Foxfire Light (1983) Poster

(1983)

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A wonderful Romance!In a nice southern way.
kimberly-2414 May 2003
Joanna Morgan (Faye Grant) Comes to the Ozark Mountains for a two week visit with her uncle Reese(Leslie Nielsen). At first Joanna doesn't care for the Ozark very much.Till meets Linc(Barry Van Dyke) a very handsome southern ridger runner.And for a long time Uncle Reese has had a crush on Rachel(Lara Parker)a very sweet and shy widow who dont like to give Reese the time of day. And also there is Jessie.A very sweet but backwoods kind of guy.Joanna doesn't get on a good start with Jessie at first.She really misjudges people when she first meets them.But she never gets along with Jessies mules. This is a wonderful movie and a book.I really enjoyed the both very much.Full of Romance it will keep you wondering till the end. Drawn by a great cast. ILL give a A+ to this movie
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3/10
Bland, predictable, generic
bronty5 October 2022
Written by prolific romance author Janet Dailey, this lightweight affair tells the story of a pampered young woman who decides to head South for the summer to find herself. As the protagonist, Faye Grant is attractive but perhaps too hard-edged, coming across as slightly too old for this part. It doesn't help any that she's not exactly a gifted actress. In fact, she's terrible. (When she tries to display anger or frustration, she tends to yell her lines in a manner one might expect from a community theatre. Though to be honest, the dialogue is often phony enough to fell even the most accomplished actress.) Tippi Hedren as her haughty mother is utterly wasted. Barry Von Dyke is quite a hunk and comes across as personable, while Leslie Nielsen is featured in a rare dramatic role. This isn't the type of movie to watch when you expect top-quality acting, direction, etc. - you watch pretty people have easily-solved problems - but the whole shebang, while rated PG and ostensibly a feature film release, comes across as earnest but unbelievably bland, with characters whiter than a loaf of Wonder bread, and production values no better than a TV movie. Recommended only for those whose tastes run towards the Hallmark Channel.
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3/10
The storybook South
JohnSeal3 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This extremely lightweight romance film depicts the American south as a bucolic paradise filled with polite and handsome (white) gen'lmen, ladylike (white) women, and amusing old (white) farmers who still drive mule-powered carts down the back roads. Tippi Hedren stars as a fancy pants Yankee outsider who comes to visit her uncle (Leslie Nielsen, in non-comedy mode) and ends up falling for handsome Linc (Barry Van Dyke). Along the way she learns important lessons about how women shouldn't be too uppity and how the native intelligence of hillbillies matches or exceeds that of most corporate bigwigs. Janet Dailey's screenplay is bland and uninspiring, with one-dimensional characters who trot through the story in completely predictable fashion. And wait till you see the dreadful special effects used to represent the titular phenomenon! Foxfire Light was shot on location in Branson, Missouri, which is now, of course, a tourist destination and decidedly short on hillbillies and mules.
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