| | | Features: DVD, Widescreen, Aspect Ratio 1.85:1, English, French, Spanish, Subtitled, Sensormatic Academy Award winner® Philip Seymour Hoffman* and Academy Award® nominee Laura Linney** deliver unforgettable performances in this hilarious coming-of-middle age story from Oscar® -nominated writer / director Tamara Jenkins***. Until recently, all John and Wendy Savage (Hoffman, Linney) had in common were a lousy childhood and a few strands of DNA. But after years of drifting apart, they're forced to band together to care for the elderly, cantankerous father who made their formative "challenging." In the process, both of these aimless, perpetually adolescent fortysomethings may just, at long last, have to grow up! *2005: Best Actor, Capote **2007: Best Actress, The Savages; 2004 Best Supporting Actress, Kinsey; 2000: Best Actress, You Can Count on Me. ***2007: Best Original Screenplay, The Savages.
 Editor's Note
 Director Tamara Jenkins made audiences sit for nearly a decade for her follow-up to the hilarious dark comedy SLUMS OF BEVERLY HILLS, but it's been worth the wait. Like her previous film, THE SAVAGES is a sometimes-funny, sometimes-sad look at family dynamics, but this time around the sense of humor is more wry than riotous. Laura Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman play Wendy and Jon Savage, a pair of siblings on the cusp of middle age. She's earning money in New York City as a temp as she writes an autobiographical play about their childhood, while he lives in Buffalo, teaching college and finishing a book on Bertolt Brecht. Their estranged father (Philip Bosco) lives across the country, but the Savages reluctantly rush to see him when they learn that he may not be able to take care of himself any longer. Jon and Wendy bicker over problems old and new as they try to figure out what's best for a man they barely know. Like Noah Baumbach in THE SQUID AND THE WHALE and MARGOT AT THE WEDDING, writer-director Jenkins knows how to mine family dysfunction for both comedy and drama. Jon and Wendy tear into each other as only people connected by blood can, but their fighting feels entirely genuine, largely thanks to the performances of Linney and Hoffman. Though they'll get most of the buzz for their roles, character actor Bosco is heartbreaking as their aging father. Though his decline is difficult to watch, the actor's performance is absolutely mesmerizing.
| Features | Keep Case |  | Full Frame - 1.33 |  | Widescreen - 1.85 |  | Audio:
 | Dolby Digital 5.1 - English |  | Dolby Digital Surround - Spanish |  | Subtitles - English, French, Spanish - Optional |  | Additional Release Material:
 | Behind the Scenes: "About THE SAVAGES" |  | Alternate Scenes: "Deleted Scene: Burt and Lizzie Uncut" |  | Trailers:
 | 1. 20th Century Fox Trailer Farm (5) |  | 2. 20th Century Fox Forced Trailers (3) |  | Text/Photo Galleries:
 | Stills/Photos: Director's Snapshots |
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| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Foxvideo |
 | Release Date: 10/20/2009 |
 | Running Time: 113 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2007 |  | Catalog ID: 2250687 |  | UPC: 00024543506799 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, Spanish Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Video: Color |
| Cast & Crew
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| | Professional Reviews | Box Office "Linney continues to create wonderfully comic neurotics....[The characters] remain vividly engaging." 12/01/2007 p.54-55Entertainment Weekly "THE SAVAGES is terrific -- A movie of uncommon appreciation for the nature and nurture that go into making us who we are, a perfectly calibrated drama both compassionate and unsentimental." -- Grade: A 11/30/2007 p.114 New York Times "[A] beautifully nuanced tragicomedy about two floundering souls....A true-to-life tale told by a director and actors who've sunk so deep into their movie together you wonder how they ever surfaced." 11/28/2007 USA Today 3.5 stars out of 4 -- "[A] remarkably clear-eyed portrait....While the film is heart-wrenchingly sad, it also is mordantly funny, uncomfortably prickly and above all, unflinching in its depiction of a believable sibling relationship." 12/06/2007 Rolling Stone 3.5 stars out of 4 -- "Linney is an amazement, showing vulnerability and strength at war for a character's soul....With the help of acting giants, Jenkins turns THE SAVAGES into a twisted, bittersweet pleasure." 12/13/2007 p.142 Sight and Sound "[A] marvellously acute, poignant and witty drama....The film retains a quirky, uplifting quality..." 01/01/2008 p.84 Total Film 4 stars out of 5 -- "[A] thoughtful, mordant and exquisitely scripted portrait of an estranged brother and sister..." 01/01/2008 p.46 Los Angeles Times "For a tender, uncommonly perceptive look at sibling relationships and a profound meditation on death and the meaning we draw from experience, THE SAVAGES is singularly funny and seriously moving." 11/28/2007 Empire 4 stars out of 5 -- "THE SAVAGES makes a virtue of its sidetracked setting, finding scuffed humour in the minutiae of human life, so that when the laughs do come they feel profound, jagged and real." 02/01/2008 p.51 Uncut 3 stars out of 5 -- "[W]ell-observed social comedy and great acting by two of America's best....An insightful, uncompromised look at the banal and unavoidable realities of family life." 03/01/2008 p.120 |
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