- Buy a new outfit. Be a disco diva. Learn to fish. Take a chance. Travel. Laugh. Love. Sometimes all you need to start really living is a little shove in the right direction ? and that?s just what Holly Kennedy gets. From the handsome, big-hearted love of her life. From a series of mysterious letters. And from gal pals who know that a friend in need is a friend in need of some laughs! Based on Cece
Buy a new outfit. Be a disco diva. Learn to fish. Take a chance. Travel. Laugh. Love. Sometimes all you need to start really living is a little shove in the right direction – and that’s just what Holly Kennedy gets. From the handsome, big-hearted love of her life. From a series of mysterious letters. And from gal pals who know that a friend in need is a friend in need of some laughs! Based on Cecelia Ahern’s joyful bestseller and boasting a top cast led by two-time Academy Award® winner* Hilary Swank and Gerard Butler (300), P.S. I Love You is your very own message full of fun, love, triumph and romance. Open it now. (P.S. You’ll love it!)For those who believe true love lasts beyond this physical plane, P.S. I Love You is a jewel in the romantic-movie crown. With elements of Ghost, Heaven Can Wait, and My Life, the film is an unabashed valentine to the notion of lasting (everlasting?) love. Hilary Swank is Holly, a deeply happy lass married to the most impossibly adorable Irishman on the planet, Gerry (Gerard Butler). When an illness takes him from her, Holly spirals into depression. Then, as if from beyond the grave, communications, gifts, and remembrances from Gerry begin to appear–gestures he’d planned knowing his death was coming. The “communications” with her dead husband could threatened to keep Holly in past, yet they begin to pave a path into her future.
Swank, not a traditional romantic actress, is quite moving as Holly, whose grief and confusion is palpable. Butler will win new continents of fans, largely female, as the yummiest honey one could wish for. Special kudos to the supporting cast, including Lisa Kudrow as a Holly pal, and James Marsters and Kathy Bates, always breaths of fresh air onscreen. Under the sure hand of director-writer Richard LaGravenese, P.S. I Love You is touching, sad (have tissues on hand), and heartbreakingly lovely. –A.T. Hurley


February 5, 2006
#1
Ok, so this is going to sound pitiful but this is all it’s worth….this is the worst piece of #$%& movie you’ll see. DON”T WASTE YOUR TICKET!!!! It’s drawn out, slow, boring, unmoving. The only somewhat redeemable parts are by Jeffrey Dean Morgan. But even he can’t make you not want to leave early. Save yourself!!!
February 5, 2006
#2
I have not recieved the movie I order, so I can’t review it. Please check to when it will be shipped.
February 5, 2006
#3
We are pleased with this purchase, the vacuum is easy to use, efficient and quiet. Only problem is that the cord will not stay out (always in the rewind mode). Since the machine has a 2 year warranty this is only a slight problem and while we wait for the new rewind mechanism a clothspin works just fine!
February 5, 2006
#4
Well here it is five weeks since I ordered this movie & I still haven’t received it! I also haven’t had a response from seller or Zodiac Movies to my request in tracking purchase. MY OPINION….never doing this online again. They were quick to charge my account on June 2, the date I placed the order & my credit card company paid them, but I NEVER received merchandise. Shame on you.
February 5, 2006
#5
What happened to the line between what is good taste and poor taste. Gutter talk in my opinion is not appropriate for Romance Movie. Top it off with miscasting – maybe just me, but Hilary Swank is UGLY and there was ZERO chemistry between her and G. Butler. And Kathy Bates cast as her mom? – that was just WRONG. And the sister…first, she couldn’t act and second, another complete miscast. If the movie had a different female lead, different mom, and different sister, a rewritten script with all of the profanity thrown out the window, different camera placement, and some proper scene transitions, then maybe, maybe it would have been OK. My better half has this aversion to movies that use FLASH CARD TIME PLATES to keep track of time. He says it is a clear sign someone didn’t write the script or want to spend money/time to scout and shoot sets properly.(GREAT CONTRAST to show how it CAN BE DONE would be “Nottinghill”). There seems to be a great deal of mediocrity in films these days. Doesn’t anyone know how to make a LOVE STORY without crudeness?