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P.S. I Love You

Product Type: DVD
Product Price: $14.98
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
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Description
Buy a new outfit. Be a disco diva. Learn to fish. Take a chance. Travel. Laugh. Love. Sometimes all you need to start really living is a little shove in the right direction – and that’s just what Holly Kennedy gets. From the handsome, big-hearted love of her life. From a series of mysterious letters. And from gal pals who know that a friend in need is a friend in need of some laughs! Based on Cecelia Ahern’s joyful bestseller and boasting a top cast led by two-time Academy Award® winner* Hilary Swank and Gerard Butler (300), P.S. I Love You is your very own message full of fun, love, triumph and romance. Open it now. (P.S. You’ll love it!)
For those who believe true love lasts beyond this physical plane, P.S. I Love You is a jewel in the romantic-movie crown. With elements of Ghost, Heaven Can Wait, and My Life, the film is an unabashed valentine to the notion of lasting (everlasting?) love. Hilary Swank is Holly, a deeply happy lass married to the most impossibly adorable Irishman on the planet, Gerry (Gerard Butler). When an illness takes him from her, Holly spirals into depression. Then, as if from beyond the grave, communications, gifts, and remembrances from Gerry begin to appear--gestures he'd planned knowing his death was coming. The "communications" with her dead husband could threatened to keep Holly in past, yet they begin to pave a path into her future.
Swank, not a traditional romantic actress, is quite moving as Holly, whose grief and confusion is palpable. Butler will win new continents of fans, largely female, as the yummiest honey one could wish for. Special kudos to the supporting cast, including Lisa Kudrow as a Holly pal, and James Marsters and Kathy Bates, always breaths of fresh air onscreen. Under the sure hand of director-writer Richard LaGravenese, P.S. I Love You is touching, sad (have tissues on hand), and heartbreakingly lovely. --A.T. Hurley
Reviews
Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2010-09-01
Summary: "One can hear the gears grinding all the way through"
**1/2
Before he dies, Gerry Kennedy (Gerard Butler) - the pluckiest victim of a brain tumor since the stiff-upper-lipped Bette Davis faced-down a similar fate in "Dark Victory" - comes up with an ingenious way to continue giving Holly (Hilary Swank), his soon-to-be widow, advice from beyond the grave. He composes a series of upbeat letters to be delivered to her at regular intervals after he`s gone - missives that contain specific instructions on how to pick up the pieces of her shattered world and move on with her life. You see, Holly was kind of an uptight stick-in-the-mud when they were married, and now the too-good-to-be-true, happy-go-lucky Irishman wants to loosen her up by getting her to perform karaoke, sending her on an all-expenses-paid trip to the place of his birth, and encouraging her to become a cobbler (I kid you not). But will Gerry's continued presence in his widow's life actually retard her ability to let go of the past and start anew? And does this "Ghost" knockoff stand a ghost of a chance of becoming as universally beloved as that earlier dead-husband-hanging-around romantic classic?
Beyond the cringe-inducing creepiness of its premise, "P.S. I Love You," based on the novel by Cecilia Ahern, is one of those annoying romantic comedies in which the women get all goofy, frisky and/or tongue-tied the moment some good-looking guy so much as steps into their line of vision. Moreover, Gerry is portrayed as such a saintly figure, both before his demise and most definitely thereafter, that we never get to know him as a real, flesh-and-blood person in his own right; instead, in order to make all the ladies in the audience swoon over his magnificent romantic spirit - one, I might add, that no man in the real world has the slightest hope of ever living up to - writer/director Richard LaGravenese has seen fit to deprive Gerry of all those flaws each of us is entitled to just for being a member of the human race - and which are truly the only things that make a character interesting in the end. And with that crucial dimension missing from the couple's relationship, we soon lose interest in Holly as well. And, of course, the movie cheats by having Gerry's illness take place entirely off-camera, so as not to disturb the light romantic tone of the piece, but it does little to make us care about the couple. The movie finally hits on some honest sentiment round about the 115-minute mark, and the story does avoid going down one painfully obvious narrative pathway towards the end, but, by that time, it's much too late to undo the damage.
A large cast of well-known and talented actors - Kathy Bates, Lisa Kudrow, Harry Connick Jr., among them - do yeomen work with poorly written parts, but it's an uphill slog against bathos, pratfalls and contrivance all the way. Well, at least the Irish scenery is lovely.
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2010-08-28
Summary: "There should be a "zero" rating."
Pass on Swank, although I realize the Director, and others, rule. But horribly miscast. Pass on the script. Pass on the direction. The supporting cast was there, talented, and ready to work and they got the shaft.
I can hear the Director: "Kathy, Lisa please be your sterotypes."
Please, actors: save your money so that you can turn down wretched roles.
Apart from that, I am appalled that women reviewers like this film. If you are really like this Holly character, then we're all doomed.
If you watch more than 3 minutes of this movie, you will feel you should do penance for enabling it.
Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2010-08-21
Summary: "Good but not the best."
The DVD was in good condition but 3/4 into the movie it stopped working, I was able to forward past the part but I missed about 15 minutes of the movie and that was disapointing.
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-07-18
Summary: "very good"
This is one you might need to watch more then once to see the great film this one is. I think it is a hidden gem. Watch it. Kathy Bates is great, as is the rest of the cast.
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-07-14
Summary: "Total chick flick!"
Which usually I'm not into despite being a chick. However, I do like Butler. Be sure to watch the scene they cut of him at the travel agency. He's hilarious. It made up for the crying I did every ten minutes during the movie. Oh year, you'll need a box of tissues. And I'm not even the emotional type! The supporting cast is awesome, especially Kathy Bates. Harry Connick Jr. is adorable as always.
