Wicker Park
Andre Lamal: Producer
Gary Lucchesi: Producer
Henry Winterstern: Producer
Marcus Viscidi: Producer
Tom Rosenberg: Producer
Brandon Boyce: Writer
Gilles Mimouni: Writer
MGM (Video DVD)
| List Price: |
$14.98 |
| Amazon Price: |
$12.99 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$2.69 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$0.60 |
| Total New: |
68 |
| Total Used: |
140 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Josh Hartnett, Diane Kruger, Matthew Lillard, Rose Byrne, Christopher Cousins
- Director: Paul McGuigan
- Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Studio: MGM (Video DVD)
- Theatrical Release Date: Sep 03, 2004
- DVD Release Date: Dec 28, 2004
- Run Time: 114 minutes
- ASIN: B00067BBMS
- UPC: 027616921529
- Sales Rank: 11416
Amazon Customer Reviews:
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    Rose Byrne: Sensational. 'Nuff Said!, 2008-07-28
I'll try not to make this sound like a love letter to Rose Byrne, but I apologize in advance if it comes across as such. I hope people will agree with me when I say that her performance alone makes this movie a must see.
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br /Rose is not the only reason this movie is great. It is a heart-wrenching, tragic love story/mystery brought to life with stunning visual style. Wicker Park is a moving painting augmented by a poetic story. It is a tale of a man, Matthew (played by Josh Hartnett) desperately searching for a lost love, Lisa (Diane Kruger). The film is told in a non-linear fashion and key plot points are revealed at precisely the right time to keep the viewer guessing. This is kind of a spoiler; but the reason his love is lost is because of the manipulative scheming of Alex (Rose Byrne's character). She falls hopelessly in love with Matthew from afar before he even knows who she is. Without too much trouble she is able to devise a plan which allows her to break up the lovers and at the same time get close to Matthew. That's the details of this particular film, but what it boils down to is a classic theme: person A loves person B while person C loves person A. Unfortunately person A essentially doesn't know that person C exists. It's a basic story that almost everyone can relate to in some form or another.
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br /Okay back to the main subject of my review. Yes, Josh Hartnett is well cast and Diane Kruger is adequate in her role, but the real star of the show is Rose Byrne. Her character is not fully revealed until 45 minutes into the film, but from that moment on, you will forever be under her spell. Rose is perfectly cast. No one can say as much with just their eyes and facial expressions as Rose Byrne can. Love, hurt, anger, fear, sadness, remorse, embarrassment, and elation are all easily displayed without so much as a word. And what a beautiful face it is, her eyes alone make me weak. Thankfully the filmmakers were aware of this and took full advantage; frequently shooting her in close-up.
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br /Rose's character Alex can easily be seen as the villain because she does everything in her power to keep Matthew and Lisa apart. Just like in real life, however, everything isn't black and white. "Love makes you do crazy things," as Rose's character declares. It depends on who you personally identify with. Different viewers will sympathize with different characters, and that is a credit to the dramatic story and to the filmmakers.
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br /As mentioned earlier, Wicker Park is beautifully photographed and edited (split screen is used frequently to great effect) and the music/score enhances every scene perfectly. Ideally I would give this movie 4.5 stars if I could (I reserve the five stars for a select few) and I can't think of many better ways to spend two hours.
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    Flashy Soap Opera, 2008-07-07
Paul McGuigan's "Wicker Park" is like a demented episode of friends without the self-conscious humor. Matthew is a twentysomething executive type engaged to his boss's sister but seriously pining for his old lover, Lisa, who left without a trace two years earlier. When Matthew and his fiancee return to Chicago (following Matthew's two year self-exile in New York), Matt hooks up with Luke, an old buddy who was privy to the whole Lisa drama. Luke has recently begun dating Alex, an elusive actress who is driving him crazy. Soon after his return, Matthew spies the long-missing Lisa in a restaurant where he is having a drink with his fiancee and her brother. Or does he? Things start to get really complicated from there on out, so it's important to pay attention in order to keep all the threads straight, as the lives of all the characters intersect in unexpected ways. It's advertised as a thriller but there's nothing really thrilling about "Wicker Park"; despite it twists and turns, it is, first and foremost, a soap opera, and one that, despite its subject matter, is oddly un-sexy.
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br /Director McGuigan does a fair job translating a French film into an American remake. It has a flashy, jumpy quality that keeps the viewer on edge, although that doesn't always work in the film's favor. Josh Hartnett delivers a fine performance as Matthew, the film's hero; he reminds me a lot of Timothy Hutton back in his heyday. This is, arguably, one of his best performances. As the long-lost lover, Diane Kruger is attractive but there seems to be something missing from her Lisa; she's not all that interesting and it's hard to believe that she cares much for Matthew. Much better is Rose Byrne as the secretive Alex; is it a coincidence that she shares the same name as the femme fatale in "Fatal Attraction"? As played by Byrne, Alex is hot and cold, a dynamic mystery woman playing a dangerous game. Matthew Lillard, as Luke, is believable but I have never seen much variation in any of his performances; maybe that has more to do with the kind of roles he keeps getting.
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br /While it starts out interestingly enough, "Wicker Park" becomes too convoluted and contrived to maintain its initial momentum.
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
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