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Match Point on DVD (2005)

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Average rating: 57%
25310920111023
3.0
from 5,765 members
 
Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Emily Mortimer, Matthew Goode, Brian Cox, Penelope Wilton, Paul Kaye, Anthony O'Donnell, John Fortune, Rupert Penry-Jones, Margaret Tyzack, Scott Handy, Selina Cadell, Colin Salmon, Steve Pemberton
Director: Woody Allen
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Run time: 124 mins
Certificate: 12
User collections: Ajee - Movies that leave you thinkin, films from my dvd collection that demand repeat viewings, My Top 20, Super-duper films!
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Hearing-impaired: English
Subtitles: English
Released: 08/05/2006
Also Available on:  Also Available on: DIGITAL

Brief synopsis of Match Point

For the first time in his long career, writer-director Woody Allen takes his cast and crew to London, and the European location breathes new life into the normally Manhattan-centric auteur. Jonathan Rhys Meyers stars as Chris Wilton, a former pro on the world tennis circuit, with eyes set on a very different kind of prize. After meeting Tom Hewett (Matthew Goode) at an exclusive club, he becomes friendly with Tom's extremely wealthy family, including his powerful businessman father, Alec (Brian Cox) and his attractive sister, Chloe (Emily Mortimer), who is desperate to get married and have children. The only problem is that Chris has fallen hard and fast for Tom's fiancee Nola (Scarlett Johansson), an unsuccessful American actress from Colorado who just might share Chris'lustful feelings, a romantic entanglement that could get in the way of his master plan.

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Critics Reviews

Tom Charity, LOVEFiLM
Tennis pro Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) is befriended by a young toff, Tom Hewitt (Matthew Goode) and begins to date his sister (Emily Mortimer). She's smart and nice,... read more »
USA Today

An often riveting drama set in London amid the lives of the rich and cultured -- highlighted by an operatic score. And it's proof that Allen, who many have dismissed with his last few forgettable films, is still a filmmaking force

Los Angeles Times

It pretty much keeps its pulse steady, its blood cold and its nerves tamped down which, combined with cinematographer Remi Adefarasin's architectural Hitchcockian flourishes, lends a queasy, cool air to the proceedings

Uncut

It's heart-poundingly tense, genuinely erotic and philosophically brutal in its closing pronouncement...

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 stars

Gideon Wellins from Manchester, England , 20/01/2006

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.

  36 out of 56 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsAwful

A customer from london england , 10/01/2006

I've always loved Woody Allen films and also fell for the reviewers' hype. But this was just truly awful. Bad everything. I have to wonder if Woody has actually gone to see a movie in the last 10 years. The plot was substandard soap style, the dialogue phony, the characters cliche'd. And to make it worse the representation of London was unbelievably distorted. What a waste of time. Bleah!

  22 out of 33 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsImplausable but watchable

Greenlove from London , 17/01/2006

Tennis coaches do not get set up in major City investment houses with their own chauffeurs even if they are going out with the Chairman's daughter. I don't know anyone in the City who still gets called 'Sir' by their secretary. Londoners have other places to shop than Bond Street.

Apart from that there are some enjoyable plot twists and Scarlet Johansson is fantastic. If you're like me you'll be made to feel continually uncomfortable by being made to root for the bad guy - which is all quite clever I suppose.

James Nesbitt comes in like a breath of fresh air with an entertaining cameo, having said that anyone looks like a great actor next to the truly awful Jonathan Rhys-Meyers.

  20 out of 28 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsIt's A Woody Allen?

butters787 from Salford [Highly rated reviewer] , 14/01/2006

Anyone would have a hard time noticing that it's actually directed by Woody Allen, it's totaly different, and not really in a good way. It could have been directed by any average joe director.

Towards the end the plot becomes just too unbeliveable and just generally stupid. Whatsmore, the way the British characters (pretty much all of them and in this case the upper-classes) is just too unrealistic.

Stick to the old classic Woody Allen films.

  20 out of 30 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsDisappointing

A customer from London , 09/02/2008

I'm a Woody Allen fan, and I have a major soft spot for Scarlet Johansen, so was bitterly disappointed with the film. I could not stand the main actor from the moment the film began, and so had no empathy at all. The film seemed to contain only two-dimensional posh upper class charactertures. Woody should stick to working with what he knows: New York. It felt like an ITV tv movie!

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsPoor

MATT from Benfleet , 17/04/2007

This is one of those films you keep watching in the hope it gets better...it doesn't! I watched the 2nd half on fast forward...the leads acting and Irish/English acccent is woefull and the story falls apart.......do not waste 10 mins on this film, let alone 2 hours... Only bonus is that Scarlet looks good, but even that can't save it!

  5 out of 7 people found this review helpful
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