DVD Learn more
Enter a zip code
Closed Caption; Audio commentary featuring Cher, Director Norman Jewison and writer John Patrick Shanley; "Moonstruck: At the Heart of an Italian Family" documentary; "Music of Moonstruck" featurette; "Pasta to Pastries: The Art of Fine Italian Food" - Interactive map of Little Italy; Collectible Italian recipe cards
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Moonstruck
1. Start [4:11]
2. A Proposal Done Right [9:27]
3. Telling the Family [11:48]
4. "I Lost My Hand!" [8:33]
5. The Wolf and the Bride [6:00]
6. As Big As the Moon [7:39]
7. Nothing to Talk About [2:10]
8. A Night at the Opera [7:41]
9. Why Men Chase Women [4:14]
10. See No Evil... [7:43]
11. Johnny Is Back [9:42]
12. Wedding Off, Wedding On [6:45]
The 1987 hit Moonstruck, a modest romantic comedy that proved an unlikely Oscar powerhouse, has weathered the passage of time far better than most '80s films. The virtuoso performances certainly figure in the picture's enduring appeal: Top-billed Cher and supporting player Olympia Dukakis both walked off with Oscars, while up-and-comer Nicolas Cage and character actor Danny Aiello also delivered hilarious turns. Cher truly shines as Loretta Castorini, a dour, superstitious, but attractive widow who accepts a marriage proposal from decent but unprepossessing Johnny Cammareri (Aiello). Resigned to a financially secure but passionless union, Loretta initially dismisses the immature advances of Johnny's tempestuous younger brother, Ronny (Cage), but eventually comes to love him. Loretta's feisty, plainspoken mother (Dukakis) has plenty to say about her daughter's choices, and interference from her could throw the situation into chaos. Director Norman Jewison, working from an unusually trenchant script by John Patrick Shanley -- who also won an Oscar -- skillfully realizes the writer's richly detailed, often subtle vignettes about working-class Italian-American families in New York City. The Loretta-Ronny romance evolves along decidedly unconventional lines, and the brothers' rivalry is resolved touchingly, without resorting to crude comedic gimmicks or cheap melodramatic hokum. Sharply written, incisively directed, and beautifully acted, Moonstruck has earned its place among the screen's classic comedies. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations