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Personal Velocity
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Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic) / Standard 1.33:1 Color / Production Year: 2002 / Region 1
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All-Time Sales Rank: 5447
| Overall Rating:    4.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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"One of theifinest pictures of theiyear!" -The New York Times
Three very different women. One daring leap of faith. Kyra Sedgwick (Something To Talk About), Parker Posey (Best In Show) and Fairuza Balk (Almost Famous) star in this "completely compelling" (The Hollywood Reporter) drama about three women who set out to change their lives. Winner of the 2002 Sundance Festival's Grand Jury Prize, this passionate, poignant and bracing film delivers "a muscular punch" (Screen International)!
Delia (Sedgwick) escapes from an abusive husband. Greta (Posey) risks everything for a new career. And Paula (Balk) takes flight after a tragic accident. These women must overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles that confine them. But are they really on their way to new lives-or are they just making new versions of old mistakes?
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Features:
| Audio Commentary by Director/Screenwriter Rebecca Miller
"In Conversation: Rebecca Miller and Cast" Featurette
Original Theatrical Trailers
Behind the Scenes Featurette
Audio Commentary With Cinematographer Ellen Kuras and Gaffer John Nadeau
| Video:
| Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic) Standard 1.33:1 Color | | Audio: (more info) | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
| Subtitles:
| | English, Spanish, French, Portuguese
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| Studio: MGM / UA Production Year: 2002 Release Date: 3/18/2003
Length: 85 mins Rating: R
| Includes: Audio Commentary
Packaging: Keep Case Number of Discs: 1 Disc: SS-SL Item Code: 1004258 UPC Code: 027616883599
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Overall Rating:    4.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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Empire Review
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A subversive, brilliant, necessary movie that is a must see. - 4.25 out of 5 (3/24/2003)
Although I am a male feminist, the idea of a feminist film movement is not one that I overly relish. It's not that I find women repugnant or that I consider women's political and social empowerment as anything but important and necessary, it's just that with any type of film when you begin to dig that deeply into one specific ideology, you tend to get weighed down with the minutia and the unwavering policies of the extreme rather than telling a good story. I think having suffered through every
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