Buy Your Gift - Gift Basket - best gift - buy gift - send gift
 Location:  Home » DVD » Midnight in Paris [Blu-ray]    
Categories
Beauty
Books
Electronics
Photo Frames
Jewelry
Watches
DVD
Links
Bangle Bracelets
Brilliant Gemstone
Study Guides
Bones Books
Cellular Phones
Music Albums
Audio Books
Gaming Books
Sponsored Links
Bookmark and Share

Midnight in Paris [Blu-ray]

Midnight in Paris [Blu-ray]

Other Views:
Director: Woody Allen
Actors: Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Adrien Brody, Carla Bruni, Marion Cotillard
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: $26.99
Buy New: $13.97
as of 5/24/2012 02:19 MST details
You Save: $13.02 (48%)

In Stock


New (37) Used (13) from $12.96

Seller: MovieMars
Sales Rank: 785

Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
Color: Color
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: Blu-ray
Region: 1
Discs: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen
Running Time: 94 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.3

MPN: COLBR38523
UPC: 043396385238
EAN: 0043396385238
ASIN: B005MYEPXC

Release Date: December 20, 2011
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This is a romantic comedy set in Paris about a family that goes there because of business, and two young people who are engaged to be married in the fall have experiences there that change their lives. It's about a young man's great love for a city, Paris, and the illusion people have that a life different from theirs would be much better.

Amazon.com
Paris is a city that lends itself to daydreaming, to walking the streets and imagining all sorts of magic, a quality that Woody Allen understands perfectly. Midnight in Paris is Allen's charming reverie about just that quality, with a screenwriter hero named Gil (Owen Wilson) who strolls the lanes of Paris with his head in the clouds and walks right into his own best fantasy. Gil is there with his materialistic fiancée (Rachel McAdams) and her unpleasant parents, taking a break from his financially rewarding but spiritually unfulfilling Hollywood career--and he can't stop thinking that all he wants to do is quit the movies, move to Paris, and write that novel he's been meaning to finish. You know, be like his heroes in the bohemian Paris of the 1920s. Sure enough, a midnight encounter draws him into the jazzy world of Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Picasso and Dali, and an intense Ernest Hemingway, who promises to bring Gil's manuscript to Gertrude Stein for review. Gil wakes up every morning back in the real world, but returning to his enchanted Paris proves fairly easy. In the execution of this marvelous fantasia, Allen pursues the idea that people of every generation have always romanticized a previous age as golden (this is in fact explained to us by Michael Sheen's pedantic art expert), but he also honors Gil's need to find out certain truths for himself. The movie's on the side of gentle fantasy, and it has some literary/cinematic in-jokes that call back to the kind of goofy humor Allen created in Love and Death.The film is guilty of the slackness that Allen's latter-day directing has sometimes shown, and the underwritten roles for McAdams and Marion Cotillard are better acted than written. But the city glows with Allen's romantic sense of it, and Owen Wilson has just the right nice-guy melancholy to put the idea over. A worthy entry in the Cinema of the Daydream. --Robert Horton


CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Powered by Bytewise

Sponsored Links