Heaven with Cate Blanchett: DVD Cover
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Heaven Director: Tom Tykwer Cast: Cate Blanchett, Giovanni Ribisi, Remo Girone, Stefania Rocca

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  • DVD Release Date: 06/17/2003
  • Original Release: 2002
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 34,925

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Features

Closed Caption; Feature commentary by director Tom Tykwer; "The Story of Heaven" featurette; Deleted scenes (optional commentary by Tom Tykwer); Space Cam fly-by; French subtitles; Original language track (English and Italian with English subtitles); Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound; Widescreen (1.85:1) enhanced for 16x9 televisions

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Untimely Cleaning [10:38]
2. Interrogation [8:40]
3. What's Wrong? [5:28]
4. A Little Help [8:52]
5. I Agree [6:07]
6. A Bag in the Toilet [3:06]
7. What Nobody Expects [6:35]
8. Do You Remember Me? [5:53]
9. Time to Leave [10:06]
10. "Where Will We Go?" [5:35]
11. Montepulciano [7:02]
12. A Father's Love [5:50]
13. A Place to Hide [4:54]
14. To Heaven [3:50]
15. End Credits [4:08]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

German filmmaker Tom Tykwer made his English-language debut with this feature, which was adapted from a screenplay co-authored by the late Krzysztof Kieslowski. Philippa (Cate Blanchett) is a British schoolteacher living in Italy, whose husband fell victim to a drug overdose, as have several of her students. Marco Vendice (Stefano Santospago) is a powerful local drug dealer who sold the dope which killed Philippa's husband, as well as a number of neighborhood teens. Disgusted with the inability of the police to bring Vendice to justice, Philippa takes the law into her own hands, planting a bomb which is intended to kill the dealer. However, Philippa's plan goes awry, and instead the bomb kills four innocent bystanders. Philippa is arrested and brought before the police for questioning, not knowing that the interrogating officer in charge of the case, Pini (Mattia Sbragia), is one of Vendice's secret business associates. More comfortable with English than Italian, Philippa requests a translator, and multilingual officer Filippo (Giovanni Ribisi) is brought in to serve as interpreter. Filippo finds himself falling in love with Philippa, and with his help she's able to escape and go into hiding; however, despite her deep regrets about the loss of four lives in the bombing, she is still bound and determined to see Vendice dead. Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

Heavenby Anonymous

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March 22, 2004: Heaven is a touching and moving film, with superb acting and breathtaking cinematography. The movie relies more on visuals - what is not said, rather than what is said. The position of a body, a hand, the facial expressions, speaks volumes. The camera shots, the angles, and the purity of silence relay more meaning than words alone can express. There is one scene where Phillipa and Filipo are shot from a distance, silhouetted in the sunset, and there is pure and perfect silence - no background music to invoke a mood. The mood is created simply in the beautiful camera work, and in the silence itself. There are no words, or even close ups of the faces, because they are not necessary here. The Space Cam produced the most beautiful and dreamlike visuals of the countryside, that are almost trancelike in their beauty. This movie did not get its due, nor did the superb direction, or the moving performance by Cate Blanchett. The synopsis of this film cannot relay the depth and layers of this movie, because it relies so much on visuals. There is far more substance to it than just the story itself.

Heavenby Anonymous

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November 28, 2003: It's simple as this: i left the theater ghasping.


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