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Under the Tuscan Sun
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Directed by Audrey Wells.
A woman starts her life over with a new home in a new land in this romantic comedy drama . Frances (Diane Lane) is a writer in her mid-'30s who feels emotionally derailed after her divorce. Unhappy and unable to write, she isn't sure what to do with her life, and her best friend Patti (Sandra Oh) decides she needs some time away from her problems. With that in mind, Patti gives Frances a ticket for a two-week tour of the Tuscany region of Italy; while there, Frances finds a dilapidated old villa. Charmed by the warmth, beauty, and charm of the small town of Cortona, Frances impulsively decides to buy the villa, thinking she can fix it up herself. The home proves to be more of a handyman's special than she imagined, but as she slowly gets the hang of household maintenance, Italian style, Frances develops a new confidence as she makes friends with her neighbors and finds love with a handsome local named Marcello (Raoul Bova). Under the Tuscan Sun is loosely adapted from the memoir by Frances Mayes, who (unlike the leading character of the film) remained happily married during her sojourn in Tuscany. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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pippin06pippin06 It's Kind of Fun to Bask Under ...
by pippin06 in Reel Thoughts
liked it.
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"Under the Tuscan Sun became my Netflix movie of the week after I noticed that the next three on the queue were Aronofsky's films (none of which I've seen). I figured I should watch something light and fluffy before I get into heady films about drug use, unraveling the mysteries of the number pi, and making sense of a time-spanning romance. Truth be told, I had no high hopes for this film. I figured it would be just another predictable romance, and it was. It was formulaic with an obvious happy ending in store, but there were enough alterations to the formula to keep me interested and make me enjoy this movie in spite of myself.The movie is loosely based on the memoir of Frances Mayes. Frances (Diane Lane) is a writer who reviews other writers. She ends up going through a painful and messy divorce from her cheating writer husband, in the process losing her house in the divorce settlement. In recovery, her best friend Patti (Sandra Oh), a wisecracking lesbian just preg ... " [More]
indieabby88indieabby88 Italy is for Lovers
by indieabby88 in Bloggish review blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I like to think of myself as a diverse movie viewer. I can watch a horror movie, then turn right back around and watch a period drama, followed by a screwball comedy. But there are some genres that I just really get a kick out of. Well-done, inspirational romantic comedies are one. I love movies like "Amelie" and, yes, even "Under the Tuscan Sun" that are light and fun and leave you feeling great. "Agata and the Storm" is one of these movies. Something like a hybrid of "Amelie" and "Waiting to Exhale," it had me grinning from beginning to end.The movie centers on the life, relationships and adventures of Agata, a forty-ish bookstore owner in Genoa with a strange ability to make electricity go haywire when she gets emotional. She's seeing Nico, a married man about half her age. Her brother Gustavo recently discovered he was adopted as an infant and appears to have abandoned his family and successful architecture career to find hi ... " [More]
spoutgirlspoutgirl Re: "Story of my life."
by spoutgirl in Best movie quotes
loved it.
"Oh wow, this is a good one! I am going to have to say "Regrets are a waste of time. They're the past crippling you in the present." This is from Under the Tuscan Sun " [More]
cspraguecsprague Agata and the Storm
by csprague in Spout Mavens
hasn't rated it.
"Agata and the Storm A swirl of pop-art color, madcap magic, and the bittersweet call of life and love suddenly take the mature, ravishing, self-reliant Agata by storm. When Agata, the popular bookshop proprietor and dispenser of sunny wisdom in the form of books, is suddenly wooed by a man almost half her age, her electricity hits high-voltage. It even sends light bulbs bursting in her wake. Yet it is Agata's joy and 'explosive' magnetism in the face of life in all its irony that eventually offers the eye of the cyclone. There, all is supremely quiet and still, as Agata creates a haven of love and freedom to quell the storms of life's unfulfilled desires.~www.filmmovement.com " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Under the Tuscan Sun
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski If it's possible to give chick flicks a worse name than they already have, the forces behind Under the Tuscan Sun have done it. In adapting Frances Mayes' memoir of post-divorce revitalization in Italy, Tuscan director and screenwriter Audrey Wells has reduced Mayes' whimsy to mere simple-mindedness while running roughshod over such nuisances as narrative and continuity in the service of a higher cultural calling: cuteness. Recovering from trauma was never so adorable. Tuscan star Diane Lane has traded down from her sordid, Oscar-nominated turn in Unfaithful to the saccharine Frances, a San Francisco critic who gets clued in to her husband's infidelity by an author whose book Frances slammed. When Frances' ex buys her out of their home during divorce proceedings, she leaves behind everything but her library and decamps to a dreary short-term apartment in a building her friends term "Camp Divorce." Worried that Frances is spiraling into depression, her best frie ... " [More]
KamiKami Re: Guess The Movie Quote
by Kami in Best movie quotes
hasn't rated it.
"Under The Tuscan Sun One of my favorites! " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
This overall thrust of this chick flick doesn't stray far from formula, but the filmmakers fill Under the Tuscan Sun with enough smart casting and unorthodox flourishes to keep things interesting far longer than they might have. Hollywood vet and Oscar nominee Diane Lane has earned the right to rest on her laurels; for her, that means letting her innate charm and screen charisma do most of the work and summoning up the odd moment of actual acting chops only on the rare occasion in which the script requires it. In smaller roles, Sandra Oh and Lindsay Duncan get to have lots more fun, Oh as a snarky lesbian sidekick and Duncan as an eccentric, over-50 actress with the appetite of a woman half her age. As far as the plot goes, the elliptical happy ending is implicit in the premise, but writer/director Audrey Wells makes sure her characters earn it -- even if that means the third act drags on into a fourth one. Luckily, cinematographer Geoffrey Simpson makes the most of every gorgeous moment even when the story begins to sag. A well-crafted, picturesque romantic comedy isn't exactly a hard sell in Hollywood, but Under the Tuscan Sun surpasses the genre's requirements more often than it settles for them. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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spoutgirl
spoutgirl
loved it.
darkfaerie48
darkfaerie48
loved it.
belladonna2054
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