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Double Jeopardy [2000]
Double Jeopardy [2000]

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Director: Bruce Beresford
Actors: Ashley Judd, Tommy Lee Jones, Bruce Greenwood, Benjamin Weir, Jay Brazeau
Studio: Paramount Home Entertainment
Category: Video

List Price: £5.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £5.98 (100%)



New (4) from £6.45

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 9288

Format: Closed-captioned, Pal
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: VHS Tape
Running Time: 101 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1

EAN: 5024165934135
ASIN: B000055ZPB

Theatrical Release Date: September 24, 1999
Release Date: February 5, 2001
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: SUPER FAST SHIPPING, DISPATCHED SAME DAY FROM UK WAREHOUSE. GREAT VIDEO IN GOOD OR BETTER CONDITION, VIDEO IN PAL FORMAT. MORE GREAT BARGAINS IN OUR eSHOP. amazon.co.uk/shops/awesome_books_001

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  • Along Came A Spider [2001]
  • U.S. Marshals [1998]

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Young Libby Parsons (Ashley Judd) is happy as a clam, and why not? She's got a loving, successful husband (Bruce Greenwood), an adorable son and an island home to die for. One morning, after a romantic sailing expedition with her husband, Libby finds herself covered in blood. Her husband is missing, the boat resembles a murder scene, and there's a knife on the deck. One might stop right there and call for help; Libby, however, takes matters--or, more specifically, the knife--into her own hands, and the moment she does, there's the Coast Guard. Faster than you can say frame-up, Libby's been charged with murder and jailed, with her young son stripped from her custody. It's all cut-and-dried, except for one thing: Libby's husband isn't dead, and she's about to track him down. And thanks to the US Constitution's "double jeopardy" rule, she can't be charged twice for his murder. Double Jeopardy has a singularly seductive revenge premise and, in Judd, one of the most seductive leading ladies to grace the silver screen in recent years. So then why does this thriller feel like it came from the bottom of the television movie barrel? Instead of taking a gritty, hard-boiled approach, the film plays up all of Libby's mushy emotions--tellingly, the director here is Bruce Beresford, whose best film, Driving Miss Daisy, is as far from thriller territory as you can get. No matter how stoically or deviously Judd plays her, Libby comes across as a soccer mom with a slight taste for blood. Only in a few scenes, specifically when she tracks her wily husband to his new identity in New Orleans, does Judd get to strut her stuff, stealing an evening gown and crashing his charity auction. Most of the time, though, this thriller offers only a smattering of suspense. Well at least, like Libby, the filmmakers can't be condemned twice for the same crime. With Tommy Lee Jones duplicating his Fugitive role, as Libby's conscientious parole officer. --Mark Englehart, Amazon.com


Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Rubbish   August 2, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Not only did they get the concept of double jeopardy wrong - Ashley Judd's character actually could have been tried as the murder of her husband would not legally have been considered the same crime - but they also made a terrible movie. The ending is a movie cliche that was used to get the writer out of a bind and tie up the lose ends.



4 out of 5 stars Great Saturday Night Film   September 15, 2006
 1 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is a super Saturday night film, or perhaps for Sunday evening when there is work the next day. Sit back enjoy.


5 out of 5 stars Brilliant Film   July 14, 2006
 1 out of 4 found this review helpful

Judd was excellent, and I love Tommy Lee Jones, I thought double Jeopardy was brilliant, all of it was excellent especially the cematary part of the film.

Give me any film that star's Tommy or Ashley and I'll watch it.



3 out of 5 stars escapist fun   August 17, 2005
 1 out of 4 found this review helpful

I quite enjoyed this film despite myself. It's true the film is really just a collection of cliches and the double jeopardy point of law nonsense but I still felt inspired by the sheer unwavering determination of the Ashley Judd character. I also found her beauty to be quite idiosyncratic and captivating. Silly really, but there you go.


4 out of 5 stars This is rehabilitation?   January 1, 2005
 5 out of 8 found this review helpful

Jones and Judd are powerful antagonists in this film of "women's empowerment". Judd, as "Libby Parsons", awakes to find a trail of blood leading from bed to brine and is convicted of her husband's murder. The evidence is hard to refute. The two were alone on a yacht off Seattle and the Coast Guard arrives while she stands with a bloody knife in her grasp. At sentencing, Judd assigns her son Matthew to family friend, Annabeth Gish. Gish, however, has an even deeper interest - she's having an affair with Judd's husband Nick [Bruce Greenwood]. Oh, yes. He's still alive after all!

Judd, twigging to Nick's survival, now sets herself a quest. Advised that she can't be tried twice for the same crime - no "double jeopardy" - she becomes a model prisoner. Eager for parole [nobody keeps a woman incarcerated for husband-murder any more], she exercises with stern intent. She trains in ways to make an Olympics try-out blush from inadequacy. Jogging in the rain [in Gig Harbour?], building up her timing, coordination and . . . The remainder of the film allows Judd to reveal just what she might have picked up in her "Washington State Correctional" rehabilitation programme. She begins to apply them almost as soon as she's placed in a parolee halfway house run by Tommy Lee Jones.

Jones, at his best irascible self, lays down the rules for behaviour - otherwise it's "back inside". Judd, burning with desire to retrieve her son, flaunts his regimen immediately and the chase is on! Judd dodges and twists in one breath-catching scene after another until the pair reaches New Orleans. What a backdrop for chase scenes! Wrought-iron grillwork! Jazz concerts for funerals! Cemeteries of vast stretches of above-ground tombs for capering around and hiding behind or in! Judd pursues her son with intense dedication, especially after what she learned of Gish's fate in trusting Greenwood. The result is a captivating sequence in the cemetery involving both husband and son. Or does it? All that exercise at Gig Island proves useful as Judd sheds much of her feminine mystique to become a female Clint Eastwood. The final confrontation is rife with surprises.

That the law actually wouldn't let Judd off scot free for "killing" Greenwood twice is almost irrelevant. This film sparkles with the personalities of Judd and Jones. Both grace any film they make - together, the result is almost overwhelming. Jones' droll delivery in tense moments provides the perfect leit motif where needed. There's not much humour in this story, but Tommy Lee Jones can produce effects that overcome the sombre. If the improbabilities of plot are ignored and the viewer lets the personalities dominate, this is an enjoyable film. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]



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