Home :: DVD :: Comedy :: General  

African American Comedy
Animation
Black Comedy
British
Classic Comedies
Comic Criminals
Cult Classics
Documentaries, Real & Fake
Farce
Frighteningly Funny
Gay & Lesbian
General

Kids & Family
Military & War
Musicals
Parody & Spoof
Romantic Comedies
Satire
School Days
Screwball Comedy
Series & Sequels
Slapstick
Sports
Stand-Up
Teen
Television
Urban
ABCD

ABCD

List Price: $24.98
Your Price: $22.48
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Film Received Great Reviews
Review: "Reminiscent of early films by Wayne Wang and Ang Lee..."ABCD" is the groundbreaker...a wryly observant comic drama... a film that reminds us that our country is less of a cultural melting pot than a crazily tossed salad." -Kirk Honeycutt, The Hollywood Reporter

"Stunning...extraordinary. [A] funny touching and haunting film." -Peter Travers, Rolling Stone Magazine

"Witty, smart, intelligent, superbly acted and passionately told." -Harry Knowles, Aint It Cool News

"Possesses exceptional depth and perception. Well-paced and graceful...brought alive by stellar performances." -Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times

"A real treat...SEE this motion picture...a total delight." -Aint-It-Cool-News

"Sensitively acted." -Stephen Holden, The New York Times

"About as honest a finale as you'll ever see in a movie about relationships." -Glenn Whipp, Los Angeles Daily News

"Affectionate and Affecting. That I found myself yelling out loud at a character about to get engaged to someone unworthy is a sign of how psychologically involved I'd become with Patel's characters." -Carrie Rickey, Philadelphia Enquirer

"ABCD is an engaging bittersweet tale...It's compassionate, funny and honest." -Jonathan Foreman, New York Post

"ABCD is a marvel to watch; it breaks ground." -Harvey S Karten, Compuserve

"The acting in the film is very accomplished as is the direction - specially in scenes that call for either highly charged emotional moments or subtle, understated ones...you could swear that this wasn't acting, that it was really happening." -P. Sebastian, The Deccan Herald

"This is a deeply layered, multi-textured piece that continually weaves a meaningful theme which, although easy to follow, is quite complex...ABCD is a finely crafted, wonderfully paced, beautifully written and perfectly directed film...This is American filmmaking at its finest. Final Grade A+ " -Lodger, filethirteen

"An honest ending that, despite obvious opportunities to do so, refuses to give in to cheap sentiments....A smart, finely crafted debut that recalls the early work of Wayne Wang, Ang Lee, and Mike Leigh." -Jody Seaborn, Austin American Statesman

"ABCD is a triumph for the independent filmmaker that echoes the fact that independent film is the source of renew and evolution for film making." -Vin Geer, Desiclub

"The dialogue is so strong and colorful, so real, the actors molded to fit their characters skins so adeptly that one could feel like a voyeur at times, peering guiltily through the window into this family's private lives." - Kalyani Giri, The Indo-American News

"A touching, honest feature film." -Anika Van Wyk, Calgary Sun

"ABCD is full of intimate touches...offering a refreshing alternative to the slick fare on art house screens lately." -John Monaghan, Detroit Free Press

"A surprising, even unsettling conclusion that offers no easy answers, ABCD makes much of its complicated and culturally rich material." -Kimberly Jones, The Austin Chronicle

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: AWFUL AWFUL AWFUL
Review: One more movie about immigrant troubles, and the agony of "culture clash"... told from the point of view of a second-generation immigrant. By this point it's just gotten boring. Guys, GET OVER IT. There's really no need to be that confused about your identity you know. You have a choice: Be Indian, Be American. Better yet, you could actually choose the good parts of both cultures and combine them...but no, this movie choses instead to be a rant against India. Very well, whatever makes you happy....but as a movie it just sucks. Oh and a correction is necessary - in one scene, the lead actress and her boyfriend are at an Indian wedding. The lead actress makes a comment about how in Indian culture, the bride leaves her family "forever" and becomes a part of the groom's family... they way she puts it, it's like the bride will never see her family again, and this is a part of Indian culture. Absolute hogwash. Two people getting married are two people getting married, not the bride marrying into the groom's family and forgetting her own. The director of this movie needs to get their facts straight. Avoid this one like the plague.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates