Graffiti Bridge (Blu-ray) PG-13
Music is the power. Love is the message. Truth is the answer.
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Also released as:
Graffiti Bridge
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: PG-13
- Run Time: 1 hours, 35 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: October 4, 2016
- Originally Released: 1990
- Label: Warner Home Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Prince | |
Performer: | Morris Day, Jill Jones, Mavis Staples, George Clinton, Ingrid Chavez & Tevin Campbell | |
Directed by | Prince | |
Music by | Prince | |
Screenwriting by | Prince | |
Produced by | Arnold Stiefel & Randy Phillips | |
Director of Photography: | Bill Butler | |
Executive Production by | Peter MacDonald |
Entertainment Reviews:
He abandons even the semi-realism of 'Purple Rain' for something closer to a good, old-fashioned, backlot musical - something we get even less of these days, so enjoy the novelty.
Full Review
Flavorwire
There is some plot, but it is wispy at best and frequently gets in the way of the music.
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Baltimore Sun
Rating: 1/4 --
Visually unappealing and inane at every turn, this one's the absolute pits.
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Creative Loafing
Rating: 2/5 --
The music is quite good and will certainly appeal to Prince fans, but it is buried under so much tedious pretention that even the performer's most devoted fans will find it difficult to sit through the film.
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TV Guide
Rating: 2/4 --
The movie suffers from various technical difficulties -- like choppy editing and songs that get cut off mid-groove -- and in the end everything collapses in a heap.
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Chicago Tribune
...It's full of Grade-A rock 'n' roll, rousingly well performed. It moves, it swings, it jumps and vibrates...
Los Angeles Times
Graffiti Bridge may be far from perfect, but it is also a fascinating film in a number of ways, due as much to its strengths as its weaknesses.
Full Review
4:3
Product Description:
Prince returns as the kid, locked in a power struggle over the Glam Slam, a prime-location nightclub he co-owns with Day. Their ongoing battle for control inspires a potent tale of goodness vs. greed and the redemptive power of love and self-expression, as well as a succession of roof-raising musical numbers.