SuperHeroBooks - Crossover Dreams

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List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $14.62
Your Save: $ 15.33 ( 51% )
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Manufacturer: New Yorker Video Starring: Rubén Blades, Shawn Elliott, Tom Signorelli, Elizabeth Peña, Frank Robles Directed By: Leon Ichaso
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD EAN: 9781567304107 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 1567304109 Label: New Yorker Video Manufacturer: New Yorker Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: New Yorker Video Release Date: 2005-06-07 Running Time: 86 Studio: New Yorker Video Theatrical Release Date: 1985-08-23
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: crossover dreams Comment: outstanding one of the best that you will enjoy if you are a true salsero
Customer Rating:      Summary: Amatuerish film with wooden acting Comment: Yes, Salsa is very seductive but as a person who grew up in the culture, it is clear that neither Blades nor Ichaso have a grip on the reality. Buy it for the sake of having Blades entre film.
But this film isn't even good enough for HBO.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Classic Tale of the New York Salsa Scene Comment: It's scary how well director Leon Ichaso depicts the people he makes movies about. Crossover Dreams is the classic movie of the salsa scene in the late 70's and early 80's. If you love the music and the culture, you'll love the movie. If you want to learn about it, this is the movie to see along with El Super and Pinero. Ruben Blades plays the unassuming Rudy Veloz, a young singer on the New York salsa club circuit that dreams of crossing over to pop mainstream. Rudy goes through some ups and downs, but finally lands a contract with a rock producer. But his new life is not all its cracked up to be and Rudy's star falls as fast as it rose, and he loses his girlfriend Rosie (Liz Pena) in the process. Crossover Dreams delivers the heartfelt "don't forget where you come from" message -- in this case, Spanish Harlem. The movie is filled with guest appearances of great salsa musicians, especially the velvet voice and style of Virgilio Marti, who sings the hands down greatest version of the Cuban classic "Llora Timbero". Pick up the CD soundtrack just for this hit. Crossover Dreams falls short of five stars because of some choppy editing, a plot that sags towards the end of the film, and some one dimensional supporting characters. The ending could have been better developed. But the music, funny lines and beautifully filmed images of El Barrio make the movie a great contribution to New York nostalgia.
Customer Rating:      Summary: More like 3 and a Half Comment: The film has spice and color, even though the story line is formula, except the part about the girlfriend, sort of a funny twist there. It is about a Harlem Salsa Singer trying to crossover, but his fate is a bit different than Selena. He ends up rising very quickly and crashing even more quickly. I really really liked the color and the shots of East Harlem. I even liked more the music. It had a liveliness that made the film come alive more. I thought Ruben Blades did a great job in acting his part, staying right with his character. His film presence is very magnetic. I also like Elizabeth Pena, although she doesn't have a whole lotta of spark in this film. It was a nice film and I suggest it and recommend it. Lisa Nary
Customer Rating:      Summary: Crossover -- and you'll pay! Comment: This was the movie that introduced me to Ruben Blades, and I loved it from beginning to end. The movie is the BOMB, and the theme is one that today's young musicians better pay heed to: when you make it, you'd better keep your soul and your friends or else you can lose both! I read somewhere that this movie, shot in Spanish Harlem, was made for around $600,000. What a deal. A young salsa singer makes a hit record and then abandons his friends and environment (sells out). He is pressured for a second record, but can't do it because he no longer has his former buddies around him. HE ends up back in Spanish Harlem. But the trip that he took is worth study and analysis, because far too many "stars of color" forget where they came from. If you have "crossover dreams," it means that for the most part you give up what you are so you can be more "marketable" to the other side. The seamier side of how these stars are "sold" to the public is also shared in this movie. IF there's a soundtrack, get it because the music is fantastic and indeed, Blades does have a band and can really sing! He's also got a law degree. You go Ruben!
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Editorial Reviews:
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"Latin Music star Ruben Blades stars in CROSSOVER DREAMS, a brash and brassy story that does for salsa music roughly what THE HARDER THEY COME did for Reggae. Blades- compared by critics to Bruce Springsteen for his charismatic performing style, driving rhythm, complex lyrics, and political savvy plays Rudy Veloz, a Barrio singing star determined to jump the salsa circuit and aim for big-time success in the mainstream. The rise-and-fall-and-rise storyline takes Rudy on a bumpy ride through life in the fast lane: drugs, compromises, easy credit, easy women, broken promises, and shattered dreams. As in EL SUPER, director Ichaso displays a gift for low-key humor and offhand vignettes, the film’s casual structure exploding in exhilarating bursts of lyricism and energy, keyed on flashy fluorescent colors and set to the pervasive Afro-Cuban rhythms provided by Blades and other Hispanic artists such as Conjunto Libre, Andy Gonzoles, Jerry Gonzales, Yomo Toro, Virginia Marti and Marco Rizo. "
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