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The Kids Are All Right [Blu-ray]
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Additional Blu-ray options | Edition | Discs | Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
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19 Sept. 2019 "Please retry" | — | — | £11.99 | £4.10 |
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21 Jan. 2013 "Please retry" | — | 1 | £13.74 | — |
Blu-ray
4 Aug. 2011 "Please retry" | — | 1 | £39.55 | £1.99 |
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Genre | Feature|Comedy |
Format | PAL, Blu-ray |
Contributor | Mark Ruffalo, Annette Bening, Yaya DaCosta, Rebecca Lawrence, Julianne Moore, Lisa Cholodenko, Mia Wasikowska, Josh Hutcherson See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 1 hour and 46 minutes |
Product description
Product Description
Nic and Jules (Bening and Moore) are married and share a cosy suburban Southern California home with their teenage children. As Joni prepares to leave for college, Laser wants Joni, now 18, to help him find their biological father. They make contact with “bio-dad” Paul (Mark Ruffalo), an easygoing restaurateur. As Paul comes into the lives of the forthright four, an unexpected new chapter begins for them as family ties are defined, re-defined, and then re-re-defined.
"A superbly Smart, Modern family Comedy" The Times
***** "Smart, funny, provocative: a blast of fresh air" Heat
***** "Terrific, Funny, Moving, Beautifully Observed" Time Out
***** "Piercingly funny, subtle and moving" The Independent
"Intelligent, sharp and very, very funny" Little White Lies
**** "Smart comedy…warm, witty" The Guardian
Special Features:
Feature commentary with director/co writer Lisa Cholodenko, The Journey to Forming a Family, The Writers Process and The Making of the Kids Are All Right
Technical details: 1:85:1 Widescreen Feature
Soundtrack: English DTS-HD master audio 5.1, Latin American Spanish, Canadian French DTS Surround 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, Latin American Spanish, Canadian French
Amazon.co.uk Review
If the relationships that anchor Lisa Cholodenko's warmly funny films appear unconventional, their problems--their pleasures--remain universal. In The Kids Are All Right (no relation to the Who documentary), she takes on a suburban Los Angeles family with two teens, Joni (Alice in Wonderland's Mia Wasikowska) and the unfortunately named Laser (Josh Hutcherson, The Bridge to Terabithia), and two mothers, Nic (Annette Bening) and Jules (an atypically relaxed Julianne Moore), who conceived via artificial insemination. Now that she's heading off to college, Laser urges 18-year-old Joni to seek out their birth father, who lives in the area (her name comes from folksinger Mitchell). Though she hits it off with Paul (Mark Ruffalo, effortlessly charming), a motorcycle-riding restaurant owner, Laser has his doubts (troublingly, the 15-year-old's best friend uses "faggot" as an all-purpose epithet). After they introduce Paul to their parents, allegiances start to shift. While Nic, a doctor, serves as breadwinner (and disciplinarian), Jules, a homemaker-turned-landscape artist, provides the nurturing. Paul, on the other hand, lives free from attachments, inciting both curiosity and suspicion. Furthermore, Jules finds him strangely irresistible, which only expands the fissures in her loving, yet unstable union. As with Laurel Canyon, Cholodenko doesn't just create fully rounded characters, but entire communities. In the end, Kids isn't about children vs. adults as much as the family unit vs. the singular outsider. Though the story concludes on a relatively happy note, it's clear where her allegiances lie. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : Unknown
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 17.2 x 13.6 x 1.6 cm; 80 g
- Audio Description: : English
- Item model number : 5050582812831
- Director : Lisa Cholodenko
- Media Format : PAL, Blu-ray
- Run time : 1 hour and 46 minutes
- Release date : 21 Mar. 2011
- Actors : Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mia Wasikowska, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Hutcherson
- Dubbed: : Spanish, French
- Subtitles: : Spanish, English, French
- Language : English (DTS 5.1), French (DTS 5.1)
- Studio : Universal Pictures UK
- ASIN : B004FPYVEC
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: 45,746 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)
- 7,606 in Comedy (DVD & Blu-ray)
- 15,526 in Blu-ray
- Customer reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 March 2025Some great actors (esp Mark Ruffalo) in a really well made film.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 November 2024Loved it
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 May 2011Mmmmm, kicked up a bit of a stir this one. My understanding is the gay community find it insulting that a gay women can suddenly go off with a straight man. On the basis of this depiction I would probably accept that point. It is the one bum note in the whole film and appears to have been written as a device rather than any attempt at realism. However, apart from that this film is very fine. The acting of the whole cast is first class and the Kids are exceptionally realistic. There are many funny moments and many situations you recognise from life. Not perfect but very well worth your time.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 August 2020We really enjoyed the film! Great storyline and fantastic acting. Woud recommend!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 June 2017It's would have been good to see a film with lesbians where they don't have to fall for a man, just to protect the male ego.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 January 2018... but ending full of hope. Such good acting from all the cast
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 March 2021Watched this with my daughter and we both felt disappointed. The story stretched out in the end. The characters are not given enough time to develop. The only non-white castings are in cliche roles. Clueless Latino gardener. Sexy black friend with ‘benefits’.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 April 2019Good film
Top reviews from other countries
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Dominique B-LReviewed in Canada on 6 July 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Déconseillé aux jeunes enfants.
J'ai adoré ce film. Les personnage sont attachant et l'histoire reflète bien les enjeux de la communauté LGBT.
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FabioReviewed in Italy on 13 January 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Originale e intelligente
Proprio un bel film, per il cast (in particolare Julianne Moore, ma anche gli altri), per l'originalità e soprattutto per la sensibilità nel toccare una storia familiare dai risvolti complessi.
In un'epoca in cui ferve il dibattito su cosa sia una famiglia, sulle polemiche su diritti negati e sull'esigenza di trovare un quadro di riferimento per tante situazioni diverse che meritano attenzione; ecco che ti esce un film intelligente che lavora molto sui sentimenti delle persone coinvolte mettendo insieme più casi insieme.
Abbiamo si una famiglia omosessuale (lesbica), abbiamo figli ottenuti con inseminazione eterologa, abbiamo storie di adolescenti ed adulti che cercano risposte. Tutto condito con sapiente tatto, senza pero' nascondere i problemi di una famiglia.
In questo modo la parte più socialmente difficile (almeno per la cultura italiana), l'omosessualità e relativo rapporto di coppia con figli, lascia (giustamente) il posto ai sentimenti degli individui e all'amore che li unisce. Come dovrebbe essere.
La storia ha un buon ritmo tra eventi quotidiani e tensioni e soluzioni (non posso anticiparvi di più) e dà il giusto peso a ogni aspetto.
Un bel film. Vale veramente la pena vederlo e rivederlo.
- Jose R. PerezReviewed in the United States on 3 December 2010
5.0 out of 5 stars An "Ordinary People" for the 21st Century
I wasn't sure what to expect from "The Kids Are All Right" other than sublime performances from three of my favorite actors today - Annette Bening, Julianne Moore and Mark Rufalo. Whatever I was expecting did not compare to what the film delivered - in spades. In short, TKAAR is a testament to the true - and new - meaning of family and a postcard of hope to the millions of non-traditional families who comprise our new reality. I liken the film to 1980's Best Picture, Ordinary People, which captured effortlessly the family dynamic of the time with brutal honesty and raw emotion. Watching "Kids" was partly a lesson in how far we've come as a society as well as how far we still need to travel to accept the fact that families come in new flavors (a same-sex couple here - deliciously played by Bening and Moore) as well as thru the miracle of science (a sperm donor, absent for a lifetime but suddenly available and real to his offspring).
While the subject matter may be distasteful to some, what I found especially touching about the film's characters and themes was how incredibly NORMAL and REAL these people were. The two moms (referenced repeatedly by the two teenagers in this quintet in the singular) are our neighbors, daughters, sisters, friends, and co-workers. We ride the subway with them, share the car pools and accept - at least on a surface level - the reality of their choices, without judgment or fear. Bening and Moore deliver stunning portrayals as the lesbian couple - they share a lived-in comfort and rapport that's familiar...like our own parents, and our own relationships - gay, straight or otherwise. Their home is lived in and relaxed. The battle the same demons most of us can relate to (that 3rd glass of wine some nights after crazy-busy days...or the longing a housewife feels for what she might have missed, the second-guessing of choices that are inevitable in any long term relationship.
But for me, what brings the film together, in the end - and after much frustration as the story ebbs and flows - is Mark Buffalo as the long-forgotten - and rarely discussed man - who donated the fruit of his testes for money in college. His life is upended as his connection with these two women and the children he spawned flows effortlessly, and his immediate sensual connection to Moore's character brings his new-found sensibilities to a bitter, life-altering crash. Buffalo works wonders with a role that relies on his stiff-upper-lip attitude and facial emotions. We see his evolution throughout the film, from when his stranger-children resurface and he's thrown unmercilesly under a microscope, finding himself unsure of who he is or why. He's both at peace with his playboy life but also yearns to know all that he's missed, accept what's left to learn, and embrace all that he's yearned for but never understood. As his world crashes around him and the "moms'" deal with real-life issues every couple can relate to - questions of character, morality, resentments and "what might have been" - the film transcends the formula and becomes an intense study in family. The ties that bind are often fraught with doubt...and some are simply ripped away by complacency, resentment and the realities of what we give up to be who we ultimately become.
The way Buffalo comes full circle here is a tour-de-force, his best effort yet. Unassuming, yet so full of himself so as to risk everything to keep reality from intruding on his world. Julianne Moore is radiant - as always. I wish she were being submitted in the Supporting Actress category instead of Best Actress since she'd be a lock to finally win a well-deserved Oscar (she should have won for "Far from Heaven").
But ultimately - "Kids" is a classic character study of the definition of family, of dads, sisters, brothers and moms. Like Mary Tyler Moore's hateful mother-dearest in "Ordinary People" - Bening's no-holds-barred laser-focused and proud mom is one for the ages. Here, she's gifted and sarcastic, staunch and direct, loving, grateful, pragmatic but very much in love. Her interactions with her lover are casual, expected and tender - never exploitive to the viewer, but understood. These women have the lived-in quality of most long term couples I know - straight and gay. They're worn, but loving, celebrating and embracing the life they've created in the face of society's ongoing ignorance and distaste for gay families. Bening KNOWS it's not an easy life choice, but her spirit and deep sincere love shines thru even when the sharp, cruel edges of her character startle us. She's the tough mom, the bread-maker, the one who went for the dream (at another's expense), and made a home with the woman of her dreams. Bening is stunning - real, authentic and sympathetic - both in her spoken dialogue and in quiet unexpected shots of her amazing etch-a-sketch face which deliberately shows exactly what she's feeling, hearing, questioning, accepting, discovering and learning. It's a wonderful face, and a terrifyingly familiar character to anyone in a long-term relationship who has ever wondered "what if I wasn't with this person...who would I be?" While Moore's character ultimately experiences this specific collision of fate and doubt on screen, it is Bening who ultimately conveys the layers and textures of a proud woman, torn by reconciling the illusion of love with the consequences of living the lives we choose. Bening is over-due for Oscar love even though the competition this year will rival her two prior losses to Hilary Swank given the buzz for Natalie Portman in "Black Swan". In my mind, Bening's singular performance in "American Beauty" already puts her among the top 1% of our best actors, while "Bugsy", "Grifters" and "Running with Scissors" remind us of her range - and the rage she taps into from the gut. Only "American Beauty" comes close to her performance in "The Kids Are Alright" - and she deserves to be recognized and celebrated for her brilliant, no-holds-barred performance.
"The Kids are Alright" deserves to be widely seen by ANY couple in a long-term relationship, and especially career-couples with kids. The themes here are universal, despite the somewhat rare and obscure circumstances of the plot. It does help to remember that today, unconventional families -both traditional AND piecemeal - live on our block, or just down the street. Our kids play with their kids; the adults engage - or not - just as we do...we share dentists, playgrounds and car pools. And, in the end, even if we don't always see eye to eye (what neighbors do?) - we all want, crave and deserve the same thing ... to be happy, to have love, and to make a better future for our kids. "The Kids are Alright" is accessible, yet distant and obscure, but ultimately illuminating, with career-defining roles from Annette Bening and Mark Ruffalo. A rare, beautifully rendered film about family that shatters myths and inspires self-reflection.
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Outlawyer1972Reviewed in Germany on 5 April 2011
5.0 out of 5 stars Stille Familienkomödie abseits des Mainstream
Die Allgoods sind eine ganz normale amerikanische Familie. Nic ist erfolgreich als Chirurg/Frauenarzt, Jules ist in ihrer Rolle als Hausfrau unterfordert und strebt eine Neuausrichtung als Landschaftsarchitektin an, der 15-jährige Laser und die 18-jährige Joni gehen durch die ganz normale Pubertätshölle, und ihre Eltern mit ihnen. Der Familie geht es gut, das Eigenheim ist schick, und wenn Jules sich für ihren künftigen Job einen Pick-Up leistet, hat Nic kein Problem mit der finanziellen Ausgabe an sich, sondern eher damit, dass die Partnerin mal wieder unabgesprochen einen beruflichen Selbstfindungstrip startet.
Das einzige, was aus dem Rahmen fällt, ist, dass Jules und Nic Frauen sind, und beide jeweils eines der Kinder unter freundlicher Mitwirkung eines anonymen Samenspenders zur Welt gebracht haben. Und da Laser und Joni ihrem unbekannten Vater gern ein Gesicht zuordnen würden, und dieses Gesicht zu dem Öko-Unternehmer Paul - Mitte 40, Single, aber nicht sexlos, Motorradfahrer, kurz: ein Mann durch und durch - gehört, nimmt das Unglück seinen Lauf. Ohne ins Detail gehen zu wollen: Paul bringt die Familie ordentlich durcheinander, und bis zum (fragwürdigen) Happy-End stehen allen Beteiligten einige schmerzhafte Erkenntnisse über sich selbst und über ihr Verständnis der Institution "Familie" bevor.
Ebenso wenig, wie "Brokeback Mountain" nur ein Film über "schwule Cowboys" ist, ist "The Kids are All Right" nur ein Film über eine lesbische Beziehung. Der Film vermeidet klug eine Anhäufung von Stereotypen. Nic und Jules führen ein Leben wie jedes Hetero-Paar auch. Der eine Partner ist beruflich deutlich erfolgreicher als der andere, der sich wiederum etwas mehr Anerkennung wünscht. Eines der Kinder steht kurz davor, aus dem Haus zu gehen, was die leibliche Mutter ein wenig aus der Bahn zu werfen droht, aber was man mit exzessiven Rotweingenuss gut kompensieren kann. Der Sohn umgibt sich mit einem fragwürdigen besten Freund, den die Eltern nicht leiden können, aber man will ja auch kein Spielverderber sein, man ist ja schließlich liberal. Aber so liberal dann doch wieder nicht, dass man die beruflichen Ambitionen des Partners fördern würde, ein Mann im Haus reicht. Und was den ehelichen Sex betrifft... naja, es gab offensichtlich schon mal bessere Tage....
So weit so normal. Auftritt: der leibliche Vater. Und plötzlich entladen sich all die subilen, mühsam kaschierten Spannungen, die zuvor sehr fein herausgearbeitet wurden, und der familiäre Zusammenhalt wird einigen heftigen Herausforderungen unterworfen. Meiner Meinung nach zeigt sich hier, wie gut der Film eigentlich ist. Man hätte nun eine platte Slapstick-Komödie erwarten können. Man hätte Paul als egomanischen Unsympathen darstellen können, auf den die Kinder nicht nachvollziehbarer Weise hereinfallen und zur Abnabelung vom Elternhaus nutzen. Aber nichts von alledem. Der Oscar-nominierte Mark Ruffalo spielt Paul als etwas ziellosen aber nicht unsympathischen Zeitgenossen, für den Familie bislang nicht zur Lebensplanung gehörte, aber der nun plötzlich, mit seinen beiden leiblichen Kindern konfrontiert, mächtig ins Grübeln kommt. Klar, dass das zum großen Knall mit der toughen Nic (großartig gespielt von der ebenfalls Oscar-nominierten Annette Bening) führt, die den Eindringling in ihre Muster-Familie mit Argus-Augen betrachtet. Umso mehr, als Jules (die nicht minder großartige Julianne Moore) ihren ersten Auftrag ausgerechnet von Paul bekommt.
The Kids are All Right brilliert durch ein Schauspieler-Ensemble, das genau die richtigen Töne trifft. Man nimmt jeder einzelnen Figur ihre Seelennöte ab. Der Film verzichtet auf jede überflüssige Schwarz-Weiß-Malerei, sondern entwirft plausible Figuren ohne Perfektionsanspruch, die sich selbst mehr als einmal selbst im Weg stehen. Das präzise (Oscar-nominierte) Drehbuch von Regisseurin Lisa Cholodenko und Stuart Blumberg nimmt seine Figuren ernst, ohne sich auf eine Seite zu stellen oder zu urteilen. The Kids are All Right ist eine leise Familienkomödie (Komödie ist vielleicht der falsche Begriff, aber eine Tragödie ist der Film auch nicht...) über eine Familie, bei der die Eltern zufällig aus zwei Müttern bestehen. Wenn die Figuren am Ende des Films ihr Leben weiterleben, möchte man ihnen allen alles Gute wünschen. Es war schön, 100 Minuten an ihrem Leben teilzuhaben.....
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MobiusReviewed in France on 19 August 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Un bon moment
Très bon film tendre et plein d'humour. Une belle tranche de vie avec des acteurs pétillants. Bref un divertissement original.