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Closed Caption; "In the Recording Studio With Hilary" featurette; Deleted scenes; Alternate ending; "Hilary's Roman Adventure"featurette; "Why Not" music video; "Roamin' Volare" featurette; Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound; Widescreen (2.35:1) enhanced for 16 x 9televisions and fullscreen (1.33:1) versions
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Opening Credits/Graduation Day [8:43]
2. Rome, the Eternal City [6:24]
3. Lizzie's Wish Comes True [7:39]
4. Adventures [7:07]
5. Paolo Asks for Help [6:43]
6. Shopping Spree [12:07]
7. Promises [10:45]
8. "What Dreams Are Made Of" [6:48]
9. Shocking Discoveries [10:31]
10. "What Dreams Are Really Made Of" [7:37]
11. The After Party [3:16]
12. Capturing the Moment/End Credits [6:03]
During a school trip to Rome, junior-high misfit Lizzie McGuire (Hilary Duff) yearns for adventure. And, this being The Lizzie McGuire Movie, she finds it -- in the person of a teenage Italian pop idol (Yani Gellman) who grooms her to stand in for his missing partner, to whom Lizzie bears a striking resemblance. As Duff's hit song asks, "Why not?" Duff, basic cable's tween queen, shines in this spin-off of the Disney Channel series. Reality takes a vacation along with starry-eyed Lizzie (and her sardonic animated alter ego), who is persuaded to ditch her tour group led by the dreaded Miss Ubermeyer, who makes R. Lee Ermy's drill sergeant in Full Metal Jacket look like Mr. Rogers. She is aided in her deception by Gordo (Adam Lamberg), whom we suspect nurses an unrequited crush on his lifelong platonic pal, and harassed by her nemesis, the stereotypical popular, um, witch Kate (Ashlie Brillault), who issues such withering put-downs as "Outfit repeater." To pad the film's 90 minutes, there are several sightseeing and trying-on-clothes montages. And whenever the movie needs a little "oops, I did it again" touch, director Jim Fall has the wide-eyed dizzy Miss Lizzie trip, awkwardly and adorably. Add the requisite out-of-it parents and nasty younger brother, and you have all the ingredients to make our irresistible heroine more empathetic. As Lizzie says at one point, "Some say juvenile, I say genius." Or as Howlin' Wolf put it, "The men don't know, but the little girls understand." Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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