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Miracle Mile

DVD | 1989 | USA | 87 min. | MGM (VIDEO & DVD)

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Retail Price: $14.98      Members Save: $5.51 ( 36% )

Director(s): Steve De Jarnatt
Starring: Peter Berg, Alan Berger, Lucille Bliss, Earl Boen, Edward Bunker, ...
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Region: 1
Video: Pan and Scan for TV
DVD Aspect Ratio: Pre-1954 Standard (1.33:1)
Audio: Dolby Surround (4.0)
Language: English
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
Weight factor: 1 item(s)

Plot Synopsis

Miracle Mile starts conventionally enough, with bashful musician Anthony Edwards going ga-ga over waitress Mare Winningham. After a pleasant if somewhat quirky day together, Edwards and Winningham plan a tete-a-tete at the all-night restaurant where the girl works. While preparing to call her on a pay phone, Edwards intercepts a frantic call from a soldier stationed at a Midwestern missile silo. The message: nuclear warheads have been launched, and it's only 70 minutes to Armageddon! This unsettling news casts severe doubts over the future of Edwards' and Winningham's relationship. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Editorial Reviews:

A charming little flick that combines elements of Night of the Living Dead, The Towering Inferno, and The Morning After into an improbable date movie, Miracle Mile gives Cherry 2000 filmmaker Steven de Jarnatt another chance to prove that a decent cast and a cool premise are more valuable than millions of dollars in special effects. The best classic science fiction stories favored compelling what-if scenarios over razor sharp prose. In the cinematic equivalent, we get workmanlike production values and a heck of a concept: What if you accidentally intercepted a phone call that alerted you to impending nuclear war? Anthony Edwards and Mare Winningham are the everyday youngsters whose tentative romance gets interrupted by the imminent big bang, and their winsome appeal goes a lot farther than something more high-octane. Meanwhile, a rich collection of character actors including Star Trek: The Next Generation's Denise Crosby provide expendable supporting players and lend the race to infinity its sociological scope. Any movie predicated on a nuclear countdown is bound to end on either a downer or an unexpectedly giddy note, but the game cast and tight little script keep the audience guessing right down to zero. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide