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From the start of Elizabethtown, big contrasts are evoked: death and life, success and failure are side by side, so we're told. When the movie starts, Drew Baylor (Orlando Bloom) is experiencing failure and death in spades: the shoe he spent eight years designing for Mercury (a thinly-veiled copy of Nike) has been recalled, costing his company $972 million dollars. On the verge of a suicide attempt, he learns his father has died, and Drew flies to Kentucky to retrieve the body to Oregon for cremation. On the red-eye to Louisville he meets Claire Colburn (Kirsten Dunst), a perky flight att'ndant with a charming flair for cute lines ("I'm impossible to forget, but Im hard to remember," she chirps). Once in Elizabethtown, Drew tries to plan a memorial while dealing with relatives who have their own agenda in addition to his manic family back in Oregon, all while facing the reality that in a few days he'll be known nationally as one of his industry's most legendary failures. Yet still he manages to connect with Claire on an all-night cell phone conversation--complete with the requisite watching of the sunrise--and to strike up a furtive romance.
So we now have death and life side by side. But despite these dramatic shifts, what sets up to be a roller coaster ride of a film flattens out to a milquetoast middle ground with no real life of its own. Drew Baylor has suffered two tragic personal losses in the course of one day, but you wouldn't know it from Bloom's lethargic performance. There's not much to Claire either. Her whole character is made up mostly of cutesy quotable lines and mysterious little smirks. In the end, Elizabethtown is a film that doesn't know what it wants to be, and unfortunately there's no payoff, other than a few memorable lines and a great soundtrack. --Dan Vancini
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Cameron Crowe |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 14 October, 2005 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Paramount Home Video |
| MPAA RATING: | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| FEATURES: | Color, Widescreen, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Drama, Feature Film-drama |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 097363433644 |
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Customer Reviews of Elizabethtown (Widescreen Edition)
I highly recommend it if you want to go sleep I dont know what all the fuss is all about this movie is boring!!! I rent this movie on Valentines Day because my college was promoting for it for more than a semester.. and my boyfreind and I thought it was the worst movie ever because it was extremely long it did not have a point, it was not a definitly not romantic, and right from the start the whole shoe making advertising [...] made me realize that this movie wasnt going to be any better.
"Almost Famous" meets "Garden State"
For those of you who have not seen the movie "Elizabethtown", with Orlando Bloom and Kirsten Dunst, I would pick it up. I had heard it was not very good, and so passed on it a number of times in favor of bigger movies. However, I have not been so pleased to find such a relatively hidden gem since "In Good Company".
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>"Elizabethtown" is an "Almost Famous" meets "Garden State", yet by the end becomes its own movie. Awesome music. Great story for 20-something's (maybe hit and miss otherwise). It has a bit of everything.
Cute, relaxed movie
Greetings,I think this is a cute, relaxed movie. It's not all up in your face, edge of your seat material, it's a good movie.I thought Clare was cute, and Drew's moodeness, and lathargic ways, was reflecting a depressed, lost man, who has no passion for life. He is suicidal, and with the death of his father, his only goal was to make sure his fathers wishes were met. I think it would have helped if they had shown some of his childhood relationship with his father, or a regretful moment with his father he wished he could change, that Clare could have helped him overcome, and a bit less of his great failure. It starts out good and slows down a little in parts. Both Bloom and Dunst are talented in their profession. This movie at the end it gives you a good feeling.