry their own book (Rudy's futile job hunting; romancing a domestic violence victim, a widow who may be worth millions) centered around a lawsuit against an HMO who won't pay for a crucial bone-marrow transplant. The book capitalizes on the rogue's gallery who define Rudy's life - Bruiser Stone (Mickey O'Rourke), the local gangster-type who gives Baylor his first job; Deck (Danny Devito) a tireless investigator and client magnet who doesn't let repeated failed attempts to pass the bar exam keep him from the law; Rudy's landlady, who imagines a fortune that she can disinherit her kids from and Dean Stockwell and Danny Glover as the judges who successively handle Rudy's case. FF Copolla goes far and beyond with a story that could be easily boiled down to a Hollywood pitch (David and Goliath square off in court). There's no complex morality in the insurance case - the Insurer is suitably sleazy, relying less on a sustainable argument than on technicalities. Handling the case for the evil insurance carrier is Leo F. Drummond (Jon Voight), a founding member of the local "old boy network". The script (like the book) dwells less on the good v. evil than on the white-shoe nature of the enemy. (Damon's voice-over reminds us that his adversaries will have the benefit of a good night's sleep before going off to a key deposition). Baylor gets a few good breaks (Glover's judge being the biggest one - a smiling foil to Drummond's smug old-style corruptibility; in one scene, he legally rules for Rudy's side on the introduction of a key piece of evidence based on a precedent - the precedent being a single court case which is so on-point, the Judge need only look at the "headnotes" before making the decision - how often does that really happen?), and the high-priced legal talent doesn't seem to help the insurer at all. Still, even when it's shameless, there's something to be said for doing the "David and Goliath" routine the right way, and this flick delivers. Baylor and Deck (once they go into business for themselves) develop a working rhythm that allows them to be noble and still wicked-bad at the same time, and the script wonderfully drops subtle hints of a southern city with a veneer of gentility covering up a bubbling reservoir of evil. (The script tells us it's Memphis, but it may as well be any fictionalized city, like the Kindle County of Turow's novels, deftly brought to life.) Get this film.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars GRISHAM'S LAW, July 6 2004
By 
Michael Butts (Berkeley Springs, WV USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Rainmaker (Widescreen) (DVD)
THE RAINMAKER is a by the numbers adaptation of John Grisham's bestseller. Director Francis Ford Coppola explores no new grounds in this film, but elicits competent and professional performances from a stellar cast. Matt Damon who plays Rudy burst onto the scene in this movie, released just before his Oscar winning screenplay and starring role in GOOD WILL HUNTING. Damon captures the youthful impetuosity and naivete of a just bar-approved lawyer who finds himself involved in a case against a big insurance company. His assistant is played by a restrained Danny DeVito. Their boss is played by an unusually understated Mickey Rourke, who shows up on screen looking halfway decent for a change. His clients are wonderfully played by Mary Kay Place and Johnny Whitworth. Jon Voight delivers an Oscar-worthy performance as Damon's devilishly cold opponent; Roy Scheider has a brief scene as the CEO of the insurance company; Randy Travis has a thirty second scene as an irate juror; Virginia Madsen is wonderful in a small role as the claims adjustor who was fired; Claire Danes is appropriately cast as the abused wife who turns to Damon for help. Oscar winner Teresa Wright turns up in a lovely role as an elderly lady who wants to leave her money to a tv evangelist.
THE RAINMAKER is perhaps a little too long (it clocks in well over two hours), and offers little in the way of suspense. It is competent, involving and ultimately satisfying, however. Matt Damon proved the hoopla about to come was deserved.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Rainmaker, Sep 26 2011
Another one of John Grisham's great novels produced as a movie. Well done! We received the movie promptly and would buy from here again!
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