Some Kind of Hero

    Some Kind of Hero
    1982

    Synopsis

    A Vietnam vet returns home from a prisoner of war camp and is greeted as a hero, but is quickly forgotten and soon discovers how tough survival is in his own country.

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    Cast

    • Richard PryorCpl. Eddie Keller / Ted Segal
    • Margot KidderToni Donovan
    • Ray SharkeySgt. Vinnie DiAngelo
    • Ronny CoxCol. Powers
    • Lynne MoodyLisa
    • Olivia ColeJesse
    • Paul BenjaminLeon
    • David AdamsThe Kid
    • Martin AzarowTank
    • Shelly BattOlivia

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The New York Times

      A very engaging, loose-limbed sort of comedy. It's written, directed and acted with amiability, which doesn't disguise the bitterness immediately beneath the surface but, like Eddie himself, absorbs it.
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      Richard Pryor's assured tragicomic performance is so engaging that this otherwise forgettable film is not only worth watching, but often compelling.
    • 70

      Time Out London

      A minor but infinitely more appealing comedy vehicle for Pryor than the earlier "Stir Crazy"...An amiable but hardly memorable two-against-the-world farce that can't quite persuade you Pryor's talents are being properly used.
    • 70

      Variety

      Some Kind of Hero is yet another example of how Richard Pryor can take a mediocre film and elevate it to the level of his extraordinary talents.
    • 70

      Washington Post

      A smooth and agreeable entertainment, Hero is easy to enjoy while you're watching it. But ultimately it adds up to far less than you hope for at the outset. [3 Apr 1982, p.C1]
    • 63

      Chicago Tribune

      There's also nothing here that has much to do with what makes Prior such a powerful artist. [2 Apr 1982, p.3-6]
    • 63

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      It's obvious Some Kind Of Hero was never meant to be more than what it is - a cute "uplifting" comedy - but Pryor's performance pushes your expectations. It makes you wish someone would give him an honest dramatic part, and that he could work with a director who wouldn't let him get away with his transparent heart-tugging tricks. Director Michael Pressman has a good touch with his actors, but falters structurally to accommodate Kirkwood's script. [3 Apr 1982]
    • 60

      Newsweek

      This is funny? Yes, as Pryor does it--not as knee-slapping farce, mind you, but as the painful comedy of endured humiliation of which he is the master... But it's high time Pryor stopped redeeming badly made movies and surrounded himself with talents equal to his own. [12 Apr 1982, p.87]