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Blind Justice |  | Director: Richard Spence Actors: Armand Assante, Elisabeth Shue, Robert Davi, Adam Baldwin, Ian McElhinney Studio: Hbo Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $1.99 as of 11/25/2009 08:22 CST details You Save: $7.99 (80%)
New (37) Used (17) from $1.64
Rating: 7 reviews
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 85 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.6 x 0.6
MPN: HBOD90984D ISBN: 078311916X UPC: 026359098420 EAN: 9780783119168
Theatrical Release Date: 1994 Release Date: May 8, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Canaan is a roving gunfighter blinded during the civil war. Attacked by mexican bandits he finds shelter in a small town to disciver that the town is held hostage by his attackers who are after a stash of government silver. He offers to slip past the bandits and alert the calvalry for 10% of the silver. Studio: Hbo Home Video Release Date: 02/08/2005 Starring: Armand Assante Elisabeth Shue Run time: 85 minutes Rating: R Director: Richard Spence
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
Great Western Action April 19, 2009 D. Villareal (Dallas TX) Blind Justice
The Blind gunman Canaan shows justice isn't so blind. It's one of those classic style movies that you can watch over and over - the final church show down is excellent - bad guys get theirs in the end! Action, humor, drama, shoot 'em ups are all there. Great casting, one of Assante's intriguing characters, Adam Baldwin suits his part well, Davi is the perfect outlaw thug, although Elizabeth Shue could have put more depth to her role.
Unusual, entertaining and brilliant! December 23, 2007 John Anthony Miller (Ventura, CA United States) Buy this for your western collection. An unusual piece, brilliantly acted. I highly recommend this.
blind justice November 11, 2006 Robert Warren (Melbourne, Australia) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have had this title on LD for years, but when it was available on DVD, decided to get it. It is unique in the content and I did like the soundtrack, it was unusual. There'I've Said a lot without giving too much away. Regards' Dewarren.
There are no reinforcements! October 3, 2004 Steven Hellerstedt 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Borrowing freely from westerns traditional and Italian, as well as from the Japanese Zatoichi series (blind swordfighter/masseur), BLIND JUSTICE works much better, and is a lot more enjoyable, than a mere plot description would indicate.
Armand Assante plays Canaan, a man blinded in Civil War. We see him first dressed in a black duster and wearing thick smoked glasses, walking across the desert with an infant bundled in his arms. Three Mexican banditos approach, whooping and hollering and firing their guns in the air. Canaan is dust, and if he manages to get out of this scrape he crawls into myth.
Although we're led to believe that Canaan retains some sight, his condition seems to have enhanced his other senses to a remarkable degree. Enough so that he's able to hear a scorpion walking across a hitching post from twenty feet and shoot it without touching the hand it was about to crawl onto.
The plot demands all of his super acute faculties. Canaan finds himself in a town under siege. A decimated U.S. Calvary unit is holed up in the local church, sitting on a wagon full of silver and threatened by the dreaded bandit king Alacran (Robert Davi) and his merciless minions. Oh, yeah, and there's that nurse Caroline (Elizabeth Shue) that he's got to kind of fall for, too.
Assante is a great actor, and makes his incredible character believable. The action is well choreographed and fast paced, save for a few flashblacks strategically thrown in to fill in Canaan's back story. I'm not sure we need to know how or why Canaan was blinded, but we find out anyway.
BLIND JUSTICE is compelling and an ingenious western.
Superb western with great appeal August 2, 2003 Montoya (El Dorado Hills, CA United States) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
The plot of this 1994 HBO movie is fairly simple with a sprinkling of more complex sub-plots, but essentially this movie is about a blind man (played by Armand Assante) on a quest. This western works very well with the exception of one mediocre performance in the female role, but very few [if any] of us watch westerns for the love interest. The strength of this movie is in Assante's excellent performance, as well as the universal appeal this movie will have across the board for fans of traditional American westerns and European [spaghetti] westerns alike. The director seems to borrow heavily from earlier ideas of Corbucci, Garrone and Colizzi, with a healthy measure of John Ford and Howard Hawks influence combined, to create a unique film in the western genre. I have no idea what HBO intended when they funded this film, but in a 2003 era of Dungeons and Dragons and a post-democratic society a little grit, guns and gore goes a long way! Highly recommend.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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