| | | Features: DVD, Director's Cut, Widescreen In Nashville, there are 10,000 singer-songwriters chasing success...with one chance in a million of getting it. For Miranda "no relation to Elvis" Presley (Samantha Mathis), that's one chance worth taking. Fresh from New York City, Miranda befriends three fellow hopefuls: shy Connecticut cowboy Kyle Davidson (Dermot Mulroney); Southern belle Linda Lue Linden (Sandra Bullock); and James Wright (River Phoenix), a cocky Texan with brooding good looks and a honeyed voice. Together they begin a rocky ride down Music City's well-worn highway, finding hope, heartbreak, happiness...and The Thing Called Love. Featuring songs and appearances by country music's hottest stars, The Thing Called Love will grab you like a great melody. "The performances are outstanding...Phoenix is especially magnetic." Bill Jones, The Phoenix Gazette
 Editor's Note
 New Yorker Miranda Presley (Samantha Mathis)--no relation to the King--buses it to Nashville and arrives with her guitar and the dream of making it big in country music. She meets other twentysomethings at the Bluebird Caf, a popular local nightspot/talent showcase: Linda Lou Linden (Sandra Bullock), a sweet, talentless southern girl who becomes Miranda's roommate; Kyle Davidson (Dermot Mulroney) a Connecticut Yankee with country dreams and crush on Miranda; and River Phoenix as James Wright, a moody, talented musician to whom Miranda is drawn. These four hopefuls struggle with life and love as they try to achieve success. Various country stars, including Trisha Yearwood and Pam Tillis, appear as themselves, and K.T. Oslin plays Lucy, the talent gatekeeper at the Bluebird Caf. Mathis, Phoenix, Mulroney, and Bullock all performed the vocals for their characters' songs. The film, directed by Peter Bogdanovich (MASK), marks Phoenix's final performance. The young actor died in 1993.
 Plot Summary
 Four struggling country-western performers wrangle with making it in love and the music business in this film, centering around Miranda Presley (Samantha Mathis), a talented young singer who buses it from New York City to Nashville. En route to success, she finds herself at the Bluebird Caf on open-mike night, making friends with handsome bucks, singers James Wright and Kyle Davidson (River Phoenix and Dermot Mulroney). Sandra Bullock also stars as Miranda's less-talented roommate, in this drama from Peter Bogdanovich (MASK).
| Features | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Commentary By Director Peter Bogdanovich |  | Director's Cut With Extended Footage |  | Interactive Menus |  | Original Theatrical Trailer |  | Our Friend River |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English |  | The Look Of The Film |  | The Thing Called Love - A Look Back |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Paramount |
 | Release Date: 5/1/2007 |
 | Running Time: 116 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1993 |  | Catalog ID: 46202 |  | UPC: 00097363284345 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Widescreen 1.85:1 |
| Cast & Crew
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| | Professional Reviews | Variety "...The scenes are fresh and the emotions real in Peter Bogdanovich's tune-laden, mixed-mood drama..." 09/06/1993New York Times "[A] small, sweet-tempered film....Mr. Bogdanovich seems genuinely interested by country music..." 03/14/2006 p.E9 Chicago Sun-Times 4 of 10 Of course you go to River Phoenix's last finished film in a certain state of mind. You remember his clarity and power in films like "Running on Empty" and "Dogfight," and against those images you hold the shots of his dead body on the sidewalk outside the Viper Club. His death still seems all wrong. How could he have been so careless of his responsibility to his own future? These thoughts are there as Peter Bogdanovich's "The Thing Called Love" begins, but there are more pragmatic thoughts, too: Will his performance reveal signs of the drug use that ended his life? Or will this farewell performance show him at the top of his form? The film is about four young singersongwriters who arrive in Nashville hoping to be discovered. They all gravitate to the Bluebell Cafe, which features new acts on weekend nights, and where a lot of stars have gotten their starts. Maybe, these kids dream, lightning will strike again. The movie stars Samantha Mathis as Miranda Presley ("That's my real name, and I'm no relation!"). At first, she is naive and not very talented, but she has a sweetness about her that impresses Lucy, the veteran owner of the Bluebell, played by country singer K. T. Oslin. "If I don't read your name," Lucy always says at the end of the weekly auditions, "that just means I don't think you're ready yet." Among the other young singers hoping to be discovered are Kyle (Dermot Mulroney), a would-be cowboy from Connecticut; Linda Lue (Sandra Bullock) from Alabama, and James Wright, the River Phoenix character, who comes from Texas and obviously has the most talent of the crowd. In Phoenix's first scene, it is obvious he's in trouble. The rest of the movie only confirms it, making "The Thing Called Love" a painful experience for anyone who remembers him in good health. He looks ill - thin, sallow, listless. His eyes are directed mostly at the ground. He cannot meet the camera, or the eyes of the other actors. It is sometimes difficult to understand his dialogue. Even worse, there is no energy in the dialogue, no conviction that he cares about what he is saying. Some small part of this performance may possibly have been inspired by Phoenix's desire to emulate James Dean or the young Brando in their slouchy, mumbly acting styles. And maybe that's how Bogdanovich and his associates reassured themselves as they saw this performance taking shape. After all, Phoenix came to the project as one of the most promising actors of his generation, and perhaps somehow an inner magic would transmit itself to the film. It does not. The world was shocked when Phoenix overdosed, but the people working on this film should not have been. It is notoriously difficult to get addicts to stop their behavior before they have found their personal bottoms, and so perhaps no one could have saved Phoenix, who was not lucky enough to find a higher bottom than death. But this performance in this movie should have been seen by someone as a cry for help. Bogdanovich does what he can. - Roger Ebert
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