-40%

NEW See No Evil, Hear No Evil Video 8 Movie 8mm Richard Pryor, Gene Wilder

$ 7.91

Availability: 65 in stock
  • Movie/TV Title: See No Evil, Hear No Evil
  • Actor: Gene Wilder
  • Format: Video 8
  • Condition: Brand New
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Rating: R
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Modified Item: No
  • Director: Arthur Hiller
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Leading Role: Richard Pryor

    Description

    This is a NEW sealed
    See No Evil, Hear No Evil
    video 8 movie.
    Movie Description
    Wally (Richard Pryor) is blind. Dave (Gene Wilder) is deaf. When Wally goes to work at Dave's New York newsstand, they find themselves in an unusual and dangerous situation when a man is murdered right in front of them. Unfortunately, Dave has his back turned, and Wally can't see! As fate would have it, they become suspects, and the bad guys will stop at nothing to keep them from blowing the lid off the case. Director Arthur Hiller once again reunites the formidable comic presences of Pryor and Wilder, who starred in his 1976 film SILVER STREAK.
    Credits
    Cast:
    Richard Pryor
    Director:
    Arthur Hiller
    Synopsis
    Several years after their smash hits "Silver Streak" and "Stir Crazy," Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder reunited for this slapstick thriller.
    On the day that blind Wally takes a job for deaf Dave, they both "witness" a murder: one catches the scent of the killer's perfume, and the other gets a fleeting look at her. Soon these two handicapped -- but proud -- men form an unlikely partnership to clear their names, catch the culprit, and retrieve a precious gold coin.
    Because of their respective disabilities, however, it will be anything but a conventional investigation.
    Industry Reviews
    "...[Wilder and Pryor] have never worked better together....It would be difficult to imagine a more benign or entertaining mass-market movie..."
    New York Times - Vincent Canby (05/12/1989)
    "...[A] brisk, ingenious and funny comedy..."
    Los Angeles Times - Kevin Thomas (05/12/1989)