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    Wicker Park

    Wicker Park
    Director: Paul Mcguigan
    Actors: Josh Hartnett, Diane Kruger, Matthew Lillard, Rose Byrne, Christopher Cousins
    Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $14.98
    Buy Used: $0.54
    You Save: $14.44 (96%)



    New (70) Used (169) Collectible (1) from $0.54

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 98 reviews
    Sales Rank: 8855

    Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed)
    Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
    Region: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 114 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
    Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5 x 0.6

    MPN: MGMD1008121D
    ISBN: 0792864387
    UPC: 027616921529
    EAN: 9780792864387
    ASIN: B00067BBMS

    Theatrical Release Date: September 3, 2004
    Release Date: December 28, 2004
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    No, Josh Hartnett doesn't make the most convincing corporate up-and-comer in the world, but then Matthew, his character in this pensive romantic drama, is supposed to be uncomfortable in his business costume. He's a photographer at heart, a sensitive guy who abandoned that passion when Lisa (Diane Kruger), his enigmatic other true love, abandoned him. Their romance had an oddly abrupt end after Lisa left without a word, so when Matthew thinks he sees her upon returning to Chicago, he starts lying to his fiancee and practically stalking his old flame before becoming entangled in a strange tryst with a lovesick nurse (Rose Byrne). The MGM publicity department busied itself trying to promote this remake of L'Appartement (1996) as some kind of heavy-breathing Fatal Attraction, and director Paul McGuigan certainly fills it with enough slick split-screens and MTV-soundtrack moments to hype it, yet it isn't even remotely a thriller. There are flashbacks upon flashbacks--Vanilla Sky begins to feel linear in comparison--and the screenplay insists on spelling everything out so we'll be sure to get how thoughtful it really is, but it all isn't half bad. Though Hartnett is a little out of his depth, his gentle, beleaguered masculinity works well, and the women are both compelling: Kruger redeems herself after being more wooden than the Trojan Horse in Troy, and Byrne is quite good. Even Matthew Lillard does solid work as Matthew's vulnerable, big-talking buddy. Somewhere in all of it is a surprisingly adult look at the things people do when love seems either too perilously close or too far away to believe in. --Steve Wiecking

    Product Description
    WHEN MATTHEW GLIMPSES HIS LOST LOVE IN A CROWDED CAFE, HE'S DETERMINED NOT TO LOSE HER AGAIN. DETERMINATION SOON TURNS INTO OBSSESSION, AS MATTHEW FINDS HIMSELF ON A DANGEROUS & CHILLING JOURNEY, WHERE NO ONE IS WHO THEY SEEM - & CHANCE MEETINGS WITH A SEXY BRUNETTE MIGHT UNRAVEL FRIENDSHIPS, CAREERS & LIVES.


    Customer Reviews:   Read 93 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Two really badly cast stars ruin any chance this film had.   June 26, 2009
    RMurray847 (Albuquerque, NM United States)
    If better actors than Josh Hartnett or Diane Krueger had been cast, WICKER PARK could have been a sleek thriller with lead characters we cared out. Instead, it's a glossy but fairly lifeless mystery that generates only academic interest.

    Hartnett plays a young professional who seems to have it made. He's about to be engaged to a lovely young professional. He's helped land a major client, is about to globetrot to China in preparation for taking another leap upward in his career. Yet just as all these pieces are falling into place, he thinks he spies the woman (Diane Krueger) he had a passionate affair with 2 years ago...an affair that ended abruptly with her disappearance. He literally watched her walk away from him after a conversation in a restaurant and never saw her again.

    He thinks he's moved on, but in truth, he is compelled to track down this woman who MIGHT be the woman he once loved (and clearly still does). His quest to track down this woman is interspersed with flashbacks of their relationship, from uncomfortable first meeting to hot, fiery passion to what sure seemed like love to Hartnett, at least. He follows the trail, and it doesn't quite lead him where he would have hoped.

    He is assisted by his old friend, woman's shoe store owner Matthew Lillard. And he is drawn to another woman (Rose Byrne) who seems to somehow figure into all this.

    The movie is a puzzle to be fitted together. And the puzzle is mildly, but only academically intriguing. In order to really care about this piece, we have to really care about the hot, steamy romance between our two leads. We need to FEEL a desire to see what happened to these people we care about, and we would then feel properly shocked, surprised, dismayed, joyful, etc. at all the events that unfold as Hartnett moves closer to the truth.

    The basic plot of WICKER PARK is not too bad, but the script is not the best. It makes the mistake of assuming (as so many movies do) that if we see two attractive people making transcendent love in their chic apartments...we'll fall in love with them ourselves and dote on their every move. It takes a bit of sparkling dialogue or real chemistry between stars to do that. The script misses on the dialogue, and the two stars BADLY, REALLY BADLY miss on the chemistry part. Krueger hasn't really done too much on-screen work in the past, and with her accent, can perhaps be somewhat forgiven for coming across as a pretty airhead. Hartnett, however, is a more complex problem. For me, I am hard-pressed to think of a "star" in recent years who is less capable of acting. I guess "the chicks dig him" or something, because he kept landing big parts in PEARL HARBOR, 40 DAYS AND NIGHTS, LUCKY NUMBER SLEVIN, HOLLYWOOD HOMICIDE and this clunker. And in not one of those films was he even remotely convincing. In WICKER PARK, he's asked to smolder and look sad. His smolder makes him just look vaguely dim-witted and his sad makes him look like a 6 year old crying over a spanking from Mommy. He's truly, thoroughly dreadful, and utterly lacking in charisma. There are a number of "stars" who can't act very well (Dwayne Johnson springs immediately to mind) but they have charisma to burn. Hartnett is in the same category as Hayden Christiansen and Jessica Alba...singularly unable to be a human being an audience can care about.

    Matthew Lillard is not a great actor either, but he at least musters ups energy and is mildly sympathetic. Rose Byrne is a dour creature...but at least something seems to be going on behind her eyes. I like her better in stuff like "Damages" where her slow burn has time to work. I wouldn't say she "succeeds" in WICKER PARK, but it is only as her character develops that any real interest in the film kicks in.

    In the end, WICKER PARK aspires to be a mystery romance or perhaps a love-story / thriller. It neither thrills nor inspires romantic feelings. However, it does add another page to the "why Josh Hartnett" mystery.

    I would avoid this PG-13 movie at almost all costs.



    5 out of 5 stars An intriguing romantic tale with a twist of ALFRED HITCHCOCK suspense!   June 5, 2009
    Sylvia T. Bosarge (Mobile,AL. USA)
    In spite of what some of the other stupid critics may have panned this
    film for,it is quite obvious by those of us who not only watched it,but
    also understood it and enjoyed it for what it is: a romantic-suspense
    thriller on the same level with the Alfred Hitchcock classic,"VERTIGO"!
    This is,without a doubt,JOSH HARTNETT at his very best from an acting
    standpoint!And he certainly deserved a nod when it came time to announce
    the nominees for the academy awards that year!!!!!!!Not only that,the rest of the cast inluding: ROSE BYRNE,MATTHEW LILLARD,and DIANE KRUGER
    all certainly played and acted their parts out to the perfect T,and also
    deserved nominations as well!These stupid critics don't know a GOOD MOVIE
    when they SEE ONE!!!Every once in a while,the right movie may take home
    all the gold.But that is TOO FAR,RARE,and IN BETWEEN!!!!!That is still the PERFECT REASON why I never listen to a STUPID,MOVIE CRITIC.Instead,I
    go and be the critic myself!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



    1 out of 5 stars Made me want to drop acid.   April 14, 2009
    Mad Dog (Canada)
    1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    Possibly the worst film of the last ten years. Certainly the worst I have seen. When it was over I had to open all the windows (minus 15C here), disinfect my TV, and throw out my DVD player (lucky it wasn't on Blu-Ray!).

    Ebert and Roeper gave this dog two thumbs up, proving that at least two people in the world are still doing Goofballs, or Mushrooms, or whatever laugh-a-minute cocktail you youngsters are into.

    The good news is that if you do sit though this stinker, Pearl Harbour will play like a Charlie Kaufman movie.



    3 out of 5 stars Lots of eye candy, but...   March 26, 2009
    Eduardo Nietzsche (Houston)
    1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    ...lousy acting, bad casting, and incoherent story.

    The two main leads, Josh Hartnett and Diane Kruger, are very telegenic but mediocre actors, with a very limited range which the script only highlights. Hartnett spends 90% of the film looking handsomely befuddled, while Kruger is the epitome of the deer-in-the-headlights.

    Kruger is a fairly attractive young woman, but in the looks department she is overshadowed by both Rose Byrne who plays the film's villain, and Jessica Pare, the girl who Hartnett becomes engaged to. I.e. she is far too bland to really fit the role of Stunning Goddess The Hero Cannot Live Without, especially given the competition. I simply couldn't understand how our hero would've possibly chosen her over the other two women on his plate. Byrne is especially fetching, combining both irresistible vulnerability and intense sensuality.

    The plot is hopelessly convoluted and improbable, strung together by one coincidence and near-miss-cliffhanger after another. Torturous, in a word. The ending had me laughing out loud, it was so ridiculous...mercifully diluted by the Coldplay tune that comes on during the last 2 minutes.

    Yet what kept me watching was the visual beauty of this film...the sets, cinematography, and yes, the amateurish but quite attractive women.



    5 out of 5 stars Quite mysterious, but eventually all the strings get attached and it all makes sense.   February 12, 2009
    Khaled Altaher (Riyadh, NA Saudi Arabia)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Mathew falls in love with Lisa, whom he sees for the first time while passing next to the shop he works at. They meet up and both deeply fall in love, then she disappears without leaving trace.

    He starts a new life after failing to find Lisa, dates another girl for 2 years, whom is supposed to later get married to him, but however he is still haunted by the memories of Lisa and the question of why she left him.

    Then one day at a restaurant he spots Lisa very quickly before she leaves. He traces her through the hotel key room she leaves at the restaurant, and starts afterwards throughout the movie following many traces of her until he eventually leads himself to another Lisa, however not the same blonde Lisa he was in love with!

    In the end we realize that this new Lisa (brunette) faked her identity. Her actually name was Alex. She was deeply in love with Mathew for a long time without him knowing. She fell in love with him at first sight the same way he fell in love with Lisa!

    In fact, she was Lisa's close friend, but when she discovered her relationship with Mathew, she did all she can to keep them apart, and she succeeded to keep them so for 2 years. Evetually Mathew discovers her lie and finds the Lisa he loves and gets back together with her.

    Quite mysterious movie and not very easy to follow at first, however excellent story that keeps you thinking while watching the film.

    This movie for me was mainly about jealousy. How jealousy could hurt others. Alex was jealous because her friend Lisa was deeply in love with Mathew, so she decided to ruin their love. Didn't we see many cases like this in our lives?

    Also, cheating was a major thing in this movie. Mathew cheats on his fiancee with Lisa (emotionally). He also cheats on Lisa with Alex (physically). Alex cheats on her boy friend with Mathew. The only faithful one was Lisa. However, cheating wasn't stressed much on in this movie even though it was a major act.

    Love at first sight was also very much stressed on. I do not know if it actually exists, but many people seem to believe it does.

    Finally, some of your closest friends could turn up to be your worst enemies. Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.



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