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      Buried on Sunday

      PG 1993 1h 35m Comedy List
      Reviews Angry island fishermen declare independence and use a Soviet nuclear submarine to get Ottawa's attention. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

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      Audience Member Oh, CBC, how I love you! AMC is giving us some Charlton Heston movie I don't think I've ever heard of, and the CBC is giving us what is possibly the most random Paul Gross movie ever made. And that definitely includes that crap [i]20,000 Leagues Under the Sea[/i] Sci-Fi has played a few times. Paul Gross is actually playing a minister in this one, and he's [i]still[/i] playing a crazy man. (Well, after all, he does it so well!) He's the minister of a tiny island community in what is apparently Nova Scotia. They're about to lose their fishing rights, and he finds an obscure treaty from the early 18th Century that lets the island decide for itself who will rule them. So, naturally, they decide that Canada isn't representing them properly, and they secede. They are aided in this by a nuclear submarine, complete with two missiles, bought from a group of renegade Russian (Soviet yet, I think) sailors. And, yes, hilarity ensues. As does romance--there's some woman who either works for the government or is having a thing with a guy who works for the government or both, and she ends up with the Mountie at the end. Clearly, he's not from a faith that requires celibacy from its clergy. Then again, he's pretty much lost the faith, so I'm not sure how much it would matter. What I find interesting about this movie--which is actually pretty dumb, but still funny--is what it has to say about governmental policy. You see, the island's fishing rights aren't being taken away for environmental reasons or the sake of a native group. No, it has to do with some deal regarding emissions scrubbers and the Belgians. (I don't really understand it, but you don't really have to.) The government is willing to give the island practically anything it wants so long as they don't shoot off those missiles, but they won't let the deal fall through. (Of course it does anyway! This is a Paul Gross movie!) It's not altogether happy--the guy who played Nero Wolfe dies--but the annoying government toadies get their comeuppances, and Paul Gross gets the girl, and nuclear war is averted. (And the movie is known as [i]Buried on Sunday[/i] as well. Why? The island is Solomon Gundy Island, though it apparently has nothing to do with the rhyme, according to the little old librarian and town historian.) Half the cast was on [i]Due South[/i] at one point or another, of course; Canadian drama is kind of insular that way. And after all, a show like [i]Due South[/i], like [i]CSI[/i] or [i]Law & Order[/i], goes through a lot of guest cast. (Less than those two, admittedly, but they had a smaller budget.) Oh, and to Eddie Murphy--Alan Arkin was nominated for his first Oscar when you were five, and he won his first one last night. I think you get to suck it up. (Actually, I hadn't realized this myself, but yes. [i]The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming![/i] was nominated for four Oscars: Best Editing, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor for Alan Arkin, and [i]Best Picture[/i], believe it or not. It didn't win any.) Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Angry island fishermen declare independence and use a Soviet nuclear submarine to get Ottawa's attention.
      Director
      Paul Donovan
      Rating
      PG
      Genre
      Comedy
      Original Language
      English
      Runtime
      1h 35m
      Sound Mix
      Stereo