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Feature commentary with director Jon Avnet; "Moments of Discovery," original documentary with director Jon Avnet, actors Kathy Bates, Jessica Tandy, Mary Stuart Masterson, Mary-Louise Parker Jon Avnet's scene-specific notes; Production photographs; Poster campaign; Theatrical trailers
Full Product DetailsChapter List
0. Chapter List
1. Opening logos [:25]
2. Main titles [2:13]
3. The sound of the train [1:42]
4. Ninny [:35]
5. The tale of Idgie Threadgoode [1:27]
6. Buddy and Little bit [2:59]
7. Ruth [2:25]
8. The train tracks [1:49]
9. That magic, that spark [3:59]
10. After buddy [4:09]
11. Taming Towanda [2:38]
12. A train ride with Idgie [3:21]
13. The bee charmer [1:23]
14. The best birthday I've ever had [3:04]
15. Reclaiming our power [3:31]
16. Ruth's new life [:24]
17. Reclaiming Ruth [3:03]
18. The change. [2:30]
19. A separate God for children [2:27]
20. The Whistle Stop Cafe [3:48]
21. Smokey Lonesome [4:01]
22. The cooking lesson [3:40]
23. The coming of the Klan [1:47]
24. The last of Frank Bennett [2:16]
25. The sheriff from Georgia [2:18]
26. He won't bother you again [2:30]
27. Towanda the avenger [3:44]
28. Smokey's return [2:08]
29. So long, old pal [2:19]
30. The murder of a white man [4:16]
31. The trial [3:55]
32. The last witness [4:12]
33. A whole lot of nothing [2:06]
34. Ninny's birthday [1:21]
35. The cancer [2:20]
36. The time for courage [3:34]
37. A lady knows when to leave [1:45]
38. Two women in the house [2:20]
39. Going home [1:08]
40. The secret's in the sauce [3:40]
41. Idgie's alive? [1:40]
42. End titles [2:36]
Bonus Materials
0. Chapter List
The very model of the contemporary "chick flick," Fried Green Tomatoes still ranks among the best of the breed. Adapted from her bestselling novel, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café, Fanny Flagg's screenplay expertly evokes the 1920s in the Deep South while drawing a vivid picture of female resourcefulness and fortitude. Skillfully slipping in and out of time periods, the dual story unfolds as dowdy, unhappily married Evelyn Couch (Kathy Bates), begins visiting a nursing home to chat with Ninny Threadgoode (Jessica Tandy). The still sprightly Ninny, a former resident of Whistle Stop, Alabama, tells Evelyn about a young woman named Ruth Jamison (Mary-Louise Parker), who operated the book's titular café, which specialized in breaded fried green tomatoes. Married to a loutish redneck, Ruth grew much closer to her friend Idgie Threadgoode (Mary Stuart Masterson), her partner in the café. The flashback sequences to the 1920s describe Whistle Stop's racial tensions, which bubble over into violence when Ruth's no-account husband disappears and is presumed to have been murdered by a black man named Big George (Stan Shaw). Less specifically described, but clearly inferred, is a lesbian relationship between Ruth and Idgie. Director Jon Avnet elicits terrific performances from Parker and Masterson, who were then near the beginning of their careers. Avnet sensitively portrays Flagg's underlying subject -- a narrow-minded society's response to nonconformity -- without wallowing in sentimentality or preachiness. The result is an uplifting movie that wins new fans with every screening. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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