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| | Salesrank: 218257
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| Our Price: $5.84 |
| Used Price: $5.13 |
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MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Media: DVD |
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Editorial Review:
Goldie Hawn, Bette Midler, and Diane Keaton prove that revenge is a dish best served cold. Former college buddies, they reunite at the funeral of a dear friend who took a swan dive onto Fifth Avenue. All three discover they share the same unhappy history of husbands who dove into middle-age by dumping them for trophy wives. Forming a warring triumvirate, they decide to get even, and along the way remind themselves of long-forgotten capabilities. The action gets a little too "wacky" at times, but the gals are great. Portraying an aging actress, Hawn is sometimes a little too flamboyant, but there is much fun to be had in her flashiness, especially when she pokes fun at Tinseltown and her persona. Instead of her usual brashness, Midler stretches herself and shows us a woman who is not just unhappy, but also deeply sorrowful. Not that she isn't quick with a wisecrack, but her expressive face alone tells the story of her marriage. As the repressed and guilt-ridden spouse of a self- involved ad executive, Keaton finds her anger, and her voice, when her psychiatrist (Marcia Gay Harden) oversteps ethical boundaries. Watching Keaton grow from an ineffectual homemaker into a powerful businessperson reminds us that it has been far too long since she has done a comedy. Director Hugh Wilson smartly chose supporting players who each brought something unique to the film. However, he does not maintain the first hour's effervescent humor throughout the film, as the ending is weakened by a softening of the wives' resolve. --Rochelle O'Gorman
The First Wives Club [Region 2] Reviews:
very good movie 
2009-12-26 - I liked this movie. It reminds me of She-Devil. Same idea. Three women are dumped by their husbands for younger women. Goldy is great and Bette is wonderful. Goldy is a ageing movie star & Bette is a housewife. There are some very funny scenes. They all find ways to make the exes pay for what they did to them.
Contrived comedy with a few good moments 
2009-10-02 - Highly contrived and artificial comedy with good moments and virtuoso carrying-on (I hesitate to say acting) by the three leading ladies--who are leading with their lefts. The problem with outings like this is that (1) it is only too obvious that a committee of brainstormers sat around and came up with the concept or 'hook' of this movie, i.e., dumped women shall wreak revenge upon their schnook former husbands, thus creating multiple opportunities for amusing gags, and (2) the viewer knows practically from the first five minutes where this is all going to go, o why waste any more time watching? Just to see how they do it? To try to locate an original joke or two among hundreds of recycled oldies? To soak up the charisma of the stars? Surely there must be something more constructive to do with one's life than watch this cookie- cutter imitation of a drama.
Hilarious 
2009-06-05 - Women divorced or not will love this comedy! These actresses as a team are hard to beat-I loved it!
The First Wives Club DVD 
2009-04-27 - A favorite movie which I wanted to add to my personal collection. Good price!
Not as Sexist and Twisted as you Might Think 
2008-09-05 - Here's the premise: after the suicide of a close college friend (Stockard Channing), three ex-wives (played by Goldie Hawn, Bette Midler and Diane Keaton) maneuver the destruction of their ex-husbands' careers and lives. Sounds like a great `I Am Woman' sicko-revenge trip, right? It actually is, for the most part - it's just that the film (based on Olivia Goldsmith's novel) becomes a bit excessive with its over-dramatization, far-fetched kookiness and stereotypical hoopla. The whole thing turns into a `How can we outwit these miserable men and take all their money and be really clever and coy about it the whole while' kind of story. After years of helping their husbands build hugely successful businesses, the three women are callously dumped for younger, sexier "trophy wives." What I don't understand is why these smart, business-minded, middle-aged women bothered with their husbands in the first place, or why they expel all this narcissistic energy in dealing with them! (For Christ's sake ladies, let this film be an example, learn early that all men are good for nothing!) Oddly enough, Diane Keaton's on-screen daughter is the happiest person in the film, not to mention the least dysfunctional, and she's a lesbian! The whole movie comes off like a cross between 9 To 5 and The War Of the Roses, though nowhere near as sick and deranged as the latter - The First Wives Club points out everything in light-hearted raillery. Bette Midler is excellent as Brenda, the wife of an electronics-emporium magnate, and Goldie Hawn, as good as always, plays Elise Elliot, an aging movie-star who can't get any roles -- an important issue in Hollywood right now (key word being `Hollywood'). Being a member of Joe Blow's Average America, its hard to feel really sympathetic for the character (or the real issue). So an actress can't pull down that typical 3 or 4 million any more -deal with it, get a job at Pizza Hut, or shut the hell up! Diane Keaton, on the other hand, seems a little out of place in such a `free and easy' production, though her performance is plenty good, as is Sarah Jessica Parker's as Shelly. There are also some delightful little cameos from Heather Lockear; Jon Stewart, Ivana Trump, Kathie Lee Gifford, James Naughton, Rob Reiner and Elizabeth Berkley.