All The Right Moves details

All The Right Moves
Format: 15 DVD
Starring: Craig T. Nelson, Chris Penn, Lea Thompson, Tom Cruise
Director: Michael Chapman
Genre: Drama - General
Studio: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Collections: 100 Eighties Greats
Name Discs
All The Right Moves
15 Feature

DVD Information

Run time: 1 hour 26 minutes
Rental release: 30 Jun 2003
Main languages: English
Dubbed: German, French, Italian
Subtitles: French, Italian
Hearing impaired subtitles: English, German
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Most helpful review All The Right Moves

  • What a difference 20 years makes to Tom Cruise

    Rated - 2.0 stars  
    By honourablewren (10 reviews) from Kingston upon Thames , 25 Aug 2004

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    The eighties, for all its faults have been responsible for many memorable coming of age teenage films. Be it The Breakfast Club, Ferris Bueller's day off or Dirty Dancing, they have all stood the test of time. However, All the right moves does not.

    Set in a decaying Pennsylvanian town, Tom Cruise stars as a high school American Footballer who is seeking a scholarship for university to have a better life. Helping Tom in his choices is his girlfriend Lea Thompson and a young Chris Penn as his high school bestfriend.

    The acting in itself is not that poor, but the script is. There are flashes of what Tom Cruise would later produce but in his career, they are few and far between. Similarly, Lea Thompson tries to do the best that she can with a poor script but ultimately succeeds in being eye candy.

    The movie can also boast one of the most gratuitous sex scenes in film history where the two lead characters make love for no good reason than to show Lea Thompson and Tom Cruise naked.

    The moral message, so abundant in teen movies, is rather depressing as well. The movie, for some inexplicable reason, seems to condone guilt trips as a way of furthering your career. Also, the film does not know if it wants to be a social movie or a sports one.

    Whereas movies such as Pretty in Pink and the Breakfast Club succeed because of the perfomances and script, All the right moves does not. All the right moves is a film which should only be viewed to see how much Tom Cruise's perfomance has developed over 20 years.
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(6)
  • Stinker

    Rated - 0.0 stars  
    By a customer from London, England , 12 May 2007
    In fairness, this review is based on only about 15-20 minutes of watching the film: it was at that point I turned it off. Silly, childish behaviour on the screen; foul language, continually repeated for no reason other than trying to recreate the locker room atmosphere; it all felt like adolescent rubbish, which I couldn't bring myself to go on watching.

    Maybe it got better further on. If so, sorry! It couldn't have got worse.
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  • Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

    Rated - 1.0 star  
    By a customer from Poole, Dorset , 14 Jun 2006
    I'm afraid that this didn't captivate my attention and I switched off after 5 mins!
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  • Not for us

    Rated - 1.0 star  
    By crispin40 (553 reviews) from Stirling, Scotland , 08 Jan 2006
    We only watched about 10 minutes of this teen romance movie as we decided not to waste any more time. Maybe one for Cruise fans or for teenagers but not for 2 discerning female senior citizens who enjoy well crafted French and Italian films! Sorry!
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  • top fun

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By coreyno1 (23 reviews) from Leicester , 16 Feb 2005
    one of tom cruises first starring vehicles and unfortunatly he does'nt really shine like his poerful star does now. A carbon copy of all the other early eighties high school movies, though lea thompson does impress (where is she now?) and mr incredible himself craig t nelson steals the show from the rest of the cast. truly forgettable, but enjoyable none the less.
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  • The boy done well, but where's the competition?

    Rated - 1.0 star  
    By michaels from East Sussex , 25 Nov 2004
    Stef (Tom Cruise) is relying on his American football ability to get a college scholarship to do engineering and become the first in his emigre family not to be just a steelworker. He's also counting on his misty eyed girlfriend Lisa (Lea Thompson) for local sex without commitment. Then he clashes with football coach Nickerson (Craig T Nelson) ...

    This flimsy story relies on its hard core of realism to prevent it sinking into slush. The young, fresh faced Cruise dominates with very personable aggression and arrogance; the others seem doused in a 'don't upstage Cruise' potion. Thompson is sweetly demure until the moonstruck abandon of the nude love scene, a time of intense appreciative commitment and conviction not otherwise experienced. Nelson is too well scrubbed to be a convincing coach, a decent man in a position of authority which he abuses and then shows remorse at Cruise's accurate taunts: you could say he plays his emasculated part well.

    The pity is there's interesting material too briefly sketched: ethnic minorities' right to prove themselves; inequality of male and female, sport and non-sport scholarship opportunities; tension between those proud of their environment and those eager to leave. You don't need a knowledge of American football to get the message. But that edgy realism in which the skies open to deluge our hero and team in mud when he looks to have triumphed crumbles away in a tame ending.
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