← Back to Movies
The People vs. Larry Flynt
Cast
Woody Harrelson, Courtney Love, Edward Norton, Brett Harrelson View AllCrew
Miloš Forman (Director), Scott Alexander (Screenplay), Larry Karaszewski (Screenplay) View AllRelease: Oct. 12th, 1996
Runtime: 2 hours, 9 minutes
Replies Discussions
We didn't find any linked discussions for this film. Here are the results of a quick search of possibly related threads:
7
Larry Gelbart, R.I.P.
Screenwriter, playright, television writer and producer Larry Gelbart has died. He was eighty-one. Here's the obit from the Los Angeles Times...
----------------------------------------------------...
5
Larry Clark
Is anyone here into his movies? His movies are Kids, Bully, Ken Park, Another day in paridise, and Teenage Cavemen. Have any of you seen any of these? He's one of my favorite directors....
2
R.I.P. Larry McMurtry
Larry McMurtry dead at 84 – Oscar-winning Brokeback Mountain screenwriter passes away
R.I.P....
2
R.I.P Larry Cohen
Larry Cohen, director of some classic B-movies such as It's Alive, Black Caesar, The Stuff and Q, passed away this weekend.
This guy was nuts in a good way. If you like documentary's about film maki...
Post a Comment
Got something to say? Log in to comment, or register for free. It's quick, easy, and we won't spam you or anything.
Reviewed by
Sexy Celebrity
Also, you'll get to witness Woody Harrelson's brother, Brett Harrelson, play Larry's brother in this movie, and he's only got one eye (a freakish image fit for a modern day Caligula story).
Also, you'll get to witness Woody Harrelson's brother, Brett Harrelson, play Larry's brother in this movie, and he's only got one eye (a freakish image fit for a modern day Caligula story).
Gideon58
Flynt's story was played out in front of us during the hedonistic 1970's so it would have been pretty hard for screenwriters Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski to embellish or fictionalize without friction from the Flynt empire, so I don't doubt the validity of the story presented here, even thou....
Flynt's story was played out in front of us during the hedonistic 1970's so it would have been pretty hard for screenwriters Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski to embellish or fictionalize without friction from the Flynt empire, so I don't doubt the validity of the story presented here, even thou....