List Price: $14.98Amazon.com's Price: $9.49 You Save: $5.49 (37%)Prices subject to change.
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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Lions Gate
EAN: 0031398217954
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Lions Gate
Manufacturer: Lions Gate
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Lions Gate
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 11, 2007
Running Time: 110 minutes
Sales Rank: 3068
Studio: Lions Gate
Theatrical Release Date: 2006
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Editorial Review:
Description: Married for almost 50 years, Grant's (Gordon Pinsent) and Fiona's (Julie Christie) commitment to each other appears unwavering. Their daily life is filled with tenderness and humor; yet this serenity is broken by Fiona's increasingly evident memory loss - and her restrained references to a past betrayal. For a while, the couple is able to casually dismiss these unwelcome changes. But when neither Fiona nor her husband can deny any longer that she is being consumed by Alzheimer's disease, the couple is forced to wrenchingly redefine the limits of their love and loyalty - and face the complex, inevitable transition from lovers to strangers.
Amazon.com: "I'm going," says a lovely, understated Julie Christie, in a heart-wrenching moment of recognition that Alzheimer's is slowly descending on her. "But I'm not gone." Away from Her, the directorial debut of young Canadian actress Sarah Polley, allows two themes--the growth of love, and the limits of the mind--to intertwine, uplift, fall, and rise again, throughout its arc. What should be relentlessly depressing is instead a film of great courage, humor, defiance--and a quality that Christie's character, Fiona, calls out in another defining moment: grace.
Away from Her chronicles a love story between Fiona and her longtime husband, Grant, played with bearlike stolidity by Gordon Pinsett, as the couple struggle with the onset and acceleration of Fiona's Alzheimer's disease. Moments of lucidity and wry observation pepper Fiona's decline, and Christie gives an unforgettable performance as a woman who is both ordinary and singular to those whom she's touched. The story is set against a frigid Canadian winter, with fields of snow as a background underscoring the bleakness of Fiona's diagnosis; yet life is constant and surprising, in the call of a meadowlark or the resurrected memory of a skunk lily. A scene of Fiona out for her daily cross-country ski shows Christie's gorgeous, sensual face in closeup against the snow, framed by a babushka, reminding the viewer of a similar scene of the decades-younger Christie in Dr. Zhivago. It's impossible not to be touched by the gifts of this extraordinary actress, through the life of this everywoman, whose very presence is shot through with grace. --A.T Hurley
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
An opportunity to ponder your mortality and your response. Well acted. Most would turn away. Julie's eyes are remarkable.
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This is a horrible movie! Nobody under 60 could honestly say they enjoyed it! I could see how senior citizen could like it. I'd rather stare at the wall.
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I agree with those who say that the Alzheimer's facility in the movie is too good to be true. Even if such a luxurious place were to exist, the cost would be far above a retired professor's means, and from the looks of the cottage Fiona and Grant lived in, they did not have other sources of wealth. Also, for seemingly artistic effect (enabling a Christmas dinner scene with Aubrey and Fiona), the movie stretches out the period in which Aubrey was in the facility to over a year, which contradicts ... Read More
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"When I look away I forget what yellow means. But I can look again. Sometimes there's something delicious in oblivion."
Sarah Polley writes and directs a faithful adaptation of Alice Munro's short story "The Bear Came Over the Mountain," adding some effective symbolic touches of her own. "Nature never fools around just being decorative."
I doubt the film will help anyone dealing with Alzheimers, but I'd be happy to be wrong.
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I thought this movie was very nice about a husband who is slowly losing his wife to Alzheimer's Disease. It presents the decline of the wife to the point that she needs to go into an assisted living facility as we would call them in the US. The wife slowly declines and finds her own life in the institution as the husband finds some life besides the wife. But they do come together in their own way and in a their new life.
The story is good as is but is missing the worry about finances (the ... Read More
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