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Road to Wellville

Road to Wellville
Director: Alan Parker
Actors: Anthony Hopkins, Bridget Fonda, Matthew Broderick, John Cusack, Dana Carvey
Studio: Sony Pictures

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $0.65
You Save: $14.30 (96%)



New (12) Used (35) Collectible (6) from $0.65

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 59 reviews
Sales Rank: 12567

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Hifi Sound, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: VHS Tape
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 118 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0800139062
UPC: 043396734234
EAN: 9780800139063
ASIN: 0800139062

Theatrical Release Date: October 28, 1994
Release Date: October 10, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Average used video with original case * * We carefully inspected this * Great customer service * Satisfaction Guaranteed!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 59



1 out of 5 stars BEWARE - FULL SCREEN - Rating the FORMAT not the MOVIE   April 30, 2006
Kim Goldman (Irvine, CA United States)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Any of the reviews here from people who rated the MOVIE as 5 STARS I COMPLETELY agree with... HOWEVER, I bought and RETURNED this dvd because it was FULL SCREEN. There is NO WAY that this format or version, or whatever you want to call it can be justified in this day and age. WIDESCREEN or LETTERBOX are the ONLY WAY TO GO. And for those who like full screen (why?????) great, but Amazon should at least offer the WIDESCREEN for those of us who ONLY ENJOY THAT FORMAT.

I hear other "vendors" offer the widescreen version, which I will now purchase, but I would like to have been able to do this through Amazon.

THE MOVIE ITSELF IS INCREDIBLY AND BRILLIANTLY FUNNY AND WELL DONE!



5 out of 5 stars The road to Battle Creek!   October 23, 2005
D. Roberts (Battle Creek, Michigan United States)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

Being a current resident of Battle Creek, this movie was a real treat. When it first came out, I immediately thought it was going to be a "family" movie. Boy, was I wrong! The film is full of crude humor as well as some nice gratuitous nudity, so the buyer should beware if these things offend him / her.

The film is set in 1903, the year the Battle Creek Health Sanitarium was burned to the ground. The building I work in now (nowadays the Battle Creek Federal Center) used to be the 2nd Health Sanitarium, and it was built on the very spot where the original burned down.

Much of the depiction of what went on is quite authentic, from Anthony Hopkins' portrayal of the highy eccentric Dr. J.H. Kellogg to the marvelous "health" contraptions that he concocted for his patients. A few of these machines are still on display in the history room of the Federal Center.

The turn of the century was a dynamic time in the cereal industry. There were nearly 100 cereal companies in Battle Creek (admittedly most were very small) and quite a few shady characters trying to turn a buck - such as the one in the film depicted by John Cusack.

If you're looking for a movie with some degree of historical accuracy + a raunchy good time, this just might be a film for you. If you're from Michigan, this film is an absolute MUST have. It's one of those times in your life where you must make the decision to hit the ROAD.



4 out of 5 stars How's your health?   January 6, 2000
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Once again Anthony Hopkins takes his character over the top and into a hilarious trip into Battle Creek Michigan as the infamous Dr. John Kellog. Who cares if the story doesn't stick to the novel's, its simply non-stop comical sequences, peppering the eyes. You'll either shriek in delight or be appalled or embarrassed by the goings on. It's the health spa we would've all saved up for and visited if we were around at the time, even if the trip were made to just watch instead of take part. Not for the immature.


5 out of 5 stars Non-stop laughs, fantastic musical score, Alan Parker again!   December 30, 1998
doug.rasmussen@cwix.com (Woodland Hills, CA)
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

"The Road" is highly entertaining from the opening scene to the all-too-sudden end.

The cast, script, editing, direction, and musical score all epitomize Alan Parker's unparalleled creative genious. Every element of this movie deserves close attention, which is what makes it worth watching over and over...

I show this movie to friends who have no idea what they are in store for (WHY didn't this movie get more acclaim???). It always gets fantastic reviews, and that is what you will experience, too.

You will love this one!


3 out of 5 stars Blah. Not necessarily awful, just blah.   January 14, 2004
Robert P. Beveridge (Cleveland, OH)
6 out of 14 found this review helpful

The Road to Wellville (Alan Parker, 1994)

I have thought for years that the novel upon which The Road to Wellville was based was written by the loathsome Garrison Keillor. Well, my copy showed up in the mail the other day, and I found out the novel was written by the far more easily-digested T. Coraghessan Boyle, so I decided I wouldn't exile the wife to the living room to watch this alone as I had planned.

What a horrible mistake.

The Road to Wellville chronicles, supposedly, the doings of a number of folks in the late nineteenth-century, all presided over by cornflake inventor John Harvey Kellogg (Anthony Hopkins). The story centers, if there can be said to be a center, around the Lightbodies, Eleanor (Bridget Fonda) and Will (Matthew Broderick), who come to Kellogg's sanitarium in order to recover from an unspecified disease of Will's (his wife confides in someone later what it is, and it's something of a major plot point). Also weaving through the tale is that of Charles Ossining (John Cusack), who gets involved with Kellogg's outcast adopted son George (Dana Carvey) and a crook named Bender (Michael Lerner, the "lost another loan to Ditech!" guy). And we haven't even begun to cover the principal actors yet, much less the cameos.

You may already be able to see where I'm going with this. If so, feel free to skip to the end of the review.

I've always considered Alan Parker an inconsistent director, but while mulling this travesty of a film over, I realized why. The movies he made early in his career that worked so very well (Midnight Express, Fame, The Wall, etc.) are movies where a lot of stuff is going on, and the viewer is being bombarded by stuff from every direction at all times. That's how the movies are written, and they succeed very well.

The movies he's made since then have had scripts that are more focused (or, in the case of The Road to Wellville, were in desperate need of more focus), but Parker is still using the same technique. And we're still getting bombarded when we require focus. Simply put, there's too much going on in any two hours of Alan Parker celluloid, and whether or not it works has to do with the material rather than the director or the actors. After all, Parker has a history of getting fantastic actors to work on his films (perhaps another thing; in every movie Parker made until Birdy, he was working with a cast of unknowns. Starting with Mississippi Burning, he started getting the A-list) and do things that could very well destroy their careers. I'm amazed that, after this mess, Hopkins, Broderick, Cusack, and a number of others survived with their careers intact.

Yes, this is a mess. Provides a few good one-liners here and there, but is basically the grown-up version of the unfunny teen sex comedy (and I can never say that without saying "American Pie and its sequels are not funny, and if you think they are, you're wrong"). Will probably be enjoyed by those who thought Scary Movie was a laff riot. Everyone else can safely stay away without feeling like they've missed anything. **


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