Though it revolves around death, Cameron Crowe's hotly anticipated follow-up to 'Vanilla Sky' is optimistic overall, beaming with the same life-affirming mood as the crowd-pleasers 'Jerry Maguire and 'Almost Famous'. Promising young shoe-designer Drew Baylor quickly learns how failure feels when his innovative but foolish .. Read more
| Starring | Orlando Bloom, Kirsten Dunst, Susan Sarandon, Judy Greer |
|---|---|
| Director | Cameron Crowe |
| Genres | Comedy, Romance |
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Though it revolves around death, Cameron Crowe's hotly anticipated follow-up to 'Vanilla Sky' is optimistic overall, beaming with the same life-affirming mood as the crowd-pleasers 'Jerry Maguire and 'Almost Famous'. Promising young shoe-designer Drew Baylor quickly learns how failure feels when his innovative but foolish design for a winged sneaker becomes the humiliation of the footwear industry. Informed of the magnitude of his mistake, Drew applies his design skills to the task of suicide by duct-taping a knife to an exercise machine. This melodramatic act is interrupted, however, when Drew receives a call from his sister, informing him that his father has died while on a trip to his home town of Elizabethtown, Kentucky. Drew's mother, Hollie, elects him to go deal with the arrangements because he is the responsible and successful one. The only passenger on his flight, Drew meets Claire, a perky stewardess, who takes the opportunity to talk his ear off despite his apparent desire for some personal space. Supplying Drew with detailed hand-drawn maps, instructions for how not to get lost, and three phone numbers where she can be reached, Claire tenderly sends him off to confront a town full of relatives he has never met. Once in Elizabethtown, Drew is subjected to relentless family wackiness from people who seem to have known his father better than he did. Meanwhile, he stumbles into a hesitant romance with neurotic but charming Claire, whose anal-retentive wisdom, lust for life, and good taste in music may help Drew come to terms with his newly diminished place in the world and to see it as possibly a better one. A love story, family drama, and road trip in one, 'Elizabethtown' boasts another of Crowe's excellent soundtracks, with artists like Tom Petty and Elton John giving the film much of its emotional drive.
| Starring | Orlando Bloom, Kirsten Dunst, Susan Sarandon, Judy Greer, Jessica Biel, Alec Baldwin, Bruce McGill, Paula Deen, Tom DeVitt, Paul Schneider, Loudon Wainwright, Tom Cruise |
|---|---|
| Director | Cameron Crowe |
| Studio | PARAMOUNT HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 58 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Collections | 100 Rom-Coms |
| Genres | Comedy, Romance |
| Language | English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Subtitles | Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 06 Feb 2006 Production year: 2005 |
| Format | DVD |
The film's best moments are pure expressions of feeling.... Bloom is surprisingly comfortable in the role of Drew, coming off as sweet, warm and easygoing, and easily in touch with his pit of despair
This must be one of the worst films I have seen in many years. It was actually embarrasing to watch such terrible directing, script and actors. It tries to be funny and quirky but just falls flat. There are American flags hanging up in nearly every scene, and I thought it was meant to be a pi*s take of stereo typical small american town syndrome but then realized it actually was just a very patriotic director. The rest of the film made me cringe and had to switch it off eventually because it was too painful watching a film trying so hard to be something it was could never achieve. I would almost recomend you watch it just to see how bad this thing is, or just to take the mickey. Zero stars
Ever watched a good comedian tell a joke and you burst out laughing then another comedian tells the same joke and you dont know why but for some reason it doesnt have the spark to make it funny. Thats how this film is. It has all the potential of a great comedy romance with lots of tear jerking moments but never quite manages to achieve its goal. I watched the film with out feeling anything for the characters. All the ingredients are there but it just misses the SPARK to give it life. Great shame...
Anne Hathaway and Jessica Biel have both walked away with prizes at the Hollywood Magazine Breakthrough Awards held in Los Angeles. Hathaway, who began her career in films such as The Princess Diaries and Ella Enchanted, was awarded the Star of the Year prize, reports Wenn. She has recently returned to comedic territory with her turn as naive intern Andy Sachs in The Devil Wears Prada, after cutting her teeth in dramatic roles such as Lureen Newsome in Brokeback Mountain. Jessica Biel was also... Read more