Leave It to Beaver PG
The Beav is back.
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Also released as:
Leave It to Beaver (Blu-ray)
for $23.60
DVD Details
- Rated: PG
- Run Time: 1 hours, 18 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: January 20, 1998
- Originally Released: 1997
- Label: Universal Studios
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Cameron Finley, Janine Turner & Christopher McDonald | |
Performer: | Erik von Detten, Adam Zolotin, Barbara Billingsley, Ken Osmond, Frank Bank, Erika Christensen, Alan Rachins, E.J. De La Pena, Justin Restivo, Geoffrey Pierson & Grace Phillips | |
Directed by | Andy Cadiff | |
Edited by | Alan Heim | |
Screenwriting by | Lon Diamond & Brian Levant | |
Composition by | Randy Edelman | |
Produced by | Robert Simonds | |
Director of Photography: | Thomas Del Ruth |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 2/5 --
Leave It to Beaver is the sort of movie that could be described as good clean fun if it happened to be good or fun.
Full Review
New York Times
Rating: 1/5 --
Unnecessary film take on the classic TV series. Leave it.
Video-Reviewmaster.com
Rating: 2/4 --
The Cleavers have come to represent the stereotype of the white-bread family.This reverent '90s remake doesn't do much to challenge it.
Globe and Mail
Rating: 3/5 --
Modernized take on '50s TV show, with some bullying.
Full Review
Common Sense Media
...LEAVE IT TO BEAVER is a gentle, good-hearted movie....The film is disarmingly charming...
Chicago Sun-Times
Rating: 1/5 --
This. Is. Just. Bad.
Filmcritic.com
Rating: 1/4 --
All but the most easily pleased kids will be bored as can be, and anyone who has fond memories of TV's Leave It to Beaver would probably rather not besmirch them.
Full Review
TV Guide
Product Description:
The juvenile miscreant of TV's golden era makes his jump to the big screen intact, along with too-perfect big brother Wally, scheming Eddie Haskell, sage dad Ward, and cookie-baking mom June. Minor touches bring the Cleavers into the 1990s (a racially diverse classroom, personal computers), but the Beav still just makes a mess of things despite his best intentions. Here, he joins the football team to please Dad (and get a brand new bike), leading to humiliation and slapstick chaos.