American Civil War
 
In Association With Amazon
Search
American Civil War
Browse
    Subcategories
Action & Adventure
African American Cinema
Animation
Anime & Manga
Art House & International
Boxed Sets
Classics
Comedy
Confederate
Cult Movies
Documentary
Drama
DVD Blowouts
Educational
Features
Fitness & Yoga
Formats
Horror
Kids & Family
Military & War
Music Video & Concerts
Mystery & Suspense
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Special Interests
Specialty Stores
Sports
Television
Westerns


    Categories
Apparel
Books
DVD
Electronics
Magazines
Music
Home & Garden
Software
Sports & Outdoors
Toys & Games
Video Games

Belt Buckle
Confederate
 
<< Back to Previous Page
Raising Arizona
 

Raising Arizona
Actors : Nicolas Cage, Holly Hunter, Trey Wilson, John Goodman, William Forsythe
Director : Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Studio : 20th Century Fox
by 20th Century Fox
Brand : CAGE,NICOLAS
Release Date : 1999-08-03
Publisher : 20th Century Fox
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Number of Items : 1
EAN : 9786305499121
UPC : 086162123023
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 160 reviews)

List Price : $14.98
Our Price : $6.85


Editorial Reviews for  'Raising Arizona'
 
Description
Vowing to go straight, a convenience store banditt (Nicolas Cage) proposes marriage to the police departments photographer (Holly Hunter). All is wedded bliss until they discover she's unable to get pregnant and are turned down by every adoption agency in town. It does not take long before they realize the only solution is to kidnap one of the town's celebrated quintuplets and hit the road!
 
Americancivilwar.com essential video
Blood Simple made it clear that the cinematically precocious Coen brothers (writer-director Joel and writer-producer Ethan) were gifted filmmakers to watch out for. But it was the outrageously farcical Raising Arizona that announced the Coens' darkly comedic audacity to the world. It wasn't widely seen when released in 1987, but its modest audience was vocally supportive, and this hyperactive comedy has since developed a large and loyal following. It's the story of "Ed" (for Edwina, played by Holly Hunter), a policewoman who falls in love with "Hi" (for H.I. McDonnough, played by Nicolas Cage) while she's taking his mug shots. She's infertile and he's a habitual robber of convenience stores, and their folksy marital bliss depends on settling down with a rug rat. Unable to conceive, they kidnap one of the newsworthy quintuplets born to an unpainted-furniture huckster named Nathan Arizona (Trey Wilson), who quickly hires a Harley-riding mercenary (Randall "Tex" Cobb) to track the baby's whereabouts. What follows is a full-throttle comedy that defies description, fueled by the Coens' lyrical redneck dialogue, the manic camerawork of future director Barry Sonnenfeld, and some of the most inventively comedic chase scenes ever filmed. Some will dismiss the comedy for being recklessly over-the-top; others will love it for its clever mix of slapstick action, surreal fantasy, and homespun family values. One thing's for sure--this is a Coen movie from start to finish, and that makes it undeniably unique. --Jeff Shannon
 
Customer Reviews for  'Raising Arizona'
 
Greatest ever
There was a time, many many years ago, before National Treasure, Ghostrider and Bangkok Dangerous, that Nicholas Cage was in the greatest movie of all time. That movie, was Raising Arizona. If you haven't seen it, please start a Netflix account right now and queue up 4 movies and watch in this order:

1st - National Treasure (wow, did I just sit through that?)
2nd - Ghostrider (wow, someone in Hollywood funded this?)
3rd - Bangkok Dangerous (wow, this is on DVD already? I saw it just opened last week in the theater???)

at this point, you are going to want to jump out of a window, but before you do, there is 1 more movie you have to watch......

4th - Raising Arizona (my god, this is the greatest movie of all time!!!!)


You have now seen the greatest movie of all time, and will forget that Gone in Sixty Seconds, Lord of War, Next, Captain Corelli's Mandolin, Face Off, The Rock, and Con Air was ever even made.
 
The Coen Brother's Quintessential Comedy
The Coen Brothers' Oscar-winning triumph for "No Country for Old Men" seemed to me as much recognition of two decades of excellent, if quirky, filmmaking as it was celebration of that specific film masterpiece. Their films defy categorization, although I think it is safe to say that most of the films lean more towards "comedy" or "drama". One of their trademarks is adding humor to their dramas, and few comedies come with darker moments than theirs. For me, "Raising Arizona" represents their best and most outrageous comedy, and since their list of comedies includes "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", "The Big Lebowski" and "Burn After Reading", that's saying something.

Nicolas Cage leads as a dim but good-hearted small time convenience store robber named H.I. McDunnough. Holly Hunter plays Edwina, a policewoman who meets H.I. over and over again, taking the booking photographs and fingerprints of repeat offender H.I. in the brilliant prologue.

Robber H.I. and cop Ed marry and set up homestead in a trailer "on the outskirts of Tempe" (when establishing shots show they are out in the western desert, far from any sign of civilization.) But Edwina's insides are "a rocky place" where H.I.'s "seed could find no purchase" so they are left childless.

While Ed is going through the heartbreak of infertility quintuplets are born to the King of Unfinished Furniture, Nathan Arizona, and his wife Florence. Trey Wilson gives an absolutely brilliant performance as the blustering, tough-talking furniture man.

In a stretch of logic common in Coen movies, H.I. and Ed decide that the Arizonas have more offspring than they need or can handle, so since they are childless it is acceptable to take one of them.

The rest of the film deals more or less with Hi and Ed's attempts to achieve domestic tranquility with little Nathan, Junior, while a manhunt is initiated to recover the high-profile infant.

Along the way we meet a pair of brothers, Hi's friends from prison, and recently broken out of said prison in a scene that is both hilarious and epic at the same time. This was the first film role that I remember seeing John Goodman, and he is a presence as Gale Snoats. Brother Evelle is played by an early William Forsyth, who tells Edwina that they haven't broken out of prison, they've "released themselves on their own recognizance." Goodman adds "we felt that the institution no longer had anything to offer us."

Former boxer Randall "Tex" Cobb adds a surreal touch as a shotgun-toting, harley-riding, cigar-smoking, rabbit hand-grenading, post-apocalyptic bounty hunter, Leonard Smalls, who offers to recover Nathan Junior for the Arizonas, but only for twice the $25,000 reward. Smalls, who is later called a "Warthog from Hell" by Edwina, is after all only a capitalist and he informs Nathan Arizona that he knows plenty of people willing to pay more than $25,000 for a healthy baby. You don't doubt that he does.

The soundtrack is Coen Brothers perfect and features a flailed banjo which is accompanied by yodeling and occasionally breaks into Beethoven's "Ode to Joy". Did I mention their movies are quirky?

It would be difficult to say which is quirkier, the Coen's hilariously surreal dialogue or the unbelievable plot, but both are part of the joy of this film.

H.I.'s boss Glenn (played by Sam McMurray) and Glenn's wife Dot (played by Academy Award winner Frances McDormand, Mrs. Joel Coen) show up so that Dot can work Edwina into a maternal frenzy over little Junior and whether or not he has been vaccinated with his Dip-Tet. Glenn meanwhile suggests wife-swapping to H.I. who responds by cold-cocking Glenn. Glenn fires H.I. who is tempted to return to his previous life of crime.

Later the Snoats brothers bust in on a hayseed bank and order everyone to "freeze" and "get down on the ground". All of the people raise their hands and turn silently towards the shot-gun wielding brothers. An old-timer asks "Well, which is it, young feller? You want I should freeze or get down on the ground? Mean to say, if'n I freeze, I can't rightly drop. And if'n I drop, I'm a-gonna be in motion. You see..."

Coen Brothers movies are full of moments like this, and Raising Arizona has more funny moments than any of their others, if'n you ask me.
 
The first 30 minutes are funny and enjoyable mostly due to tickling and witty dialogues. The rest is boring.
The first 30 minutes are funny and enjoyable mostly due to tickling and witty dialogues. The rest is boring.

**** SPOILER. DO NOT READ this if you HAVE NOT WATCHED the MOVIE ****

The film goes south when the two friends of Nicolas escaped from the prison and visited him in his home. Since then, there are only a couples of
hilarious scenes. One is where the boss suggested wife-swapping. The other is when the kids of his boss wrecked his home.

It gets worse when the bounty hunter started to track Nicolas down. The imagination is so wild that it's not interesting any more.

Anybody who is expecting a child or wants to have one should watch this. It realistically and funnily portraits part of the difficulty of raising a child.
 
Coen Brothers
Coen Brother's film, what more needs to be said. These guys are remarkable at capturing a area's culture, dialect and humor.
 
Best movie ever
I am a fan of all the Coen brothers' movies, but Raising Arizona is my favorite of them all. It's a gem, and I bought it for all my senior advisees (I'm a high school teacher) as their graduation present. "Okay, then."
 
Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty.
View Cart
Featured Items
Andersonville
Gods & Generals
Civil War Journal - The Conflict Begins
Indian Warriors - The Untold Story of the Civil War (History Channel)
Civil War Combat: America's Bloodiest Battles
Lee Shirt
Cavalry
Lee HDQRTS
 
American Civil War Quarter Masters Supply Depot
 
American Civil War - Discount prices, fast delivery on DVD American Civil War - Raising Arizona only $6.85 at americancivilwar.com products.