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Shape Of Things, The
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Widescreen 2.35:1 Color (Anamorphic) / Production Year: 2003 / Region 1
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Current Sales Rank: 5978 All-Time Sales Rank: 4801
| Overall Rating:    4.25 out of 5, including 1 review Be the first customer to comment on this Title. |
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Seduction isian art.
Writer/director Neil LaBute (Possession, Your Friends & Neighbors) has created another boldly original movie that is as fascinating as it is unsettling.
When nerdy Adam (Paul Rudd), meets Evelyn, (Rachel Weisz) a sexy and confrontational art student, his predictable life seems to change overnight. But when Adam's brash best friend Phil (Fred Weller) and his fiancée Jenny (Gretchen Mol) meet Evelyn, the sparks begin to fly. Phil doesn't like the new Adam, while Jenny seems a little too interested in Adam's new look. Soon everyone is caught in a circle of passion, temptation and betrayal that is oddly funny and totally unexpected.
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Features:
| Feature Commentary with Director Neil LaBute and Paul Rudd
The Shape Of Things From Stage to Screen: An Introduction by Neil LaBute
Welcome to Mercy College
Theatrical Trailer
| Video:
| | Widescreen 2.35:1 Color (Anamorphic) | | Audio: (more info) | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
ENGLISH: DTS 5.1 [CC]
FRENCH: Dolby Digital Surround
| Subtitles:
| | Spanish, French
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| Studio: Universal Studios Production Year: 2003 Release Date: 9/23/2003
Length: 97 mins Rating: R
| Includes: Audio Commentary
Packaging: Keep Case Number of Discs: 1 Disc: SS-DL Item Code: 62022813 UPC Code: 025192281327
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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 mean sprited little film. I loved it! - 4.25 out of 5 (9/19/2003)
A few names come to mind when you think of the Hollywood creme de la creme. Everybody knows about David Mamet and his ability to write dialogue so cutting edge that one would feel just in wearing chainmail to the theater.
But characters are a different story and few do character studies better than Neil Labute. His characters are often filled with such realism, that they walk off the screen and sit down beside you in the theater. The problem with that though is that his characters are rarely
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