Match Point details
| Format: | 12 DVD |
|---|---|
| Starring: | Rupert Penry-Jones, Brian Cox, Scarlett Johansson, Steve Pemberton, Colin Salmon, Paul Kaye, Emily Mortimer, Scott Handy, Margaret Tyzack, Selina Cadell, John Fortune, Penelope Wilton, Anthony O'Donnell, Matthew Goode, Jonathan Rhys Meyers |
| Director: | Woody Allen |
| Genres: | Drama, Romance |
| Studio: | WARNER HOME VIDEO |
| Name | Discs | |
|---|---|---|
Match Point |
12 Feature |
DVD Information
| Run time: | 2 hours 4 minutes |
|---|---|
| Rental release: | 08 May 2006 |
| Main languages: | English |
| Subtitles: | English |
| Hearing impaired subtitles: | English |
LOVEFiLM Review
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By Tom Charity from LOVEFiLM
Writer-director Woody Allen takes his cast and crew to London to film this drama of a romantic entanglement starring Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Emily Mortimer.
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Most helpful review
After a middling ...
By Gideon Wellins from Manchester, England , 20 Jan 2006[Highly rated reviewer]
After a middling career in pro tennis, Chris (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, slinky and reserved) has found himself employed as a tennis pro at an English country club. It is there he meets Tom (Matthew Goode), a playboy who introduces Chris to his wealthy and influential family, including sister Chloe (Emily Mortimer). Looking for a bump in class, Chris marries Chloe, but Tom's new fiancée, an American named Nola (Scarlett Johansson, in an ideal combo of sultry and disturbed), is what really sets his mind and loins wheeling. Instigating a rapturous affair with Nola, Chris embarks on a dangerous social journey that might threaten his perfect, respectable life.
Woody Allen has been in a rut as of late. Finding that his comic timing has lost its tick ('Hollywood Ending,' 'Anything Else'), and his dramatic chops lacking urgency ('Melinda and Melinda'), 'Match Point' finds the filmmaker at a creative dead end. So, I guess it's time for a trip to England.
'Point' is one of the few Allen productions to be set outside of America (or New York City, to be more specific), and the change in scenery has really ignited the filmmaker's cinematic tools. That's not to say the picture strays far from Allen's traditional visual and aural trimmings, but the jump across the pond has given Allen an opportunity to try examining new personalities, class systems, and locales. Thematically, 'Point' has a lot in common with Allen's 1989 masterpiece, 'Crimes and Misdemeanors,' which, to some fans, might reek of stealing from himself. I can't defend Allen's questionable inspiration for 'Point,' but I do enjoy the filmmaker's continuing study of morality, and what part that plays in passion and critical decision-making.
In keeping with the new surroundings, 'Point' explores the English class system and how it's the fuel that drives Chris's ambitions. Starting out as a lowly tennis instructor (with a history of failure), Chris soon begins to taste the high life with his courtship of Chloe, gradually climbing the ladder of money and respectability that's as potent and important to him as the sexual gratification he gets from Nola. Allen mines this material for everything it's worth, selling Chris's new life with gorgeous locations that take the viewer into impeccable London apartments and the rolling countryside of a holiday home (shot beautifully by Remi Adefarasin). He also adds an element that rarely rears its head in an Allen production: sexual heat. While far from explicit, the affair between Chris and Nola provides some sequences that are unusually frenzied, yet feel necessary to comprehend the carnal desire that keeps impeding Chris's good sense.
In trying to keep in line with my critic code of ethics, I must stop here in describing Allen's scripted twists and turns; the final act of the film is runaway mine car of surprises, and keeps closely in line with the heavy opera backdrop of the story. 'Match Point' provides just enough reason to fall in love with Woody Allen again, with the auteur creating cracking good drama for the first time in a very long time, in a location that will hopefully relight the creative fires in him for years to come.- Was this review helpful to you?
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All reviews
(359)Woody Allen at his worst
By a customer , 21 Nov 2012This is one of the worst films I have seen for a long time - unrealistic with a clunky script. Woody Allen - I should have known. Well, Woody, we just don't behave like that in England.- Was this review helpful to you?
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Match Poit
By a customer , 10 Aug 2012excellent , i did'nt know how it was going to end, i would highly recommend this film if you like a twist in your viewing, and it certainly would be enuff to put me off from Cheating, just could'nt do what he did in the film. my conscience would get the better of me!- Was this review helpful to you?
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Unpleasant story and characters
By a customer , 30 Apr 2012I loathed this film. I love Woody Allen (well, mostly) but this film was a big disappointment and with hindsight we should have stopped watching after the first 20 minutes. Or even better, not hired it in the first place. The story was not a story and the characters were thinly drawn and not credible - the whole premise was unpleasant. One to miss.- Was this review helpful to you?
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I'd still take a Woody collection to my desert island
By RichPickings (167 reviews) from 'kin Bruges , 03 Feb 2012Not a great Woody film. Though less successful its still head and shoulders above the best most others can offer. Scarlett the muse, like a sunbeam breaks into our consciousness with her dazzling beauty and can seemingly do no wrong, such is her luminescence. If the film is to rest on her shoulders though, that it isn't quite enough. Some of the other casting is quite parochial and clunky and the views of London tend to diminish next to his other cherished city landscapes. But that is okay, this is not those films. It does seem to be, something of a domestic pot boiler, an overstretched thriller or a half baked mystery. There is no mystery of note and its not that thrilling. Still, Allan's take on things is so special that even when it underachieves, its still quirky and noticeable. That's good. Strangely some scenes are pretty enough, or even that powerful, that they stay with you. Not unrewarding. Such is genius. Who knew?!- Was this review helpful to you?
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Slow but eventually speeds up
By Brian Stapleton from Beckenham,Kent , 24 Jan 2012Felt the lead actor wasn't very believable - seemed to only have one mood. Film felt long and slow and then the interesting bits at the end were over too quick. Worth a watch but not with high expectations.- Was this review helpful to you?
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