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World Famous Comics: The Break-Up (Widescreen Edition)
The Break-Up (Widescreen Edition)
Starring: Vince Vaughn, Jennifer Aniston, Joey Lauren Adams, Cole Hauser, Jon Favreau
Directed By: Peyton Reed
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Universal Studios
Number of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 17, 2006
Running Time: 107 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: June 02, 2006

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The Break-Up (Widescreen Edition)
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Editorial Comments

Description:
Vince Vaughn and Jennifer Aniston star in the charming and unpredictable comedy The Break-Up. After two years together, Gary and Brooke's relationship seems to have taken a comical wrong turn on the way to happily ever after. Now the break-up is on, the lines have been drawn, and their honest feelings for each other are coming out. Get ready for an all-out war of the exes in this fun date movie that's hilarious and heartfelt.

Amazon.com:
The combined star power of Vince Vaughn (Wedding Crashers, Swingers) and Jennifer Aniston (Bruce Almighty, The Good Girl) makes The Break-Up a high-profile romantic comedy. Gary (Vaughn) and Brooke (Aniston) find that their brittle relationship may have reached the breaking point--but neither is willing to give up the condo they co-own. As their fighting grows increasingly bitter, neither is sure if they're fighting to get out of the relationship or to save it. The Break-Up is an odd combination of realistic scenes that capture the harsh yet human ways that lovers can hurt each other, and broad comic scenes with a more farcical edge. Both types of scenes are entertaining on their own terms--the movie is never boring--but they don't fully mesh, and as a result it's hard to engage emotionally with either Gary or Brooke. But the sterling supporting cast--including Jon Favreau (Wimbledon), Cole Hauser (The Cave), Joey Lauren Adams (Chasing Amy), John Michael Higgins (A Mighty Wind), Justin Long (Dodgeball), Jason Bateman (Arrested Development), Vincent D'Onofrio (Happy Accidents), and the ever-delirious Judy Davis (Husbands and Wives)--give every scene they're in a boost of comic energy. An uneven but enjoyable movie that may suffer from viewers having overly high expectations due to Vaughn and Aniston's celebrity. --Bret Fetzer


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsthe break up...
I found myself relating to this movie. It was funny to me. The ending was great.

One couple, one condo, and one break up equals fighting without end. Boyfriend takes girl for granted, girlfriend says things she doesn't mean equals break up.

This is not a family movie because of language and some content.



4 out of 5 starsNot a feel-good, laugh-riot comedy, but... interesting
A pretty entertaining, thoughtful movie if you ignore the bouncy/fun art on the DVD box and forget the bouncy/fun marketing campaign when this movie hit theaters a couple of years back. This is not a romantic comedy but rather a drama with some comedy sprinkled in, or- at best- a 50/50 mix of drama and comedy. If you go in knowing that, you won't be put off (as I was until I got into the right groove) by all the intense, shadowy lighting and the intense, pain-laced arguments. Once you know what you're getting, you'll enjoy the well-crafted intensity and the handful of funny moments, too (Jon Favreau is a riot as Vince Vaughn's protective friend).

The extra features are pretty illuminating, too. That's where we learn that the film's tone was unambiguously intentional on the part of Vince Vaughn and director Peyton Reed, who essentially said, "we hate those brightly lit, goofy romantic comedies that don't have a thread of true complexity in them!" Oh, and for an entertaining lesson in the art of film-making, be sure to watch the Vince Vaughn/Jon Favreau improv sessions, also among the special features. You'll see five or so improvised takes of a conversation in a bar between the two actors, while in character. It's fun to see what responses they come up with on the spur of the moment as each actor takes turns throwing openings and straight lines at the other. In the end, pieces of all the takes were edited together to produce the actual scene in the movie.

So, again, if you don't mind a little nuance and complexity in your comedic dramas (or your dramatic comedies, or whatever you want to call this mixed-up genre), give "The Break-Up" a try.



3 out of 5 starsBETTER THAN I EXPECTED
This is a great rainy Saturday movie. I'm not a big fan of Jennifer Aniston because she is always, well, Jennifer Aniston. But that works for her. The same thing with Vince Vaughn - he's the big goof in comedies and eerily frightening in dramatic vehicles. But, together, they make a nice team with believeable chemistry. They are nicely supported by Jason Batement and Jon Favreau. Vincent D'Onofrio is a chameleon, barely recognizeable as the over-analytical detective in television's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent". The plot here is a lot less violent than "The War Of The Roses", but telling the same story in a more civilized and delightful manner. The ending was perfect, leaving the viewer with the sense that there's room for a sequel. Hopefully, that will never happen, but we can just follow Aniston's real-life workaholic/on-again-off-again romances/friendships/"friends-with-benefits"/booty calls/boyfriends-of-the-week/still trying to get over Brad and Angelina/ saga.



5 out of 5 starsA great movie A must see
this movie was eye opener in my relationship. watch it.
It is worth the watch. Sometimes no matter what you say or do
they just don't get it...



2 out of 5 starsA Cellloid Catastrophe
Unless your idea of entertainment is to listen to a recording of nails scraping against a blackboard, avoid this movie at all costs. A movie in the dreaded "dramedy" catagory (you know the one, Home Improvement meets cancer-scare), this offering by two normally entertaining actors hits all the wrong notes.

The basic plot is stupifyingly simple: boy and girl who to all conscious observers seem to have nothing in common, whatdayaknow, break-up! That in and of itself does not a movie make, so the writers and directors pad the film with uncomfortable and poorly acted scenes of yelling, arguments, tantrums, and other assorted ill-advised and sophmoric behavior. Not only are the protagonistics utterly clueless, but their friends are utterly useless, providing unhelplful and ultimately destructive advice; their only purpose seems to provide characters that the principals can rant and rave at and interact with, like a live action video game.

Some reviewers, bless their hearts, have observed that the film portrays relationships as rather realistic. Well I've just read that Jennifer Anston, who was the real-life "girlfriend" (what?! are we thirteen,- Aniston is 39!!) of Vince Vaugn during filming, just broke up with her British model boyfriend after two months. What a suprise! Perhaps her acting isn't so great after all.


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