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Closed Caption; Making of Just Like Heaven; Meet the Cast; Deleted scenes; Gag reel
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Just Like Heaven
1. At the Hospital [7:55]
2. David Meets Elizabeth [6:00]
3. Seeing Someone [5:35]
4. Bookstore [10:05]
5. At the Bar [3:39]
6. Meet the Neighbors [5:08]
7. "I'm a Doctor!" [3:41]
8. St. Matthews [10:11]
9. Katrina's Visit [5:16]
10. On the Roof [3:01]
11. David's Garden [6:47]
12. Elizabeth's Last Night [7:29]
13. An Idea [3:53]
14. Stealing the Body [7:07]
15. Elizabeth Comes Home [4:22]
16. End Credits [4:17]
This minor comedy-drama with romantic overtones is not only saved but also significantly enhanced by a nimble performance from the always-adorable Reese Witherspoon, once again taking an underwritten character and skillfully fleshing it out. She portrays work-obsessed intern Elizabeth Masterson, who apparently dies in a tragic car accident. Her spacious apartment is subsequently rented to David Abbott (Mark Ruffalo), a lonely architect trying to rebuild his life following the death of his wife. Elizabeth -- or, rather, her ghost -- returns to the apartment and begins haunting David, the only person who can see and hear her. Though Just Like Heaven twists itself into narrative knots with an especially silly third-act contrivance, plot ultimately recedes in favor of performance, and the underlying sweetness of both main characters more than amply compensates for any script failings. Contributing minor but important supporting turns are Donal Logue, playing David’s skeptical best friend, and Napoleon Dynamite’s Jon Heder, who comes close to stealing the show as a faintly psychic bookstore clerk. Heaven doesn’t have any of the edge or hipness of director Mark Waters’s preceding film, Mean Girls, but its genuine warmth and gentle humor should not be dismissed or undervalued. This is a nice, family-friendly movie with a positive, uplifting message -- and we could definitely use more of those. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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