You’ve Got Mail Review
Samedi, septembre 25th, 2010Compare Prices on You’ve Got Mail
A 10th Anniversary DVD seems a bit vaunted for this familiar 1998 romantic comedy since it continues to play repeatedly on TBS and other cable outlets. It’s no wonder since Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan have the kind of ingratiating rapport that makes it easy to lunge into one of their movies no matter what section you rep yourself watching. Directed by the acerbic Nora Ephron, who helmed 1993’s Sleepless in Seattle with the same pair, this movie gleams with the same kind of good-natured, Hollywood-style gloss that made the previous outing a hit. However, the pieces fit a tiny too perfectly for me, so great so that it feels packaged for maximum audience appeal. It really takes the combined skills of Hanks and Ryan to do this appetizing, even likable, but it’s not without its challenges.
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As with Sleepless in Seattle, Ephron, along with her sister Delia as co-screenwriter, attempts to update a tried-and-true film classic, this time Ernst Lubitsch’s The Shop Around the Corner (1940), about two people who are concurrently in an antagonistic professional relationship and also anonymous pen-pals fantasizing who the other may be in actual life. The novelty this time is that the account takes space at the dawn of the Internet age when people automatically spot up AOL accounts with incognito cloak names. E-mail and instant messaging have replaced the need for the postal system to exchange anticipated treasure letters. The record focuses on Joe Fox, one of the wealthy owners of a mega-bookstore chain called Fox Books, a doppelganger for Borders or Barnes & Obliging. On Manhattan’s Starbucks-saturated Upper West Side, he is opening one of his unsightly stores in the vicinity of The Shop Around the Corner, a specialty children’s bookstore owned by Kathleen Kelly.
Much of the movie has to do with her attempts to defend her antiquated turf and ward off the inevitable cannibalization of her slight business. I actually found this section of the movie gripping with nice tweaks in the verbal interplay on corporate greed. I especially liked the sharply scripted scene in the coffeehouse when Kathleen succinctly puts down Joe’s business intentions. The other side of the film is the burgeoning adore sage between Joe and Kathleen on AOL where under their cover names `NYC152′ and `Shopgirl’, they gain themselves bonding and falling in worship. Similar to what occurs in the novel movie and the Judy Garland musical remake, In the Respectable Conventional Summertime, Joe finds out who `Shopgirl’ is before Kathleen realizes that he is `NYC152′, allowing for an extended courting sequence from Kathleen’s sickbed through the Union Square Greenmarket and other locales.
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Hanks is a more avuncular presence as Joe and not as manically comical as usual except for a droll scene where he attempts to veil his identity in her bookstore. As Kathleen, Ryan is sometimes on twinkle overdrive, but she manages to approach succor to her innate malleability as an actress, a quality not all that celebrated among the subsequent generation of rom-com heroines (for example, Kate Hudson in How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days or Hilary Swank in P.S., I Appreciate You) . Most importantly, even when the material feels like retread, the pair has positive chemistry. The supporting cast is adept and filled with strong players - Parker Posey as Joe’s self-obsessed book editor girlfriend Patricia, Greg Kinnear as Kathleen’s intellectually pompous boyfriend Frank, a young Dave Chappelle as Joe’s colleague Keith, Jean Stapleton as Kathleen’s eccentric partner.
The 2008 Deluxe Edition DVD maintains all the features of the previous 1999 DVD, specifically an arresting commentary track by Ephron and producer Lauren Shuler Donner, a brief HBO short with Ephron, a music video of Carole King’s “Anything at All”, a music-only audio track, and an interactive tour of the filming locations in Novel York’s Upper East Side. Unfortunately, there are no deleted or expanded scenes offered in either the used or unusual DVD releases. The print transfer on the current DVD is trim and vibrant, and there are two current featurettes offered as fraction of the package. The first is “Delivering You’ve Got Mail” where Hanks and Ryan - both looking qualified but not overly engaged - reminisce about the filmmaking experience a decade later. The second, “You’ve Got Chemistry”, is really more about romantic comedy as a genre rather than anything particular about this production.
Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks shine in this romantic comedy. This is the second time this duo have performed together (Sleepless in Seattle) . Perhaps that helps produce the serene natural tone of the interactions between the two. Ryan plays a bookstore shop owner…a exiguous cramped store first race by her mother. Hanks company is building a stout bookstore chain in the same neighborhood. The two cannot stand each other. Besides their business lives, the two are both chatting with an racy person through the internet and hold they are falling in adore with the person. Minute do they know, it is really each other! Will they meet? And if they do, will they topple in treasure or be petrified and paralyzed? Witness the movie to derive out what happens!
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