![Revolutionary Road [Blu-ray]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51AgYlUYG9L._SL160_.jpg) | |
List Price: $39.99 | | Label: Paramount
Salesrank: 14126
Released: June 2, 2009 |
| Our Price: $14.90 |
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MPAA Rating: R (Restricted) Media: Blu-ray |
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Editorial Review:
Genre: Drama
Rating: R
Release Date: 2-JUN-2009
Media Type: Blu-Ray
Description of Revolutionary Road [Blu-ray]:
In Revolutionary Road, Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio reunite for the first time since their careers exploded with Titanic--and it's almost as if they're playing the same characters, only married and faced with the hollowness of a 1950s suburban existence. Frank and April Wheeler (DiCaprio and Winslet) always thought of themselves as special, but they settled in a conventional Connecticut suburb when they had children. Hungry for a less constricted life, April persuades Frank to move to Paris--but slowly their plans unravel and their marriage unravels along with it. While Revolutionary Road may be a bit too glib about suburban emptiness--the lives Frank and April lead don't seem so stifled--the portrait of a mismatched marriage is vivid and devastating. The ways that Frank and April misinterpret each other, and the subtle yet unbearable dissatisfaction they feel, is rendered with remarkable and unsettling acuteness. Winslet and DiCaprio's natural chemistry tells us what drew these two together, making the way they tear each other apart all the more shocking. The excellent supporting cast includes Kathy Bates (Misery), Dylan Baker (Happiness), and especially Michael Shannon (Bug) as a mentally troubled mathematician who cuts to the quick of the Wheelers' troubles. Mention must be made of the beautiful production design; the costumes and sets are simply gorgeous. --Bret Fetzer
Stills from Revolutionary Road (Click for larger image)
Revolutionary Road [Blu-ray] Reviews:
Old, muddled, rehashed message! 
2009-11-30 - I've never felt more empty and cold after watching a movie before in my life. I could completely relate to the Wheelers sense of "entrapement" in their average, suburban lives but where I feel that the story goes awry is that there is no redemptive, overall message at the end. I'm not of the camp that says there has to be a clear, concise message at the end of every film, but this one is so depressing it needed something at the end to balance it out! Otherwise, what's the point of sitting through the entire movie? The Wheeler's aspire for something "more" (what that is exactly is never clear), their plans are foiled for various reasons and then things just spiral horrifically out of control at that point. THE END! Maybe in 1961 when this story was written the theme of "quiet desperation" was new and interesting for people to contemplate but in 2008, I don't think there was anything new to bring to the table and of limited interest for most people!
The only semi-interesting thing that I can point out about this film is that both Wheelers want something more out of life but Frank at some point seems to realize that what they already have isn't so bad. April, on the other hand, never seems to reach this realization! Maybe that makes Frank a "coward" and maybe it makes him the smart one?!? Who knows! Everything's relative!
Lots of people lead lives of quiet desperation, some do something about it and are very successful, some try and fail and others never try at all. There are a myriad of reasons (some within our control and others not) that contribute to these potential outcomes. That's life and this isn't new ground!!
I gave the film 2 stars because Kate and Leo gave good performances, but unfortunately they were not good enough to elevate this movie above anything other than depressing!!
Good acting carries an otherwise lame story 
2009-11-23 - Only the talents of DiCaprio and Kate Winslet keep this story watchable.
Otherwise it is a lame story.
In a nutshell, this movie keeps hammering the point that the 1950's were not really as wonderful as portrayed in classic shows like Andy Griffith and Happy Days.
The film also attempts to portray the American Dream and Suburban living as a lie and a depressing prison.
Okay ..... we all know the "good old days" were not as pure and innocent as Happy Days ------ BUT, at the other extreme -------- neither were they as depressing and jaded as Revolutionary Road.
Unless of course you were dysfunctional and mentally unstable and generally negative about living.
This film attempts to send a message that the good life of the 1950s was all a lie of fake smiles, depressions, frustration and harmful materialism.
The characters in this film have a nice home in a quiet neighborhood, recently were chosen for a promotion and a raise, take vacations at the beach, etc..etc..etc..
The wife is in perpetual misery because her dream is to toss all this aside and go slum it up in Paris.
In the process she acts like a miserable person on the edge of a mental breakdown.
Her husband is no angel, but he certainly puts up with more of her whacky unstable behaviour than most would put up with.
The movie tries to hard to demonize the rise of middle class suburban living in America and offer a derivative view of life in the 1950s era.
The facts are not matter what time in history you examine, you will find people who are both happy and others who are miserable.
That is no different today than it was then.
However, having lived in the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and today ....... I DO believe life in America was better 20-30 years ago.
And while there is no time in human history that is perfect (nothing involving people ever will be) ... I can certainly say living in the 70s and 80s in America was better than what we are experiencing today with the direction this Country is heading.
This Ain't Ozzie And Harriet 
2009-11-10 - Over the past period I have seemingly endlessly retailed the experiences of my young adulthood during the 1960s, the time of the "generation of `68". That makes me, obviously, a child of the 1950s, the time period of this very interesting movie, "Revolutionary Road" based on a book by the darkly sardonic writer, Richard Yates. I have also seemingly endlessly pointed out my experiences and the effects they had as a result of growing up among the marginally working poor in that `golden age'. I am fond of saying that I didn't know there was any other condition than being poor for a long time. Well, I did find out there was and although in my youth I would still have had a hard time relating to the story line of this film. The `trials and tribulations', then, of an upwardly mobile, prosperous young couple, the Wheelers, Frank and April, with the mandatory two charming children and a nice leafy suburban house in some nice town in Connecticut would have gone over my head. Now though I can a little more readily appreciate the seamy psychologically paralyzing side of that existence.
As graphically portrayed in the film that seamy side (that also provided some of the most powerful scenes in the movie, and best acting moments by both Winslett and DiCaprio), the central driving force of the story), is the emptiness of middle class existence in the 1950s. Cookie-cutter is the word that came to mind as Frank and April try to break the golden bonds that keep them tied to their old life. One of the nice moments cinematically is the sequence involving Frank's routine workday morning ritual catching the train to New York City (along with all the other felt-hatted men, the symbol of success in that period). Another sober moment is when April takes out the rubbish in their deathless suburban tract and realizes that this life is not for her.
But how to break those golden chains? The issues presented here about consumerism, meaningless and vacuous work, the isolated role of women in the nuclear family, the eternal struggle for security in an individualistically-driven society are all issues that got a fuller workout and wider airing in the 1960s (and since). In a sense the `whimsical' Wheelers were too early. They were before their time. However, although times have changed, I will bet serious money that if you go to some Connecticut train station headed to New York City on any Monday morning you will see, two generations removed and without the hats, men and women making that same meaningless trip that old Frank made. Yates was definitely onto something about the nature of modern capitalist social organization. But I will confess something, although I know better now the stresses of that fate, I would not have minded, minded at all, growing up in that little `cottage' the Wheelers called home. That, however, is a story for another day.
Well-Acted 
2009-10-30 - Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio play Frank and April, a young couple with two children living a comfortable lifestyle. Frank has a good job in the city and April, who failed at being an actress, is a housewife. April is very unhappy; she looks at her husband and herself as "special people" who were not meant to live ordinary lives so convinces her husband to move to Paris, where she intends to work and where she hopes he will find the person he's meant to become. The two seem to communicate at different levels and April verges on severe depression. Frank is offered an opportunity to move up in his company and begins to have second thoughts about moving to Paris. He has an affair with a coworker and April has a one-nighter with a neighbor. The movie moves forward via the characters' interactions with one another and constant misunderstandings. Winslet and DiCaprio, together for the first time since "Titanic", have a chemistry on-screen that works for them. They play off one another well and their confrontations are realistic.
Easily one of the best films of 2008 
2009-10-26 - The Bottom Line:
It didn't get the Best Picture nomination it deserved and Kate Winslet got a trophy for her inferior performance in The Reader, but Sam Mendes's brilliant adaptation of Revolutionary Road deserves to be recognized for the way it breathes new life into the cliched subject of American suburbia: with its perfect cast, beautifully stark cinematography, vitriolic screenplay and agonizing conclusion, this is a searing and nearly great film.
3.5/4