
A Hollywood actress who worries that the movie world is eroding her grip on reality is drawn into a love affair with an ordinary - and married - guy.... (Full plot summary below)
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A Hollywood actress who worries that the movie world is eroding her grip on reality is drawn into a love affair with an ordinary - and married - guy.
Leave your thoughts about Tales from the Hollywood Hills: Natica Jackson.
| User ReviewPatrick LPresently I've been watching it. not all the way through at once, and it's been an interesting film. Michelle's role is a small one of a starlet who is alone and looking for love, or a man at least. Sadly her found man is not what she'd like him to be. There are actors whom I recognize, if not by name then by face. I still haven't finished watching it, I was so tired last night after enjoying The Muppetts, but it seems a decent film with Pfeiffer, Stella Stevens and other recognizable faces. I have watched the whole film now, much later, and it was worth seeing but mostly for its "insider look" at Hollywood and the filmmaking industry. |
| User ReviewRichard DThis TV movie adaptation of a John O'Hara story aired as an episode of "Great Performances", which would lead you to believe that it might actually be good. Michelle Pfeiffer stars as a Hollwood actress in the 30's who starts an affair with a married man. Although the valiantly try to make you believe it's the 1930's, there's something about shooting on video that renders the attempt unconvincing. Oddly enough, the DVD release of this intersperses it with a completely unrelated episode also set in Hollywood in the 30's starring Darren McGavin and Steven Bauer. Neither story is interesting enough to justify more than 30 minutes of your time. Interspersing them just serves to confuse the viewer. |
| User ReviewAdam RBoredom is the least of this movie's problems. The section of the film known as "A Table at Ciro's" - though it smacks of rushed made-for-TV movie quality - still has a lot to like about it, notably Darren McGavin and Kenneth McMillan's performances as two washed-up Hollywood heavy hitters trying desperately to hang onto past glories. Sure, there were problems, primarily a badly constructed romance between McGavin's character's wife (Lois Chiles) and a Rudolph Valentino-style Latin lothario (Steven Bauer) and a load of bad dialogue, but it was still charming. However, the train that is "Power, Passion, and Murder" goes off the rails when the story switches - rapidly and with little warning - to the woes of promising young actress Natica Jackson (Michelle Pfeiffer) as she engages in an affair with an unhappily married man with tragic consequences. Nevermind that the romance is pathetic and chemistry-free; around this time, the post-synchronization of the dialogue and the physical quality of the film itself deteriorates so much that it makes "Power" basically unwatchable, and not just because of the putrid melodrama onscreen. |