Pretty Woman (15th Anniversary Special Edition) From:Jason Alexander , Bill Applebaum , Hank Azaria , Judith Baldwin , Ralph Bellamy , GERE,RICHARD , Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone ,
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD Brand: GERE,RICHARD EAN: 9780788858994 Format: Closed-captioned Format: Color Format: Dolby Format: DVD-Video Format: Special Edition Format: Widescreen Format: NTSC ISBN: 0788858998 Label: Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone Audio Format: Dolby Digital 5.1 Manufacturer: Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone Number Of Items: 1 Packaged Height: 58 hundredths-inches Packaged Length: 710 hundredths-inches Packaged Weight: 18 hundredths-pounds Packaged Width: 542 hundredths-inches Publisher: Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2005-08-30 Running Time: 125 minutes Studio: Buena Vista Home Entertainment / Touchstone Theatrical Release Date: 1990-03-23
Product Description:
This 15th Anniversary celebration of PRETTY WOMAN is even more irresistible than ever with all-new, never-before-seen special features you'll love at first sight. Academy Award(R) Winner Julia Roberts (Best Actress, ERIN BROCKOVICH, 2000) is a spirited, streetwise diamond in the rough when she meets a no-nonsense billionaire played by Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (Best Actor In A Motion Picture -- Musical Or Comedy, CHICAGO, 2002). It's a chance encounter that turns a weeklong business arrangement into a timeless rags-to-riches romance. This Special Edition will seduce you with all the comedy, charm, and passion you remember about this classic -- plus more!
Customer Reviews:
A star is born in a wasted movie..., 2008-10-24 One of those movies you watch every time it comes on television because it's so cute, yet one of those movies you're almost ashamed to adore because it has almost no redemptive features; `Pretty Woman' has become an instant classic for almost no reasons at all. Sure, it's cute, but so aren't a lot more respectable films.
Oh yeah, I forgot; Julia Roberts is amazing here.
So, that answers all questions doesn't it? Why do we love this movie? We love it because it gave us Julia, our beloved Julia. She is charming and warm and heartbreaking and moving and memorable and sincere and we just want to eat her up in every scene. The problem with `Pretty Woman' is that when you take Roberts' magnetism out of the equation you have a rather empty film that relies on clichés to carry it across the finish line. It works to an extent (in the fact that it is charming in that totally forced kind of way) but it is nothing spectacular.
So Edward, a wealthy businessman, pays Vivian, a streetwalker, a large sum of money to pretend to be his girlfriend over the weekend while he attends some social events. He falls in love with her and visa-versa but this poses a problem because he starts to question his ethics (business-wise) and his partners are furious and attempt to break apart the pair.
Total cliché.
The acting is also hit-or-miss. Like I said, Roberts is luminous. We all know that (she has the Oscar nomination to prove it), but aside from her there are only a few standouts. Jason Alexander is a little overdone, but I'm not a fan of his to begin with. Laura San Giacomo is decent, but underused so she is rather unimportant. Hector Elizondo is wonderful, and totally chews up his few scenes. Then there is the rather boring and uninspired Richard Gere. I have never been blown away by this guy, and here he just kind of sulks there throughout the movie.
Does this guy know how to evoke any emotion?
He just always appears so sullen. Him and Nicolas Cage; like seriously, why are they acting? Gere may be even worse that Cage for me. At least Cage as the perfection that was `Leaving Las Vegas' and `Adaptation' (how he pulled those off is beyond me), and what does Gere have? Chicago? I rest my case.
Anyways, this movie is really all about Roberts. The film is a mess really; plot-wise at least. It doesn't make a lot of sense and it glorifies a profession that is rather insulting and degrading. At least `Leaving Las Vegas' had the decency to create a likable character stuck in a gritty world. `Pretty Woman' is so obsessed with being charming and likable that it insults the audience by expecting us to buy into this Disney World variation of prostitution.
Oh well, the movie is a C- but Roberts is a solid A+.
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