English Français Español Deutsch

Best blackjack games is here.

  Top » Catalog Log In |  Cart Contents  |  Checkout | 

Best online pokies at https://aucasinosonline.com/pokies/

Search DaaVeeDee:
box
 
DescriptionNarrow




Advanced Search
box
Categories
box


Arthouse
Classic Films
Cult Films
Erotic Films
Euro-Westerns
Kids and Family
Jewish Themes
Documentaries
Mini-Series
Other Great Films

USA, Canada 
Latin America, Mexico 
France, Benelux 
Germany, Central Europe 
Russia, Eastern Europe 
Spain, Portugal 
Italy, Greece 
India, Eastern Asia 
Africa, Middle East 
Australia, New Zealand 
Great Britain, Ireland 
Scandinavia, Iceland 

View All Products

Blu-Ray

New Arrivals
Coming Soon
box
Shopping Cart more
box
0 items
box
Log In
box
Your Email Address
Your Password
box
Information
box
Our Policies
Shipping Info
Privacy Policy
Returns
Inquiries
Write a Review and Save!
Contact Us
box
Very Annie Mary (DVD) (*)
box_bg_l.gif.
$20.99

Original Title: Annie-Mary à la folie!
Alternate Title: Pavarotti in Dad's Room
Screened, competed or awarded at:
Other Film Festival Awards


Language Selections:
English ( Dolby Digital Stereo )
English ( Subtitles )


Product Origin/Format:
United Kingdom ( PAL/Region 2 )

Running Time:
100 min + 38 min extras

Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen (1.78:1)

Special Features:
Behind the scenes
Cast/Crew Interview(s)
Commentary
Interactive Menu
Scene Access
Trailer(s)


Movie filmed in 2001 and produced in:
France ( France, Benelux )
United Kingdom ( Great Britain, Ireland )


Directed By:
Sara Sugarman


Written By:
Sara Sugarman


Actors:
Rachel Griffiths ..... Annie Mary Pugh
Jonathan Pryce ..... Jack Pugh
Ioan Gruffudd ..... Hob
Matthew Rhys ..... Nob
Kenneth Griffith ..... Minister
Ruth Madoc ..... Mrs. Ifans
Radcliffe Grafton ..... The mayor
Jill Richards ..... Chapel woman
Josh Richards ..... Mr. Bevan
Joanna Page ..... Bethan Bevan
Gwenyth Petty ..... Chapel woman
Mary Hopkin ..... Chapel woman
Rhys Miles Thomas ..... Colin Thomas
Maureen Rees ..... Chapel woman
Stevie Parry ..... Chapel woman


Synopsis:
Captivating and heart-warming, when it was released in 2001 Very Annie-Mary was greeted as the latest in a long line of small, quirky British comedies. In fact, Very Annie-Mary is a proudly Welsh film, celebrating the eccentricity of a small town in the valleys where the inhabitants certainly suffer deprivation but are by no means isolated from the outside world. They simply plough their own furrow. None more so than Annie-Mary herself, a 30-year-old woman trapped in gawky adolescence by the death of her mother and subsequent years of repression by her father, the Pavarotti-obsessed town baker (brilliant Jonathan Pryce). In a plot slightly reminiscent of Little Voice, she has lost her prize-winning singing voice, apparently forever. Played with resolute intensity by Rachel Griffiths, Annie-Mary is hardly odder than her fellow townsfolk. But when her father has a stroke and she is thrown on her own awkward resources to fulfil both her personal dreams and those of her mortally sick friend Bethan, she finds unique comic ways to cope with disaster. Redemption comes with the return of her ability to sing. The excellent cast includes cameos from Ioan Gruffudd and Matthew Rhys as the gay couple who run the sweet shop and Ruth Madoc as a libidinous widow. Everyone delivers all-stops-out performances in even the smallest roles. The promising script is loaded with one-liners; but its constituent parts promise more than they eventually deliver.

The myth of the eccentric Englishman (or woman) is given a cinematic boost by the awkwardly hysterical VERY ANNIE MARY, a tale of a young Welsh woman's stumbling struggle to proclaim her independence and strike out on her own. With an epic sweep reminiscent of THE SOUND OF MUSIC, VERY ANNIE MARY examines the bucolic and banal life of 33-year-old Annie Mary (Rachel Griffiths), a perpetually adolescent and tragically klutzy young woman, miserably under the thumb of her egomaniacal opera singing father (Jonathan Pryce). Since the death of her beloved and similarly opera-loving mother when she was a girl, Annie Mary clings to the memories of a childhood musical competition where she was awarded a scholarship to study opera singing in Milan (which her domineering father prevented her from accepting). Haunted by the spectre of a future that could never be, Annie Mary mopes around, lost in hopeless dreams of living on her own and finding love. When her father is rendered helpless by a stroke, Annie Mary is forced to take her life into her own hands, which is when her inspired and overenthusiastic effort to reclaim her true self (and her singing voice) begins to send shock waves through her secluded Welsh village.

This product was added to our catalog on Friday 21 May, 2010.
box_bg_r.gif.
Customers who bought this product also purchased
box
box

Copyright © 2005-2013 DaaVeeDee LLC
Powered by Oscommerce Supercharged by CRE Loaded Team
Using Version CRE Loaded PCI CE v6.4