In the Land of Women

Actors: Adam Brody, Kristen Stewart, Meg Ryan
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Category: DVD

List Price: $27.98
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Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 4973

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 98 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: WARD73676D
UPC: 012569736764
EAN: 0012569736764
ASIN: B000VE4UHO

Theatrical Release Date: April 20, 2007
Release Date: October 30, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
In the Land of Women

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Customer Reviews

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1 out of 5 stars A Train Wreck    December 8, 2008
Devon Christopher Adams (Arizona)
I'll admit that I wasn't about to purchase this movie since it didn't even sound good in summary, but the wife snagged it. I figured I'd go along with it since Kristen Stewart's in it, and she's hot. Well, I've come to agree that this is the only thing redeeming about this film.

I understand the arguments of the nature of mankind and the rawness of the needs of these women in the movie, and I don't know what to expect, but it was terrible. Twenty minutes in my friend commented on how slow it was and she left after 45. The wife and I wanted to turn this movie off, but we needed to see if something redeemed it by the end. It didn't. It was like not being able to pull yourself away from a trainwreck. We just couldn't do it.

The movie was completely predictable. Everything I expected to happen then proceeded to happen. All of it. Films of this sort can be done well (for example LITTLE CHILDREN) but this was not done well. The younger daughter was probably the most interesting character for me, but she was completely off set by the obscenely flat character of her father. And speaking of which, the acting wasn't great. Someone earlier in a review mentioned something about this, but when Adam Brody plays the SAME character over and over in everything he does, it gets old. Really old. Kinda like Dukakis' character in the film (who does a good job and is fun to watch).



4 out of 5 stars offbeat romantic comedy/drama    December 1, 2008
Roland E. Zwick (Valencia, Ca USA)
Jon Kasdan (son of filmmaker Lawrence Kasdan) makes a most auspicious directorial debut with "In the Land of Women," an utterly charming and winning indie comedy/drama marked by interesting characters, complex relationships and delightful performances by a first-rate cast.

When his fashion-model/actress girlfriend dumps him without warning, a "soft-erotica" writer by the name of Carter Webb leaves his home in L.A. to spend time with his eccentric grandmother in suburban Michigan. A 26-year old who hasn`t been able to grab a hold of anything meaningful in his life thus far, Carter finds his world becoming even more complicated when he makes the acquaintance of a mother and daughter who live across the street from where he`s staying.

The beauty of Kasdan's screenplay is that we never know where the story is going to take us at any given moment. Moreover, the characters interact with one another in ways that are both believable and surprising, and no one is made out to be either a hero or a villain, a sinner or a saint. Carter is coping with the pain of a failed romantic relationship, while the two women contend with marital difficulties, suburban angst, adolescent rebellion and a life-threatening illness. Yet, for all the potential sturm und drang of the material, "In the Land of Women" maintains a light-hearted, lyrical tone throughout, thanks to witty dialogue and a full-hearted appreciation for the subtle little ironies and eccentricities of life.

The performances could not be improved upon. Adam Brody makes Carter into a sympathetically vulnerable figure who, at the same time, can display a surprising amount of strength and intestinal fortitude when the situation calls for it. Makenzie Vega is sweet and charming as the literal girl-next-door who is quick to criticize her mother even though she doesn't know the woman quite as well as she thinks she does. But it is Meg Ryan as Sarah Hardwicke, the full-time housewife and mother, who truly excels in her role, turning a potentially two-dimensional character into a multi-faceted woman of surprising depth and emotion. With admirable restraint and understatement, Ryan conveys all the unspoken thoughts and feelings of a woman who is aware of the compromises she has made in life but who is far more wise and complex about the ways of the world than either her daughter or her philandering husband are willing to give her credit for. Finally, Olympia Dukakis seems to be having the time of her life playing an attention-seeking, doddering old woman who may not be quite as out of it as she wants others to believe she is.

As director, Kasdan takes full advantage of the bucolic Michigan setting (though it is remarkably lush and green for October), as Carter and Sarah take long, leisurely strolls around the neighborhood, getting to know one another and establishing a lasting relationship.

Like them, the movie is not afraid to take its time laying out its storyline and revealing the hearts of its characters. The result is an offbeat and deeply satisfying film that bodes well for the future career of its neophyte director.



5 out of 5 stars A Real Film About Real People    November 23, 2008
John W. Schlatter (Grand Junction, Colorado)
This is such a human film...It illustrates the truth that we don't love people because they're perfect because if we did, we'd have no one to love...Every character is flawed and yet each one has a tremendous streak of courage and even some wisdom.
There are REAL teenagers in this film, not the usual sex crazed idiots that are so often featured in today's cinema...
Seldom does one hear such truthful dialog between people who are looking for answers and finding their way....It reaffirms reasons why we should believe in humanity...



3 out of 5 stars Olympia Dukakis Commits Acting Crime, Gets Stripped of her Oscar    November 7, 2008
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States)
I remember Kristen Stewart in PANIC ROOM when she was a good looking little boy, or so I thought, but baby look at her now! If she is going to be tne one playing Bella in the movie of TWILIGHT, then it is bound to be a winner. Here she plays the sullen, rebellious, teenage daughter of Meg Ryan in a midwestern suburb that's been manicured to within an inch of its life. Her boyfriend is the chief jock in the high school and she hangs out with a trendy, Vogue-reading pack of gossip girls. And yet for some reason she's not happy--well, if she was, there wouldn't be a movie. To Lucy, Carter Webb the visitor from far off Los Angeles, is her entree into a more intriguing world of exile and possibility. He's creative--a writer--and he still acts like he's in high school, which is reassuring.

He has a comically sad relationship to his aging grandmother (Olympia Dukakis, flaming the screen with shreds of ham), which is just as winsome as Lucy's own relationship with her mother, the aforementioned Meg Ryan, going out of her way to act as if she really had cancer.

The two houses across the street from each other form a dichotomy which the younger characters resent, always spilling out of domestic life and meeting in the middle of the street--I kept waiting for one of them to get run over by Kristen Stewart's car-crazy pack of jock friends.

Adam Brody just wasn't right for this movie, and if it fails, it's because of two things, he's the same as Seth Cohen only without any snappy dialogue, and b, the whole script is written in a way that makes you think the producers are purposely avoiding letting Carter have sex with either mother or daughter.

He's supposed to write soft core porn for HBO or whatever, but as the film makes it clear, he is as ignorant about sex as he is about everything else. I guess he's okay, though how convenient that he gets to meet Ms. Right in the last sixty seconds of the movie. Whoops, that's a spoiler right there but now I've got you curious and otherwise there's not much to look forward to once Olympia Dukakis totters in and destroys the picture.



5 out of 5 stars In the Land of Women DVD    August 10, 2008
Robert W. Simmons (Madison WI USA)
You KNOW this is a comedy from the title -- and it delivers big time. The FINE seller gave me great service, too, and rates AAA+++++.