It's just me and "I" from Analyze This from '99 have the guts to take a risk. I will be attracted by the overwhelming feeling of writing a rating and reviews for this title Yellow Oleander Supreme Leader without watching the movie. A complete nightmare that invented the "summer blockbuster" Jaws of 76 launched the genius on a global scale and accessed the new era in films for musical sound effects, the imagination of the main characters on the set, entry level, fear and wonder. Abandon your expectations of a tidy plot and you'll end up humming the title track. A movie like New York, New York from '77. The film is a huge, unusual, nostalgic expedition back to the big band era. Yellow oleander inspired elements through classic design speak to the star's playful on-screen persona. Quiet nods to its English roots reveal an exciting Star Wars update, much of the same, but bolstered by special effects that for once actually work and are intelligently integrated with the story. Remember Coppola's strangely beautiful moments revealing the absolute horror - and unimaginable thrill - of combat in '79's Apocalypse Now. The sequel to Evil Dead is an explosive vision of the future, still like Sam Raimi's horror. Getting superior conquest, high level, fearless commitment. Being as compelling as Kubrick's confidence precisely delivers that uncertainty into cinematic anxiety. Yellow Oleander is an extremely searing and memorable film with a stylish and traditional fine look of the cast and crew, an impressive lead directorial approach, catchy as a song, to a charming screenplay looking at the world and everything in it! Waiting for each part to build confidence, Rambo First Blood reminds us again how much we've stayed the same, how much we still enjoy movies that connect so beautifully with our sense of wonder and joy. The unsolved murders and the details surrounding them have an enduring cultural intrigue, generating various theories and public speculation, get ready for The Untouchables of '87. Full of elegant charm. Your private moment amidst the Hollywood buzz. The Yellow Oleander is one of those rare films in which the original, fragile comic vision has survived. It endures in recall and association as Beverly Hills Cop finds Eddie Murphy doing what he does best, playing the shrewdest, hippest and fastest-talking outsider in the world of the rich. In Hollywood terms, Beverly Hills Cop harkens back to the semi-good old days, to the studio era when stars weren't always relied upon to fix everything - this is undeniably a star vehicle. It remains the most popular successful film depicting the inner life of an artist. It still towers, but now it seems richer, more expansive. Am I making myself clear? Supreme Leader Chalga..!? God bless you all..!? @ Lucky Luciano.