Release Year: 1994 Rating: PG Duration: 91 minutes Other Title: The Flintstones: The Live-Action Movie Director: Brian Levant
synopsis
The Flintstones and the Rubbles are modern stone-age families. Fred and Barney work at Slate and Company, mining rock. Fred gives Barney some money so he and Betty can adopt a baby. When Fred and Barney take a test to determine who should become the new associate vice president, Barney returns the favor by switching his test answers for Fred's, whose answers aren't very good. Fred gets the executive position, but little realizes that he's being manipulated by Cliff Vandercave to be the fall guy for an embezzlement scheme.
cast
Elizabeth Taylor as Pearl Slaghoople Halle Berry as Sharon Stone John Goodman as Fred Flintstone Kyle MacLachlan as Cliff Vandercave Rick Moranis as Barney Rubble Rosie O'Donnell as Betty Rubble
quote
Sharon Stone: can I get you anything? Coffee?
Fred Flintstone: Sure.
Sharon Stone: How would you like it?
Fred Flintstone: In a cup?
Sharon Stone: Bold choice, Mr. Flintstone!
It’s a yabba-dabba-doo time. Fred, Wilma, Barney, Betty, Pebbles, Bam-Bam and Dino all invite you to join them in Bedrock. Dozens of grest pics of the whole gang as well as the theme song. Dektop theme and Messenger skin also available. They’re a modern stone-age family. Source: Ezthemes Size: (2054 Kb)
Her\s a theme for all Flintstones fans---has Fred,Wilam,and Dino.Included is a desktop pet of Dino,plus all the theme usuals. Source: Ezthemes Size: (970 Kb)
I decided to try something different for THE FLINTSTONES. I put aside my critical notebook and tried to clear my mind of all preconceptions: the thirty-two writers who worked on the script; the mind-numbing marketing blitz; the dread at the appearance of yet another TV retread. And I resolved to let it be what it would be, to tell myself, Norman Vincent Peale-like, "I will enjoy this film on its own level." Do you know what? It almost worked. As silly, clunky and repetitive as THE FLINTSTONES may be, it's still something of a guilty pleasure, at least on a visual level. While it's no film for the ages, neither is it a modern stone-age travesty.