The Secret

DVD : The Secret

Go to your Ebay Login for online-trading!

blaaa

Go to your Ebay Login for online-trading!

The Secret

starring: Davide Duchovny, Lili Taylor, Olivia Thirlby




See Larger Image
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

List Price: $27.98
Your Price: $11.99
You Save: $15.99 (57%)
Prices subject to change.

Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 16217







Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Image Entertainment
EAN: 0014381499322
Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
Label: IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT
Manufacturer: IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT
Region Code: 1
Release Date: August 12, 2008
Running Time: 92 minutes
Sales Rank: 16217
Studio: IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT
Theatrical Release Date: 2006




Get your free Ebay signup today!






Editorial Review:

Product Description:
In the spirit of Ghost and Birth, Hannah and Benjamin (Lili Taylor, Six Feet Under and David Duchovny, The X-Files) are a happily married couple whose love is tested in ways they never could have imagined in this touching supernatural drama. But when Hannah is killed in a car accident, the couple's strong bond may be responsible for an unusual twist of fate that keeps their love alive -- at the expense of their daughter (Olivia Thirlby, Juno).

Amazon.com:
Compared to pallid supernatural romances like Ghost, The Secret is a fireball of Freudian pathos about a love triangle between parents Benjamin (David Duchovny) and Hannah Marris (Lili Taylor), and their teenage daughter, Samantha (Olivia Thirlby). Directed by Swiss actor Vincent Perez, The Secret succeeds where other cheesy ghost films fail because there is always the possibility that after Benjamin's wife, Hannah, dies in a car accident and comes back to inhabit her daughter's body, Benjamin will be lured into his daughter's arms by sheer grief commingled with desire. The film's operates with increasing tension throughout, starting when Benjamin decides to believe that Sam is temporarily not Sam, but his wife. There are sappy scenes, such as when Sam, as mother Hannah, returns to high school following the accident and flails terribly in teenage situations. But the notion of a mother spying on her daughter through possession recalls Mommie Dearest, in a great way. The real credit in this film goes to Thirlby, who in essence plays two characters well, switching identities throughout. The sexual innuendo she brings to the part adds the zest The Secret needs to elevate it from a suburban nightmare to real horror. Viewers who enjoy The Secret might also look to Argento's mother trilogy, or the recently released French horror film, Inside. That said. The Secret contains no gore and relies on psychological suspense rather than violence to construct its mother/daughter tale. --Trinie Dalton









Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Related Items:
     see more

Related Items:




Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Uneven and unsatisfying
This film is one of those that takes itself too seriously and in so doing ceases to remember that movies are first and foremost about entertainment. If you want to show you have depth become a swimming pool and if you want to send a message go to Western Union.

It began with a good idea, promised to deal with real human emotions and then became a disappointing cliche of PC whining, absurd plot resolutions and self-indulgence. Ultimately the emptiness of the plot is not the actor's faults, but rather that of the preachy and simple minded writer.

Save your nickel for something worth buying.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Movie review
* A somewhat trite storyline, but done really well, with no gratuitous sensuality! Ending may be a surprise, depending on how many movies of this type one has watched! ...



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Very well acted
I am rather surprised at the reviews. I thought the acting was completely solid. You knew when it was the mother and when it was the daughter. I must admit I was nervous about the couple consummating since it was known beforehand that the girl would come back to inhabit the body but other than that it was great. Although it is reminiscent of Freaky Friday it is smarter. I truly enjoyed the movie.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - music?
* I'm a huge Duchovny fan, and he was great in this... it's definitely a very interesting film, and worth renting, imo.

I'm wondering about certain music that was used in the film though-- specifically, what are the songs in the following scenes: a) when Hannah and Ben are kissing on the couch on their \"night alone,\" b) when Sam/Hannah asks Ben to dance with her, when she's in the nightgown, and c) when Sam/Hannah does the shot at the party.

Any help? ...



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - The Secret-fascinating take on an old movie theme
The Secret is a fascinating take on a old theme, soul migration, used in many films. But where it's usually played for laughs in films like "Freaky Friday", this film tries to delve into the consequences for a loving couple and their daughter. It's a love story on two levels...The love of the mother and father which acts as both source of strength and temptation; the love of the mother and the father for their daughter which must inevitably separate the couple forever if they are to reclaim their daughter's soul.

Hannah, the mother, played by Lili Taylor, is a would-be photographer and housewife who gave up her education when she fell in love and bore a daughter, Samantha (Sam) at a very young age. Her relationship with her ophthalmologist husband, Benjamin, played by David Duchovny, is loving and strong but she is having great difficulty in her relationship to daughter Sam, played by Olivia Thirlby, a rebellious teenager who brushes off her mother's protectiveness and despises her lack of ambition. A tragic accident leaves both near death but when Hannah emerges from a coma to find Sam slipping away in the ER, in trying to save her daughter she somehow projects her soul into the girl's body and is trapped there while her body dies. On waking in Sam's body, she's horrified but her condition is dismissed as the result of trauma and psychological strain. Once home with Ben, however, she gradually persuades him to believe her story.

The film is hardly the horror tale a reviewer claimed earlier...And though it's a spoiler...It should be noted it does not cross a certain sexual line in the relationship of father and mother/daughter, though it plays intriguingly on the border. Although once accepting the transfer Hannah at first seeks to rekindle her relationship with her husband, after she and Ben learn that Sam's soul may still be buried within her she is persuaded by Ben that she must resume Sam's life in the hope that their daughter will revive over time. After initial bewilderment at the life of a modern teenager, Hannah begins to immerse herself in Sam's life, learning that her daughter was leading a secret and dangerous life she and her husband knew nothing of. Eventually, her desire to keep her daughter's existence alive combine with a mix of old resentments and raging teen hormones to begin estranging her from Ben who is increasingly fearful of again losing Hannah as well as his daughter. Both parents are tempted by the thought of resuming their life together at Sam's expense while Hannah is further torn between the thought of building the life of her own she gave up when she married young and a refusing to let Ben move on without her. Meanwhile Ben finds himself veering between loving, overprotective father and bitterly jealous husband. Both Duchovny and Thirlby handle the need to shift tone and mood frequently in scenes very well and succeed in making the concept believable. Ms. Thirlby is especially fine in accomplishing the shifts between the Hannah and Sam personalities, she clearly has a great career ahead. Add a very moving ending and it's a wonderful take on the idea, facing good people with impossible choices and a lovely testament to the love of a mother and father for their child. I highly recommend it.


Secret The


read more customer reviews on The Secret


Browse for similar items by category:


 


Get your Ebay account today!


Recent Entries
Baby Shopping  Books Shopping  Digital Camera Shopping  Notebook Computers Shopping  DVD Movies Shop  Major Brand Electronics  Video Games Shopping  Garden shop and Outdoor equipment  Gourmet Food Shop  Wellness and Healthcare Shop  Fashion Jewelry  Kitchen and Housewares  Pop Music Store  Plasma TV  Software Store  Apparel, Shoes, Underwear  Sports Clothing  Tools and Hardware Store  Toys Store  College Posters and Shirt  Customer Reviews  Discount Shopping 



Apparel Shop






Steering clear of many of the pitfalls that sapped past video-on-demand broadband solutions, Vudu delivers the closest thing to "Netflix in a box" that we've seen to date.

It's June 29th and Apple is finally ready to let the public play with the iPhone. The past six months have shaped up to be the highest profile mobile phone launch ever, Apple has conjured up an...

[Thanks to dozens of spam sites using the full text of our RSS content, the feed is now only a summary. Click through to see the full story.)






$10.99



You can say this about D.E.B.S.: director Angela Robinson’s 2005 feature isn’t very good, but it is surprisingly entertaining. The premise, which bears a passing resemblance to any number of previous films (from Heathers and Clueless to Charlie’s Angels and the Austin Powers franchise), involves a secret government agency recruiting young women as spies, based on their smarts, their ability to lie convincingly, and the fact that they look fetching in ultra-miniskirts. Four of the D.E.B.S. are then charged with collaring "criminal mastermind" Lucy Diamond (Jordana Brewster), who has returned to the States after hatching all manner of nefarious plots overseas. Then comes the twist: Diamond is gay, and one of our heroines, Amy Bradshaw (Sara Foster), unexpectedly finds herself falling in love with her. Out goes the espionage element; in comes the love story, and therein lies the surprise, as this burgeoning lesbian relationship is handled with unexpected sympathy, even tenderness. Sure, the acting, even by veteran grownups like Holland Taylor and Michael Clarke Duncan, is almost uniformly lame, and the script is silly; overall, the film would have to put on considerable weight to even be considered frothy. Still, D.E.B.S. isn’t a bad way to kill a couple of hours. DVD bonus features include a making-of featurette and commentary by Robinson and the cast. --Sam Graham
$9.99



The teaming of Johnny Knoxville (Jackass: The Movie) and Seann William Scott (Dude, Where's My Car?) as well as the presence of the '70s-flavored car chases that were a specialty of the TV series guarantees that The Dukes of Hazzard will be even more lowbrow than the CBS TV series (1979-85) that inspired it. However, this brain-damaging comedy is more "rehash" than "remake," as good ol' Georgiaboys Luke Duke (Knoxville) and his cousin Bo (Scott) are frequently upstaged bythe General Lee, the Confederate-flagged '69 Charger that they drive, jump, race, and fly in as they smuggle moonshine for their Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson). Meanwhile, cousin Daisy Duke (Jessica Simpson) is reliably available to model her short-shorts (aka "Daisy Dukes") and awesome figure (and let's face it, Simpson's talents pretty much begin and end right there), while corrupt honcho Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds, who should know better) recruits a local NASCAR star to advance his wily scheme of converting Hazzard County into a strip mine. Director Jay Chandrasekhar (Super Troopers) manages to mine some good-natured humor from the movie's oval-track detour and a few colorful supporting players (notably Kevin Hefferman as the Duke's pal Sheev). Otherwise, consider yourself warned: The Dukes of Hazzard is shameless Hollywood product at its most forgettable, trafficking in shameless white, rural Southern stereotypes. If you can make itto the end, there's a blooper reel to reward your endurance. --Jeff Shannon

DVD features
Yes, the unrated edition of The Dukes of Hazzard has nudity... but no, it's not of Jessica Simpson, but topless sorority girls. There are also two sets--"PG-13" and "unrated"--of deleted scenes and bloopers. The four minutes of unrated deleted scenes (supplementing the 25 minutes of "PG-13" deleted scenes) include more sorority girls and a menage à trois for Johnny Knoxville . The five minutes of unrated bloopers (the same amount as the "PG-13" bloopers) feature a few more girls but mostly bad language. Featurettes discuss the Daisy Duke short shorts (and show how you can make your own), car stunts, and the making of the movie (narrated by a cast member of the original TV series). --David Horiuchi


by Michael-Anne Jones, Marie Morrale

Average customer rating: 4.5 ISBN: 0590024493

by Barbara Hanson

Average customer rating: ISBN: 1560323469

by Matt Netter, Nancy E. Krulik, Jill Matthews

Average customer rating: 3.5 ISBN: 0671713841
$13.57

Steve McCurry

The Secret
Shopping  Created at Wed Dec 3 07:43:21 2008