Me
Without You DVD Review:
Synopsis
One long,
hot summer in seventies London, Holly (Michelle Williams)
and Marina (Anna Friel) make a childhood pact to be friends
forever. For the troubled, unpredictable Marina, with her
seemingly glamorous father and her Valium-addicted mother,
Holly stays the only constant in a life of divorcing parents,
experimental drugs and fashionable self-destruction. Meanwhile,
Holly buries herself in books out of feelings of frustration
with her over-protective mother and a nagging insecurity around
her beautiful and possessive best friend. She holds just one
secret from Marina, her increasing passion for Marina's brother
Nat. As the years go by, they experience everything life has
to offer, sex, love, loss and rock 'n roll.
Critique
Me Without
You is a heartfelt character study of two life-long friends,
portrayed very nicely by Michelle Williams and Anna Friel.
Friendship is the most important thing in the lives of kids
as they grow up. Im not drawing this conclusion from
this film, but from my own experience. Incidentally, this
film chronicles the evolution of a long-time friendship, but
the emotional effect somewhat breaks off in its crass dramatization
of it. By crass I mean the situations and events surround
the friendship. Taking place in Britain during the turbulent
1980s might prove to be a hard time in keeping up with your
best friend. Things change and people change. So goes the
story of Holly and Marina as they face and have to set aside
their differences, emotions and love interests (Kyle MacLachlan
plays a professor who is sexually involved with both of them).
Williams
and Friel inhabit these two girls quite commandingly. Williams
is most enthusiastic, however, as she is more conservative
and true to herself than Anna Friels Marina, not to
mention Williams is better looking but thats really
beside the point. The fact remains is that, I believe, the
film is a bit of a stretch. The story spans well over thirty
years and for a frail friendship such as theirs to survive
all that time must be the work of a wee miracle. For dramatic
purposes, director Sandra Goldbacher, who also co-wrote the
script, chooses to make their friendship sustain the length
of time, but in retrospect challenges the viewers attitude
towards the two girls. Me Without You almost feels like a
personal account, but then again it does not. The film is
mostly genuine, despite some of the flaws.
Me Without
You also does have its rewarding parts. Its humor is likeable.
Its drama is more than passable. Its sex scenes are, well,
on the same page. But probably the biggest positive of the
film is its assortment of recognizable, selected songs from
the early 70s to the late 90s. Me Without You is a nice little
character study, however, its not without its share
of pretentious drama. The film is not for everyone, because
at some point you will ask yourself, "how long is this
going to continue," yet couples looking for a good time
on a Friday night might want to stay up a little late and
rent a copy of this film from the video store.
7 out
of 10
The Video
Columbia
Tristar presents Me Without You in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen.
This transfer shows some problems. Some scenes show a lot
of grain and dirt, especially the ones at night. Is this a
problem with the transfer or the print quality? Im not
sure, but it might be the lighting or what kind of camera
was used. The films color palette is generally fine,
but all together a little on the soft side. Color detail is
inconsistent. Dark tones and black level suffer greatly in
a few spots. Overall, Me Without You looks decent, but the
occasional grainy image is a bit distracting.
6 out
of 10
The Audio
Columbia
Tristar presents Me Without You in English Dolby Digital 5.1
Surround Sound. The assortment of time-referencing music in
the film is quite nice and impacts the sound system in a decent
way. Dialog is clear and easy to understand. In the overall
sense, however, this film is not really designed or equipped
to correctly handle surround sound. Therefore, Me Without
You sounds decent and a little loud when the music starts
playing.
6 out
of 10
The Extras
The only
feature is the films Theatrical Trailer, plus bonus
trailers for Dick and the Audrey Tautou film He Loves Me,
He Loves Me Not. You can select to view the film with optional
English subtitles. The DVDs menus are interactive, but
not animated. The 101-minute feature is organized into twenty-eight
chapters.
0 out
of 10
Overall
Michelle
Williams really shines in Me Without You and Anna Friel is
also pretty good. The film stretches a bit too far in time,
but the basic drama of this character study is likeable and
sweet. The video transfer is somewhat bad, though the audio
presentation holds a very slight advantage over the video.
The abundance of special features makes this disc look too
empty. Therefore, Ill recommend this film only as a
possible rental on a late Friday night.
RATINGS
SUMMARY
THE MOVIE
6
THE VIDEO 6
THE AUDIO
6
THE EXTRAS
0
OVERALL (not an average)
4
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