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| DVD - Wide Screen | $12.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / Repackaged | $12.99 |
8 additional scenes; Commentary with Director Callie Khouri and actress Ashley Judd; Commentary with Director Callie Khouri, Executive Producer Lisa Stewart, Producers Bonnie Bruckheimer, and Hunt Lowry, Editor Andrew Marcus and Composer T Bone Burnett; Featurette: unlocking the secrets of ya-ya sisterhood; Interactive Ya-Ya Sisterhood scrapbook; Alison Krauss music video; Unlocking the Secret of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood featurette; Additional scenes
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Ya-Ya Priestesses [4:07]
2. The Interview [2:37]
3. Cutting Sidda out [5:11]
4. Will or Pill? [5:05]
5. Her Ticket Out' [2:36]
6. Show 'em How it's Done [3:20]
7. Princesses in Atlanta [6:13]
8. Wartime Promises [3:52]
9. Joyride [2:45]
10. The Ring [4:53]
11. Birthday Thing. Ow! [4:21]
12. Exit Jack [4:34]
13. Enter Shep [2:46]
14. Ruination by Phone [3:24]
15. Teensy/Vivi Standoff [3:06]
16. Better Off Alone [2:55]
17. Hailing Mary (Dimming of the day) [2:34]
18. Paved with humility [4:46]
19. Sidda's Fears (Salah) [3:08]
20. Absolution [3:23]
21. Away From Home [3:43]
22. Coin Toss [3:06]
23. Breaking Point [5:30]
24. Sure as Hell Gone [3:51]
25. Sunflower Saint [2:40]
26. Angels Aloft (Walk in Jerusalem) [6:14]
27. Answer to Her Prayer [5:38]
28. Initiation [3:53]
29. End Credits (Waitin' for you, the World Exploded Into Love) [6:01]
Callie Khouri, who penned the Oscar-winning script for Thelma and Louise, returns to "chick flick" territory for her directing debut, an adaptation of Rebecca Wells’s megaselling novels Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood and Little Altars Everywhere. Sandra Bullock stars as Sidda, a successful, 40-ish playwright who is estranged from her mother, Vivi, a gorgeous, charismatic, alcoholic, and thoroughly unstable southern belle (played, at different stages of her life, by Ellen Burstyn and Ashley Judd). Vivi belongs to a quartet of feisty, hard-drinking matrons (Maggie Smith, Fionnula Flanagan , and Shirley Knight fill out the group) who call themselves the Ya-Yas -- a quasi-mystical sisterhood they formed as girls growing up in a small bayou town. Deciding it’s high time that Vivi and her daughter mended their fences, the Ya-Yas whisk Sidda back to Louisiana, where they reveal the secrets behind Vivi's emotional state and explain how the Ya-Yas sustained each other through life’s travails. Khouri, who also wrote the script, borrows some elements from the decidedly darker Little Altars, but the film’s story and spirit hew much closer to the wish-fulfilling Divine Secrets. There is no shortage of rueful sentimentality as the narrative veers, sometimes clumsily, between flashbacks and present-day events. Missing are the sharp details of southern provincial life that make the books (particularly Little Altars) so vivid, but the performances keep the film crackling. Judd is incandescent as the young Vivi, as is Burstyn in the character’s older incarnation, while veteran actresses Smith, Flanagan, and Knight provide delightful support. Bittersweet and funny, The Divine Secrets is a warmhearted tribute to the unbreakable bonds between mothers, daughters, and lifelong friends. Kryssa Schemmerling, Barnes & Noble
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