When Harry Met Sally... | 
enlarge | Actors: John Arceri, Robert Alan Beuth, David Burdick, Frances Chaney, Donna Hardy Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $3.20 You Save: $11.78 (79%)
New (44) Used (66) Collectible (3) from $2.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 232 reviews Sales Rank: 5336
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Special Edition, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 96 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 DVD Layers: 2 DVD Sides: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: D1001460D ISBN: 0792848241 UPC: 027616857804 EAN: 9780792848240 ASIN: B00003CXDC
Theatrical Release Date: 1989 Release Date: January 9, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Nora Ephron wrote the brisk screenplay for this 1989 romantic comedy, director Rob Reiner made a nicely glossy New York story (very much in a Woody Allen vein) out of it, and Billy Crystal's unstoppable charm made it something really special. Crystal and Meg Ryan play longtime platonic friends who keep dancing around their deeper feelings for one another, and Bruno Kirby and Carrie Fisher are their respective pals who fall in love and get married. Ryan doesn't get a lot of funny material, but her performance is typically alive and intuitive, and she more than holds her own with Crystal's comic motor mouth and sweet sentimentality. Reiner is on comfortable ground, liberated from the burden of making serious statements in the lead-footed manner of subsequent features. --Tom Keogh On the DVD The Collector's Edition offers seven new featurettes (the previous Special Edition only had one documentary), beginning with a sit-down between director Rob Reiner and writer Nora Ephron waxing nostalgic on how the movie originated: He, recently divorced from Penny Marshall, was a miserable single man, while she was the screenwriter who rejected his initial pitch over lunch ("It was a shame," she remembers, "because we hadn't even eaten yet."). It's easy to see that Reiner is clearly Harry, and Ephron is clearly Sally: He's the squawking chatterbox and she's constantly corrects his memory (Sally's meticulous method of ordering food is also a direct rip-off of Ephron herself). Other featurettes show Billy Crystal's attempts to play Harry (or Reiner, as it were); location filming in New York; the love stories that served as interludes between scenes (again, the counselors-at-camp story is from Ephron's parents); the significance of the film over time; and more discussion on the film's famous question: "Can men and women really be friends?" Most of the stories from the featurettes are recycled in the new film commentary by Reiner, Ephron, and Crystal (Reiner mentions that the "I'll have what she's having" line, spoken by his mother, is in the top 10 of AFI's top 100 movie lines no less than five times overall), but the inclusion of Crystal, who contributed many improvised lines in the movie, makes for a nice easygoing repartee. Fans may be interested to know that Reiner originally thought Harry and Sally shouldn't get together, until he himself fell in love with his future wife on the set, but the most hilarious tidbit involves Reiner storming the production offices and polling all the women on whether or not they "fake it" because didn't believe that really happened. Seven deleted scenes--which were also included in the previous version--and original theatrical trailer round out the set, but Harry Connick Jr.'s "It Had to Be You" music video is missing. Still, the special features are a great look into a romantic comedy that clearly remains a meaningful experience for cast, crew, and audience alike. --Ellen A. Kim
Description "Brimming over with style, intelligence and flashing wit" (Rolling Stone), this "splendid and irresistible" (Los Angeles Times) film from director Rob Reiner(American President is one of the best-loved romantic comedies of all time. Featuring dazzling performances from Meg Ryan, Billy Crystal, Carrie Fisher and Bruno Kirby, exceptional music from Harry Connick Jr., and an OscarA(r)-nominated* screenplay by Nora Ephron, When Harry Met Sally is an "explosively funny" commentary on friendship, courtships - and other hardships - of the modern age (Newsweek)! Will sex ruin a perfect relationship between a man and a woman? that's what Harry (Crystal) and Sally (Ryan) debate during their travels from Chicago to New York. And eleven years and later, they're still no closer to finding the answer. Will these two best friends ever accept that they're meant for each other...or will they continue to deny the attraction that's existed since the first moment When Harry Met Sally? *1989
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| Customer Reviews: Read 227 more reviews...
SMART & INSIGHTFUL VERY RARE IN A ROMANTIC COMEDY! September 1, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
A rarity in this type of film, it has a brain and it isn't too sappy! Crystal and Ryan are great in this smart and funny romance flick! This is definitely one romantic comedy that both men and women can enjoy. The DVD transfer in very good.
YES! YES! YES!!! Whatever. August 30, 2008 So this is ranked number six on AFI's Top Ten List of Romantic Comedies? Well it is a funny movie. Not that funny, but funny. I just mean not as funny as apparently most people seem to think it is. I remember going to the theater and seeing WHEN HARRY MET SALLY when it first came out. I went with my much older cousin and his friends. When the scene that this movie is famous for came on I remember my cousin, his girlfriend and all his friends, along with most of the audience, laughing just hystericaly like what they were seeing is the funniest thing ever. And they glanced over at me and I guess I was smiling. I don't know. Maybe I was laughing too. Anyway, after the movie when I was alone and riding around with my cousin he explained to me what it was about and that's when I first heard about what that's about. He explained they feel really good and that guys have them more easily. When girls have them it is more special because it is harder sometimes for them to have one, or for some of them to. I'm paraphrasing but that's about how he put it. Anyway, looking back on how famous that scene was and the "I'll have what she's having line" and how much media attention it got, I can't help but feel people are stupid when I think of a cultural moment like that. It really isn't THAT funny. The movie isn't bad. What happened to Billy Crystal? Who cares.
Wonderful August 3, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This my second favorite romantic movie after the notebook.Can friends become lovers?? I loved this movie and just loved the ending.
love this movie May 9, 2008 this is like a classic movie, I loved everypart of it. And you can watch it over and over again and not get tired of it like some other movies.
Classic March 20, 2008 This is one of the few movies I can watch a million times. it makes me laugh every time... Classic. Love Rob Reiner...
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