Changing Lanes with Ben Affleck: DVD Cover

    Changing Lanes Director: Roger Michell Cast: Ben Affleck, Samuel L. Jackson, Toni Collette, Sydney Pollack

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    • DVD Release Date: 09/10/2002
    • Rating: Rated R
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
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    Scenes

    Features

    Closed Caption; Widescreen version; Dolby Digital 5.1 and Surround (Eng/Fre); English subtitles; Director commentary by Roger Michell; The making of Changing Lanes; A writer's perspective featurette; 2 deleted scenes; 1 extended scene; Theatrical trailer

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. That Champagne Feeling
    2. The Accident
    3. The Missing Document
    4. Twenty Minutes
    5. Better Luck Next Time
    6. Bankrupt
    7. A New File
    8. Computer Voodoo
    9. Partners
    10. Back on the FDR
    11. Confession
    12. The Boys
    13. Addicted to Chaos
    14. The Memory of Another Life
    15. At the End of the Day

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Ingenious scripting, earnest performances, and fastidious direction make the patently preposterous premise of Changing Lanes not only believable but genuinely compelling. Ben Affleck is perfectly cast as a callow yuppie lawyer who, late for an important court proceeding, leaves the scene of a car accident that strands Samuel L. Jackson. A recovering alcoholic due in court himself, Jackson fails to show up on time and, as a result, forfeits his rights to partial custody of his son. What really distinguishes the Chap Taylor-Michael Tolkin screenplay is its portrayal of the ensuing battle of wits: Jackson inadvertently acquired a file vital to Affleck’s case, but he refuses to surrender it until the lawyer makes compensation. Affleck has never been better; he is superb as the increasingly desperate attorney who first uses his connections to ruin Jackson’s life and then remorsefully tries to undo the damage. He and Jackson get strong support from Sydney Pollack (Affleck’s charming but ruthless boss), Toni Collette (his admiring co-worker), and Amanda Peet (his blithely amoral sweetheart). Director Roger Michell (Notting Hill) skillfully stages the frenzied chess game between equally determined opponents who both yield to the dark side of their nature. Changing Lanes might initially seem to be little more than a contemporary urban nightmare, but it’s actually a film about vulnerability, compassion, ethics, and redemption --important values portrayed in the guise of fast-paced, hard-edged melodrama. Director Michell provides a commentary track for the DVD, which also includes a featurette exploring the writers’ perspectives, two deleted scenes, and one extended sequence. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    Changing Lanesby Anonymous

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    December 16, 2007: With meditations from Sydney Pollack and great acting from Ben Affleck, what more can you want in life? A highly thoughtful film that blur the lines of convenient racial, moral, modern, and legalistic definintions, Jackson and Affleck duke it out philosophically and intellectually with both being the loser. I thoroughly recommend this film.

    Changing Lanesby Anonymous

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    April 21, 2005: This is a good movie, but it could definitely have been better. There is a lot of drama, and the acting is great, but I was left feeling unsatisfied.


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