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Description: Genre: Comedy / Theatrical Release: 2004 / Director: Nigel Cole / Actors: Helen Mirren, Julie Walters ... / DVD ... more Newest Review: ... and the two women set about recruiting their different months and finding a photographer. The scenes where the women are ... more |
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Movies Price Comparison
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Calendar Girl (1947) DVD Â [2007]
Release Date: 2007-07-01, Rating Universal, suitable for all, |
£ 14,99 |
Postage & Packaging:
£ 0.00 Availability: refer to shop website |
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by ruth_cole - written on 24.09.04 (Very useful, 3590 readings)
Rating:
Way back when UIP.com put me in the way of two free tickets to a mystery preview and I jumped at the thought of a free film in a cinema that might cost upwards of £8. There was some trepidation (would it be some reportedly godawful pap like Gigli?), but off I went, and I was rewarded with this gentle, funny, moving little tale. Chris Harper HELEN MIRREN Annie Clarke JULIE WALTERS Jesse ANNETTE CROSBIE Celia CELIA IMRIE Ruth PENELOPE WILTON Rod Harper CIARAN HINDS John Clarke JOHN ALDERTON Directed by NIGEL COLE (Saving Grace) Written by TIM FIRTH and JULIETTE TOWHIDI Original music by PATRICK ...
by theediscerning - written on 03.10.03 (Very useful, 291 readings)
Rating:
The editors of that silly book they sell in The Works for a couple of quid that lists sexy female actresses (in among the unsexy ones) and which films you might get a glimpse of nipple, might have a passing interest in Calendar Girls. So might you, should you have similarly puerile interests. Should you, however, aim to see the best-acted, breeziest and most bitter-sweet British-set comedy of the year, then Calendar Girls will fit the bill. Life as a member of the WI can?t be incredibly exciting, however often you like to tirelessly sing through Jerusalem at the start of each meeting. Sure, there is a range in the topics of the talks provided, from an ...
by ickkate - written on 02.10.03 (Very useful, 1515 readings)
Rating:
There are some films that are quintessentially English in their mixture of pathos and humour. When done well, these films hold a certain charm and inoffensiveness that can appeal to a large range of audiences, often including those located on the other side of the fishpond. Problems sometimes arise when these type of films attempt to cater to our American friends a little too much, and don't quite manage to hit that the tricky balance that makes the film truly appealing to either audience. Thankfully, with 'Calendar Girls' director Nigel Cole has managed to hit the spot, doing justice to a film based on the real events of Rydesdale, Yorkshire, that ...






