| Index | 7 reviews in total |
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Charming piece of whimsy, 14 July 2003
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Author:
latakiahaze from Hereford, England
A kids movie that adults will have to smile at too. Flawed on the location and accent fronts and questionable when it comes to the cultural heritage of "the little people", the movie nonetheless delivers with slapstick fun, catchy Irish jigs and better-than-average special effects. A whimsical, charming treat for all the family, and Big Mick is excellent with it... to be sure, to be sure!
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Big Mick Is a Leprechaun!, 22 December 2006
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Author:
themossybog from United States
What an enchanting story and amazing effects and beautiful photography! Veronica Hamel was superb as the evil Laura and sidekick, actor David Warner was very amusing as well! I was so impressed by the acting of Big Mick Lonegan,who plays the leprechaun. He brought this character to life and I've enjoyed watching this movie several times,just to see his performance.He would have been great in the classic fantasy movie "Legend" starring Tom Cruise,as one of the little elves.The casting director should be awarded for casting him in this unique role! I look forward to seeing more movies with Big Mick,as Im sure I will be delighted!! Highly recommend this movie! Four Stars!
Really really funny.. in the worst possible way., 11 January 2008
Author:
Michael Dillon from Ireland
My favourite thing about this terrible film are the accents.. not since
Natascha McElhone's attempt at the Irish accent in The Devil's Own have
i heard such terrible Irish accents. The leprechaun clearly has some
sort of strange Yorkshire accent (english), though in fairness he does
sometimes sound a bit like he's from Cork - but most of the time he
sounds like he's a grumpy little ginger man from coronation street.
The next great thing about the film - the location. Looks like it was
filmed in California. Looks precisely nothing like Ireland, and the
house which is central to it is clearly an American lodge. In the first
five minutes there is an American Lincoln limousine with apparently
Irish number-plates which show it to be from Kildare.
The story's great... it has it all - leprechauns from northern england,
property development, American landscapes... all tied together with a
brilliant 5 second refrain of trad flute music which is repeated over
and over in an annoying loop. I love this film!
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Little wheels within little wheels, 15 October 2007
Author:
annevejb from UK
Anyone hoping for a story made for an adult audience will likely be
disappointed. I am not.
*
As I awaited delivery of the adult version paperback of the princess
story, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, I re-watched my copy
of The Last Leprechaun, 1998, and the central aspect for me was that
there is an occasional lookalike to The Supreme Queen, Liesel of A
Little Princess 1995.
Looking a bit closer, this was Britteny Bomann, pronounced Britain y
Bow Man, born in La, 1 May 1987, in an acting family, and is one of
three screen features that she acted in while a girl. All are IMDb
dated 1998. All are from Peakviewing Transatlantic PLC. All are filmed
in South Africa. All have a fairy theme. Casting is USA and or SA, UK
unlisted. Post production in Europe, typically the UK. All include
people called Matthews in key roles, Peakviewing is their baby and
appears to have started in the UK, I doubt that they are related to
Liesel.
As a young woman, Britteny has re-started acting in features and
current photos show her looking different.
These early features do not have the power of A Little Princess,
nothing like it, but these are still very okay. Okay stories and okay
Britteny while reminding me of the power of young Liesel.
These make me muse on Living Stone and Stanley Matthews, but that is
unlikely to be sense to anyone else. Reactions to stories as an
individual thing.
*
From Peakviewing's UK site, they had formed their international sales
wing, then expanded production with a batch of three stories in 1997,
to be filmed in South Africa.
Beings, alias The Fairy King of Ar in the UK, was the first of these to
be made. I found it to be okay but weaker than Leprechaun.
My problem is the storyline, which bothers about the look of detail,
less about other realism. I am finding it worth suspending disbelief
and so far I can manage that. The storytelling is okay. All three
features feel okay by the standards of features made for children,
maybe not by the standards of features made for young adults or Big
Girrrs.
*
I found Leprechaun alienating at first, the first few minutes. Now I
like it more than the others and as I get to know the others, by
occasional viewing, could be I will get to like them as much as this
too.
The problem, for me, was the look of the baddie, a Banshee, much
scarier than a Big Girr who has deliberately overdone the cosmetics.
She is there at the opening looking really foul and I was wondering how
many five year olds would get nightmares from this opening. I know that
I would have. But this opening does help her look cuter when the comedy
starts.
Beings has a bit of that too, but not so conveniently. Beings: Scary
looks come in when the boy dreams of goblins and their looks compared
to how locals understand them is a theme of this story, they are meant
to look foul.
I maybe would prefer these to be PG, but only for that aspect.
Doubtless some aged around four will find other reasons so this will be
a fairly standard situation with U or G rated features.
I find I need to watch Leprechaun only occasionally, but to do that
allows the story to grow addictive. This has charm, as one might hope
in a fairy story. Not a charm that springs out as obvious at first
viewing. First off, it felt like an encouragement to going to sleep.
Further than that I found the music familiar but helpful. The story to
be warm. Britteny looks the most like Liesel in this and it is the one
that stands out as the best.
*
Britteny hit on the head by a football, grazed knee, pressure to send
her to a school other than her own. Magic, leg healed, school reprieve.
The Little Unicorn was the last of these three to be made. At October
2007 IMDb listed this as 1998 and they often seem to prefer to list by
when first shown, but the end credits give 1999, I assume the
completion year, and the sleeve gave 2000, possibly when first shown.
End credits say 'In Memory Of Stephen John Howard, 1958 to 1999'. I
assume that is someone known to Peakviewing.
There is a lot of fun stuff here, but the hurdle I face is two pieces
of grit.
Grit 1, the music. Really big music that gets in the way in a big way,
but it was a lot less painful the second time around.
Grit 2 is worst, but it also was a lot less painful the second time
around. Brittney has an Irish accent similar to that Fairuza Balk had
to use in Worst Witch 1986. I am more a fan of Worst Witch 1998.
Brittney is nice, other than that, but hers is not a little role, she
is not pretty and silent background.
The fun. A lot of this is the assorted bad guys all trying to do the
dirty, covering each other in dirt in the process. Lots of neat comedy.
Fun for me is the mood of other parts, akin to the sampler DVD I have
for the Skippy the bush kangaroo 1998 TV series, but only because I
know that other DVD. Add my fascination with the young Liesel and there
is a lot in this.
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Even a 6 year old girl hated it, 1 October 2005
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Author:
wingnut77 from Los Angeles
This is one of the most vapid, poorly acted movies I have seen in years. I had to force myself to sit through the entire thing, and was quite proud when I made it to the end. . . though saddened by the fact that I had lost that chunk of my life to this travesty. My daughter who is 6 (and God knows the movie tastes of 6 year old girls runs pretty parallel to this dribble)could not even stay awake through it, and it is probably the first movie ever she had no desire to watch again. Yes, that's right, a 6 year old girl refused to sit through this movie a second time. In her words "it was stupid". I think that pretty much sums up this colossal waste of time, and film. It was stupid.
0 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
The idea was cute but..., 24 January 2004
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Author:
Alex (stingaree1) from Texas City, TX
I love all things Irish and was in hopes this would be a clever movie about an enduring Irish Legend. Instead I saw another version of "Cruella DeVille" acting out an improbable (even for a fantasy) story. The actor who played the leprechaun was good but the rest of the cast seemed to be along for the ride. When the film ended the only feeling you had was "why did I waste my time?"
2 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Better "switch" to books, 17 November 2001
Author:
BCM (bcm-2)
A nice, little fairytale - but You get more if You read fairytales to the
children.
Yes, You can laugh with Your kids on that leprechaun, You can enjoy the
special effects, listen to that funny tunes... but better You "switch" to
a
fairytale book and let the childrens imagination run wild than Your TV
set.
And then You will teach them the morals better.
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