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| A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy | 
enlarge | Director: Woody Allen Actors: Mia Farrow, Jose Ferrer, Julie Hagerty, Tony Roberts, Mary Steenburgen Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $2.73 You Save: $12.25 (82%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 10979
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 88 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.1 x 0.6
MPN: MGMD1001746D ISBN: 0792851277 UPC: 027616860460 EAN: 9780792851271 ASIN: B00005O06K
Theatrical Release Date: July 16, 1982 Release Date: November 6, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
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Product Description A quiet country get together with three loving couples but everyone seems to be loving the wrong person. Studio: Tcfhe/mgm Release Date: 09/21/2004 Starring: Woody Allen Mia Farrow Run time: 88 minutes Rating: Pg Director: Woody Allen
Amazon.com In A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy, Woody Allen mixes Shakespeare, Ingmar Bergman, and the music and art of the turn of the century. Allen plays Andrew, an inventor, whose listless marriage to Adrian (Mary Steenburgen) has lost all erotic zip. He welcomes two pairs of friends to his country home: college professor Leopold (Jose Ferrer) and his fiancee Ariel (Mia Farrow), and dentist Maxwell (Tony Roberts) and his suffragette nurse Dulcy (Julie Hagerty). Before long, everyone's lusting after everyone else's partner, and the plot twists and turns to a happy and magical conclusion. It's a light and airy film, perhaps a deliberate break from Allen's previous production, the caustic Stardust Memories; but the tone may also be due to his new relationship with Farrow, who went on to star in Allen's films for the next 10 years. --Bret Fetzer
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
The Stuff Of Dreams November 1, 2008 This is Woody's effort at pure camp, a spoof on Shakespeare's famous play, as he puts a group of three couples ( one of them being himself and his wife played by Mary Steenburgen) into the idyll of the countryside in the early 20th century. This little piece of fluff takes on the fickleness of human nature on the question of love or maybe just lust, at least the aspects of human nature that we have created since coming out of the caves. Naturally the center piece, as was almost always the case in early Woody movies, is the eternal question of love. Being in love, not being in love, longing for love, not longing for love and the endless waiting that goes on in between times. The action gets a little slow at times and the humor is not top notch as it is in such efforts as Manhattan and Annie Hall but it passes.
The story line is fairly simple. Through a quirk of fate an old flame of Woody's (Mia Farrow, a flame at this point in his real life) is getting married to an older man, a bombastic professor, (Jose Ferrer) in order to settle down and bring stability to her life and is escorted by him to Woody's country place in, well, mid-summer. Hold it, maybe it is easier to tell the story this way. Woody and his wife, sexually frustrated, nevertheless want to have sex. Enter Mia to scramble thing up. Woody now wants Mia, Mia wants, or think she wants Max (Woody's doctor friend). Max very definitely wants Mia. Professor wants nurse (doctor's escort) and so on. In the end everyone gets what they want even though it is less than they expected. Well, that is about it. The grand design of Shakespeare it is not but as a modern spoof on current sexual mores (at least as they were understood in the mid-1970's) it is a fairly funny exposition of that sensibility.
Midsummer magic July 27, 2008 Following closely on "Stardust Memories," "Midsummer" seems to be a compromise piece of sorts: comedic enough to satisfy the fans of his earlier slapstick, but sweet and reflective enough to feed his own artistic hunger and satisfy the fans of his more serious cinematic turn. This is one of Allen's better films, although not of the first quality. In it, themes and comedy nicely complement one another, instead of the latter stepping all over the former.
I think that human yearning is the central theme explored in the film: yearning for deep meaning in life that transcends the here-and-now (everything that the hard-nosed materialist Leopold deplores), creative yearning (Andrew's inventiveness, Ariel's curiosity, Maxwell's love of nature), nostalgic yearning for lost opportunities (Ariel and Andrew's moment in the woods years earlier), for human intimacy (Adrian's frigidity), for mystery (the magic lantern), and most of all, yearning for love. None of these are exclusive of the others, and in "Midsummer" they cleverly twist and twine into one another to create a pleasing comedy of manners (and errors). The acting is exceptionally fine except for Mary Steenbergen's strangely subdued--as in drugged--performance. She's a good actor, but just can't get find her groove as Adrian.
In addition to its artistic merits, "Midsummer" is an interesting film for several reasons. Allen isn't the centerstage star he's been in most of his straightforwardly comedic pieces, but is now a member of an ensemble. The notoriously cosmopolitan Allen sets the film in the country around the turn of the 19th century. And it's the first (of many) of his movies in which Mia Farrow stars.
Enjoyable, sweet, soft, tender, happy, visually beautiful: these are the words that come to mind when thinking about "Midsummer."
Great Woodsy Allen comedy! April 5, 2008 I remember going, many years ago, to the movies, to see this one! It's charming & funny! I highly recomended!
Light. But slight. September 26, 2007 Extremely beautiful scenery. Amusing character parodies. Witty lines. Interesting actors. Based, more or less equally, on Shakespeare and Bergman. Several viewers don't seem to recognize the Bergman influence, which is at least 50% of this movie. Captures the enchantment which can occur, very occasionally, in youth, especially, when nature, sun and moon combine to create a sense that there is more, after all, to existence, than the daily grind. I feel guilty that I found my attention wandering every so often. I gave it an extra star when I wasn't thinking.
One of Woody's Best! September 16, 2007 There was a classic line from this movie spoken by Woody Allen that went like this "love creates tension and sex relieves it".
Woody Allen is hilarious! This movie is often amusing and sometimes hilarious. It sort of reminded me of sense and sensability. This movie is about mismatched romantic partners and it is also about friendship, classical music, philosophy, and there is even a bit of slapstick comedy thrown in for those who get easily bored with talk.
One of his best movies and I suggest you watch it or buy it.
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