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 | | 6. Mamma Mia the Movie | | | Starring: Amanda Seyfried Meryl Streep Director: Phyllida Lloyd | | Format: DVD Release Date: 4/14/2009 | User Rating: 5 | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | Mamma Mia! The Movie - DVD Review By: Robert M. Barga - Blogcritics.org Reviews Published on: 12/4/2008 2:04 PM | | Mamma Mia! tells the story of a love-struck young girl named Sophie (Amanda Seyfried) looking for her real father. Living in a work-in-progress hotel on a small Greek Island with her mother Donna (2 time Academy Award Winner Meryl Streep), Sophie is planning on marrying her fiancé Sky (Dominic Cooper) and wants to have her father give her away. Being the sneaky intelligent girl that she is, she steals her mother's old diary and discovers three potential fathers, Sam Carmichael (Pierce Brosnan), Harry Bright (Colin Firth), and Bill Anderson (Stellan Skarsgård). Being completely love-struck, she invites all three to come to her wedding. read the full review | |
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 | | 14. Hello Dolly | | | Starring: Barbra Streisand Director: Gene Kelly | | Format: DVD Release Date: 4/10/2007 |  | Hello, Dolly! - DVD Review By: Don Willmott - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 10/31/2008 3:31 PM | |
Come back, Carol Channing! All is forgiven! The epic screen version of the charming musical Hello, Dolly! hasn't aged well, but then again, it wasn't so great when it was new, either. An overstuffed extravaganza populated by thousands of extras gallivanting in period costumes, the movie is hamstrung by the miscasting of Miss Barbra Streisand in the lead role. read the full review | |
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 | | 19. Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Widescreen) | | | Starring: Helena Bonham-Carter Johnny Depp Director: Tim Burton | | Format: DVD Release Date: 1/27/2009 | User Rating: 5 |  | Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street - DVD Review By: Sean O'Connell - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 10/24/2008 2:14 AM | |
Quite possibly the strangest holiday release since Miramax rolled out its bloodsucking Dracula update in December 2000, Tim Burton's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street reproduces Stephen Sondheim's moody musical as a theatrically macabre vengeance play that gleefully soaks its numbers in gallons of gooey, red stage blood. It's a mesmerizing mess of a film that alternates its high notes with blatant missteps. Yet for all its unmistakable faults, it casts such a complete spell that I'm chomping at the bit to see it again (and again). Where other studios might have demanded proven singers for the parts, Paramount (bravely?) permits Burton to practice extreme nepotism. read the full review | |
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