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Holistic Guidance - August Rush

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List Price: $28.98
Our Price: $19.99
Your Save: $ 8.99 ( 31% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Starring: Freddie Highmore, Keri Russell, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Terrence Howard, Robin Williams Directed By: Kirsten Sheridan
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Binding: DVD Brand: Warner Brothers EAN: 0012569763685 Format: AC-3 Label: Warner Home Video Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Warner Home Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2008-03-11 Running Time: 113 Studio: Warner Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 2007-11-21
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Editorial Reviews:
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There?s music in the wind and sky. Can you hear it? And there?s hope. Can you feel it? The boy called August Rush can. The music mysteriously draws him penniless and alone to New York City in a quest to find ? somehow someway ? the parents separated from him years earlier. And along the way he may also find the musical genius hidden within him. Experience the magic of this rhapsodic epic of the heart starring Freddie Highmore (as August) Keri Russell Jonathan Rhys Meyers Terrence Howard and Robin Williams. ?I believe in music the way some people believe in fairy tales? August says. Open your heart and listen. You?ll believe too.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre:Â DRAMA/CHILDHOOD DRAMA UPC:Â 012569763685 Manufacturer No:Â 76368
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A Wonderful Movie Comment: I loved this movie and have already watched it three times..always recommending it to others. It takes you on a whole gammet of emotions. I had never heard of any of the actors before except for Robin Williams, but the three main actors where great! They totally draw you into their lives. This is a very captivating and inspirational movie!
Customer Rating:      Summary: one of the best movies of the year Comment: This movie is a must see for people who believe in serendipity. The combination of circumstances is truly extraordinary and stresses your ability to believe them. But in the end it is really worth it. The combination of acting, singing and music is skillfully blended and carrys you along in an emotional cloud. It is bound to make you feel better at the end. A rare movie for all ages and persuasions.
Customer Rating:      Summary: You have to understand this GENRE Comment: I won't rehash what all of the positive reviews have said. My five star rating speaks for itself.
As for the negative reviews about this movie, I can't help but make the observation that those individuals apparently don't understand or appreciate the genre of fantasy drama. There are a few somewhat implausible elements to the story, but they're done artistically enough that instead of detracting from the film, they enhance the emotion of it.
This is one of the best movies I've ever seen. It's in my top 10 for sure.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Same Note Sammy Comment: I'd have enjoyed this movie more if... well, if it had been better! I was expecting a serious movie and was dealt a Dickensian, Hollywood fairy-tale where actors are merely props for the movie's symbolism: Keri Russell is sublime and disciplined classical music and Jonathan Rhys Meyers is hip and emotional Rock and Roll. A short-lived fling gives birth to Freddie Highmore, a super-gifted, musically inclined child who integrates both. Robin Williams plays an interesting character, the only complex one in the movie, who represents, to me, the stages of a career in music which in the end goes bad: Inspired and driven by love of the art initially which then turns materialistic and self-destructive.
These aspects could have, if they had been done correctly by writer/director Kirsten Sheridan, been interesting. What is beyond reproach are her sets and shots; she has the ability to create in her movies a world one wants to live in. I absolutly love her use of colors and light. Yet, using actors as chess pieces to tell a story is just bad film-making, I'd have expected better from her. The problem is that once a writer or director decides to make symbols out of characters, the actor is trapped into playing the same note (and isn't that ironic?). That premise leads the movie to make several unbelievably stupid choices: After Rhys Meyers abandons his super-hip band in New York (there was talk about "going back to Ireland") he finds an unlikely, super-cushy job in California. This type of overtly-privileged fantasy life is fine for the OC or 90210, not for a movie that wants to be deep. When he runs into a former band mate years later we find that although the band broke up after he left, somehow they ALL live in California and within driving distance of each other! This is just insulting your audience. Beyond that, August Rush is just enervatingly sentimental; I haven't rolled my eyes at a movie so much since the English Patient.
This movie has heart, is beautifully shot, is family friendly and even something you might enjoy if you are in the right mood. It is about a universe of sounds and how harmony brings us together, about integrating all the notes in our scale and the value of art, discipline, emotion and Love. Too bad there's a droning single note throughout the movie and an excessive amount of emotional sap that makes it easy to be cynical about it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Give me a break!!! Comment: All I can say after seeing this highly recommended movie is...Puhleeze!!! Nearly every movie has some unrealistic "hollywood" aspects to it that stretch believability, but I have never seen anything that quite compares to August Rush in this way. Keri Russell is not very believable as a renowned concert cellist in the first place. On top of that, when she is playing a concert at the beginning and end of the film, she somehow knows that her true love, Jonathan Rhys-meyers, is playing a rock concert somewhere at the same time, and he knows that she is playing a concert at the same time, and their music is perfectly in sync, and somehow at the end of the film she knows that her son can hear her playing through a subway grate, and somehow the boy ends up running away from the evil Robin Williams just in time to make it to the concert to squeeze into a tux and direct the Juilliard orchestra playing his composition, and somehow he knows that his mom and dad are in the audience standing down in the first row... you get the idea. Everyone in the film must be clairvoyant I guess. This is pure sentimental pap.
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