My Blueberry Nights (The Miriam Collection)



Currently viewing: My Blueberry Nights (The Miriam Collection)

Compare prices for My Blueberry Nights (The Miriam Collection)



Affiliate Program

My Blueberry Nights (The Miriam Collection)

 My Blueberry Nights (The Miriam Collection)

List Price: $19.98
You Pay Only: $17.99
You Save: $1.99 (10%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours




Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0796019813464
Format: Color, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Weinstein Company
Manufacturer: Weinstein Company
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Weinstein Company
Region Code: 1
Release Date: July 01, 2008
Running Time: 95 minutes
Sales Rank: 8969
Studio: Weinstein Company
Theatrical Release Date: 2007




Related Items:

Editorial Review:

Description:
Oscar® nominee* Jude Law (The Talented Mr. Ripley, Cold Mountain) and Grammy® Award-winning singer Norah Jones star in this 'ravishing triumph... [of] pure romantic sensibility' (Armond White, New York Press). Law plays a big-hearted owner of a small New York diner who tries to soothe Jones' jilted heart with his blueberry pie. But only after going on a year-long cross-country odyssey does she realize love was right at her doorstep all along. Gorgeously filmed by award-winning director Wong Kar Wai (In The Mood For Love) and featuring Oscar® winner** Rachel Weisz (The Constant Gardener) and Oscar® nominees*** Natalie Portman (Closer, Garden State) and David Strathairn (Good Night, and Good Luck), My Blueberry Nights is an optimistic ode to love and 'one of the best movies of the year!' (Andrew Sarris, New York Observer).

Amazon.com:
Bob Dylan's song 'Lovesick' could describe every film Wong Kar-Wai has made since 1988's As Tears Go By. My Blueberry Nights, his first English-language feature, continues the Hong Kong helmer's fixation with the concept. Grammy-winning vocalist Norah Jones plays downhearted New Yorker Elizabeth. When her boyfriend takes up with another woman, she drowns her sorrows in the hand-crafted pie served up by sympathetic café proprietor Jeremy (Jude Law in a charming turn). Lizzie appreciates the support, but decides her best plan of attack is to leave town, so she hops a bus to Memphis, where she waitresses while serving as a sounding board for alcoholic police officer Arnie (David Strathairn), who pines for estranged wife Sue Lynne (Rachel Weisz). Later, Lizzie tries her luck in Vegas, where she joins forces with professional poker player Leslie (a brassy Natalie Portman). During her journey, Lizzie sends Jeremy postcards; through her wistful words, he finds himself falling in love. With Ry Cooder's plaintive score (bolstered by tunes from Jones and special guest Chan 'Cat Power' Marshall) and golden-hued camera work from Darius Khondji (replacing regular cinematographer Christopher Doyle), My Blueberry Nights reaches for the elegiac tone of Wim Wenders' Paris, Texas as much as Wong's own Chungking Express. It's an odd combination that doesn't always work--the banal dialogue isn't up to the director's usual standards--but lovesickness has rarely been rendered more vividly. --Kathleen C. Fennessy



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Rabbit Trail
What I like most about "My Blueberry Nights" is the great soundtrack album My Blueberry Nights. Wong Kar-Wai who won an award at Cannes for Happy Together directed his first English language film. Unfortunately, it doesn't work very well. Jude Law is always interesting to watch for me. His two Oscar nominations for "The Talented Mr. Ripley" and "Cold Mountain" gave much better stories and characters than does this film. Darius Khondji, the Oscar nominee for "Evita," does stunning work with the cinematography. However, time lapse photography of ice cream melting on a blueberry pie might make me hungry, but it doesn't compensate for the lack of a story. Law's Jeremy and Norah Jones' Elizabeth seem like they are destined to become romantically linked. After nights in the pie shop, Jones takes off which takes her to several locations. Rachel Weisz who won a supporting Oscar & Golden Globe for "The Constant Gardener" plays the sleazy wife Sue Lynne to David Strathairn's boozy policeman. I actually liked Strathairn more in this film than in his Oscar nominated performance for "Good Night & Good Luck" He has such an unrequited love and such a tragic demise. Down the road, Elizabeth runs into Natalie Portman's gambler character who seems juvenile, untrustworthy and spoiled. However, Jones can't hold her own in frame with Portman and the film loses its path, as it seems to take a rabbit trail rather than illuminating the Elizabeth-Jeremy story. Chan Marshall shows up as Jeremy's ex. ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - poorly made
this was really disappointing, great cast, could have been a great romantic comedy but the lines were off, slow and terrible photography.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Could have been so much; became so little...
I really wanted to like this movie. I remember when the buzz surrounding this movie started flooding in during the beginning of 2007 and everyone was predicting it for all kinds of awards beings that it was Kar Wai Wong's first English language film and the casting of singer songwriter Norah Jones in the lead role was particularly interesting. I waited patiently for the buzz to turn into full-fledged madness but it seemed as if no sooner did the buzz begin then the buzz died and before I knew it the film wasn't even being released for a wide release and I had to wait until it was available on DVD before I could see it. Regardless of the fact that it managed only one nomination (at Cannes mind you) I still really wanted to see this film, and so I did, and now that Cannes nomination baffles me, because `My Blueberry Nights' is very disappointing.

`My Blueberry Nights' gets off to a sour start. In fact for the first twenty minutes or so absolutely nothing happens. We see Elizabeth, a frantic stalker-type ex-girlfriend going in and out of a bakery where she continues to ask the owner Jeremy if he has seen the man she was last in there with and they eat some pie and she watches some surveillance videos and cries and she gives him her keys to give to her ex and then she picks up and leaves town. I know that sounds like a lot, but it's not when you watch it. It's slow moving and rather vapid.

In fact the whole movie feels rather vapid.

There are a lot of critics ... Read More



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - I want my money back.
I rented this from Blockbuster and should have taken heed to my instinct to put it back on the shelf when I read the sticker proclaiming it to be a Blockbuster exclusive rental.

I was lured in by the cast and the art house feel. Ten minuted into the film, however, I found myself wondering: "is this it???". I kept waiting for it to begin but it never did. Jude Law and Natalie Portman were really the only interesting characters in the movie and their bits were so minute compared to the entirely lackluster Nora Jones that I kept wondering to myself if the rest of the cast would add this film to their shame list and forget they ever participated in this disaster.

As for the arthouse feel, think in terms of the cinemagraphic tricks used in music videos and video snapshots of subways in New York where everything seems purposely sped up and blurred for effect. Now imagine an entire film of that. It's exhausting.

As to be expected with such a gifted lead, though, there was some lovely music to keep me company throughout the numbing dialogue and impersonal directing. Other than that, it's painful.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Diners, Trains, Gamblers, Love in Slo-Mo
"My Blueberry Nights" represents Wong Kar Wai at the peak of his craft. Not the stylistic transition I had expected as much as a translation of a directors vocabulary into a different spoken language. Which seems to make little difference, as Mr. Wong speaks a cinematic language that is both all his own and universal.

Each slow-mo blur and obstructed frame has as much poetry in it as a line of Shakespeare. Wong motifs abound-- Trains, clocks, diners, female gamblers, policemen, the down on their life and luck and looking for love. (Is the similarity of the names Su Li-Zhen and Sue Lynn mere chance?) From "Days of Being Wild" to this latest film, Wong's work is connected by a thematic thread. It is to his credit that repetition, even if deliberate ("In the Mood for Love" and "2046" come immediately to mind, as do the fraternal twins "Chungking Express" and "Fallen Angels"), does not indicate a lack of invention, a creative rut but rather a prevailing vision.

First-time actor Nora Jones (I must admit I winced at the prospect when I first read the news) acquits herself with charm and grace and the rest of the cast performs flawlessly, with David Strathairn perhaps being the standout. When one takes into account that, despite the crediting of two screenwriters, much of the dialogue is improvised by the the actors, as is Wong's wont, the strength of the performances stands out in greater relief.



Browse for similar items by category:



 More Products
Electronics Store, Photography Store, Computers and Accessories, Power Tools Store, Online Jewelry Store, Online Health Store, Buy Clothing Online, Baby Stuff, Huge Bookstore, Classical Music, Buy DVDs, Gourmet Food Store, Kitchen Shopping, Buy Magazine Subscriptions, Online Music Store, Office Products Store, Outdoor Lifestyle Store, Buy Software, Buy Sporting Goods, Online Toy Store, VHS Videos, Buy Video Games, All Stores


 Popular Products
Digital SLR Cameras, LifeDrive PDA, Casio Exilim Camera, Tag Heuer Watch









Shop in:
German | Arabic | Japanese | Italian | French | Spanish | Portuguese | Korean | Chinese