WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Comedy >

Switching Channels

Watch Switching Channels For Free

Switching Channels

A television news chief courts his anchorwoman ex-wife with an eleventh-hour story.

... more
Release : 1988
Rating : 5.9
Studio : TriStar Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Assistant Art Director, 
Cast : Kathleen Turner Burt Reynolds Christopher Reeve Ned Beatty Henry Gibson
Genre : Comedy

Cast List

Related Movies

The Single Moms Club
The Single Moms Club

The Single Moms Club   2014

Release Date: 
2014

Rating: 5.4

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Nia Long  /  Amy Smart  /  Wendi McLendon-Covey
Fool's Gold
Fool's Gold

Fool's Gold   2008

Release Date: 
2008

Rating: 5.7

genres: 
Adventure  /  Comedy  /  Romance
The Philadelphia Story
The Philadelphia Story

The Philadelphia Story   1940

Release Date: 
1940

Rating: 7.9

genres: 
Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Cary Grant  /  Katharine Hepburn  /  James Stewart
Chef
Chef

Chef   2014

Release Date: 
2014

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Comedy
Stars: 
Jon Favreau  /  John Leguizamo  /  Bobby Cannavale
High Society
High Society

High Society   1956

Release Date: 
1956

Rating: 6.9

genres: 
Comedy  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Bing Crosby  /  Grace Kelly  /  Frank Sinatra
S.F.W.
S.F.W.

S.F.W.   1995

Release Date: 
1995

Rating: 5.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Stephen Dorff  /  Reese Witherspoon  /  Jake Busey
The Bounty Hunter
The Bounty Hunter

The Bounty Hunter   2010

Release Date: 
2010

Rating: 5.5

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Gerard Butler  /  Jennifer Aniston  /  Peter Greene
I Could Never Be Your Woman
I Could Never Be Your Woman

I Could Never Be Your Woman   2007

Release Date: 
2007

Rating: 6

genres: 
Drama  /  Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Michelle Pfeiffer  /  Paul Rudd  /  Saoirse Ronan
Two Much
Two Much

Two Much   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 5.4

genres: 
Comedy  /  Romance

Reviews

TinsHeadline
2018/08/30

Touches You

More
HeadlinesExotic
2018/08/30

Boring

More
Matrixiole
2018/08/30

Simple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.

More
Invaderbank
2018/08/30

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

More
debruyn-864-236127
2010/10/07

Nobody expects greatness from actors like Burt Reynolds and Chris Reeves but they do have a certain charm and together with the wonderful Kathleen Turner, a competent director, some good character actors and a great script have produced an hilarious movie. As other reviewers have noted, the chemistry between Reynolds and Turner brings a lot to the movie and even though the dialogue has been completely re-written it works as well as it did in 1940 for Cary Grant in His Girl Friday (the second movie version of The Front Page and one of the funniest movies of all time). Interestingly, my DVD is called Scoop (rather than Switching Channels) - who knows why the name was changed but the choice of name is amusing. It seems likely that it is a reference to the eponymous Evelyn Waugh novel written in 1938 satirising the press.

More
jmpruitt
2005/08/29

I really enjoyed this movie. It has been a few years since I saw it but we were watching Superman recently and it made me think about it.All three of the leads are so good at playing this type of comedy. Sure it is no Oscar material but if that is all you are looking for in a movie then you will not watch many movies.If you want a good clean fun movie - this is one.It was nice to see these actors play something different.Anybody know about this coming out on DVD anytime? Thanks. John

More
tgreene_msp
2002/03/25

Anyone can make any sort of commentary on how this film didn't live up to its heritage as the "umpteenth" remake of the movie "His Girl Friday", or the original "The Front Page", but in this case, I prefer to take the film on its own merits, especially in light of how things have been since its release.First of all, no one has to get on a soapbox and talk about how the chief supporting actor of this film (Chris Reeve) has been in the time since its release. The movie "Speechless", with Mike Keaton and Geena Davis in my opinion stands as a much better reference point, if one is looking for one, for Mr. Reeve's work before his accident. Instead, I like to look at his role in this as seeing how he was moving away from his Superman stereotype. The man has worked with some of Hollywood's A & B list leading men over the last twenty years, ranging from Michael Caine to Morgan Freeman. While he was no Ralph Bellamy in this film, I don't recall anyone saying he was supposed to be when the film was made. After all, he was only supposed to play the type of character Ralph played in the earlier remake, and if they had wanted Ralph's nod on the film, (Especially since he was the only surviving castmember) why didn't they get him to play the Network Owner's part?Then there is Burt Reynolds' character. While I don't think they gave him the best lines they could have in some scenes, I felt, and still feel that he played the part of the Station Manager/ex-husband in a role that was not out of range for him. However, if you want to sit there and compare him to Cary Grant's role, I ask that you do one thing before you do so. Go out and rent "His Girl Friday", and then fast forward to the scene where Cary goes "Oh, Walter!", and then try to imagine how easy it would have been to get Burt to do that scene in the same way.Finally, but in no means last, there is the heroine of the movie, played by Kathleen Turner. Ms. Turner has always played capable women who can be independent when they need to be, and continued to do so here. One scene of note in this movie is her reaction to the story about kazoo players and the President of the United States at the beginning of the film. When you consider the fact that Hollywood has repeatedly told us that modern broadcast journalism's motto is "if it bleeds, it leads", and they seem to be living up to that on the local news broadcasts, I as a viewer would want the person giving me the news to crack up on a story about Kazoo players, long before they ever did about someone going postal at a Luby's Cafeteria.The point in the movie where one can draw a strong similarity between the original remake and this one begins in the the interview at the prison. The scene here does not play out as a remake of the same lines and dialogue as the original said by new people, and one does have to admit that you can't exactly go in too many different directions with that as part of your storyline.Also, in my opinion, the story does demonstrate much more detail about one thing that the Grant-Russell movie only touched on. There is a changing of the guard going on in the business. The older seasoned journalists in the main story have or are changing positions. Sully has moved on to Producer, and is now fighting a constant battle over lead stories, rather than deadlines. An example of this is where he makes the comment to his boss, in jest, about having a team going all over Chicago looking for "Smutless fires". Christy is also following the "grass is greener" principle, as she is leaving SNN for a job as morning anchor in New York, a show with a Willard Scott-type weatherman and fake furniture.In my opinion, the only ones who really weren't well-developed as well as they could have been were Ned Beatty and Charles Kimbrough's characters. While it was interesting to see a man who would later go on to play a television journalist in a long running TV series (Kimbrough was "Jim Dyle" on Murphy Brown), the portrayal of them as a simple-minded Governor, and a crooked-dealing DA both running for governor seemed to me to be a mixed message over which story should have been covered. Everyone likes a good political debate, but at what cost, or should that be whose cost?

More
Stefan Kahrs
1998/12/13

This umpteenth version of the Front Page story made the quite appropriate adaptation from newspaper journalism to television.Although the character names have been changed we have no problems identifying the main characters of the Front Page. As in His Girl Friday, Hildy is played by a woman and Kathleen Turner was the ideal choice for this role at the time. Burt Reynolds takes on the Walter Burns character, but he neither has the charm of Cary Grant [His Girl Friday] nor the comic timing of Walter Matthau [Front Page, The (1974)] - but then, who has? The only serious miscasting is Christopher Reeve who just can't match the whimpish Ralph Bellamy.All in all it's not as good as the previous (excellent) versions, but it is still quite enjoyable. A story with that many remakes normally has a stinker amongst the lot, but this one has not (so far).

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now