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| DVD - Subtitled / Pan & Scan / Dubbed | $12.99 |
Dupree's Memoirs: Want more Dupree? Browse his personal scrapbook full of outrageous photos and funny stories from his crazy past; Feature commentaries with directors Anthony & Joe Russo and with writer Michael Le Sieur and producer Scott Stuber; Includes hilarious deleted scenes, alternate ending and outtakes
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- You, Me and Dupree
1. Getting Married [5:52]
2. The Best Man [4:30]
3. You Can't Sleep in a Bar [5:09]
4. A Week at the Most [7:00]
5. Family First [6:33]
6. Carl Time [7:34]
7. Hit the Road [7:23]
8. Gut Check Time [6:26]
9. Career Day [5:02]
10. Meet Me Halfway [6:56]
11. Getting Suspicious [5:03]
12. Rock Bottom [7:35]
13. Dinner With Dad [7:54]
14. Is Love Enough? [4:26]
15. Permission to Miss School [4:19]
16. Can You Get Me Ten Minutes in There? [4:15]
17. A Pretty Big Candle Stick [2:59]
18. He's On His Own [3:40]
19. "7 Different Kinds of Smoke" [1:27]
20. End Titles [5:07]
There’s an old saying: No good deed goes unpunished. That’s the lesson learned by the Peterson newlyweds, Molly (Kate Hudson) and Carl (Matt Dillon), who take pity on Carl’s hapless best friend, Randy Dupree (Owen Wilson), inviting him to temporarily stay in their new home. When Dupree’s visit degenerates into an extended tenancy, the Peterson marriage begins to show the strain, with Carl’s stress level further elevated by his boss, Kate’s father (Michael Douglas). Sibling directors Anthony and Joe Russo move the story along rapidly, zooming past wildly improbably plot situations, making sure that the irrepressibly charming Wilson is never far from sight. Two things will become apparent to anybody watching the essential DVD supplements: First, the palpable chemistry between Hudson and Wilson (who were romantically linked in the tabloids soon after the film’s release) and, second, the fact that several of the movie’s funniest scenes never made the final cut. The former is plainly evident in nearly every inch of on-the-set footage, which suggests that Hudson couldn’t keep a straight face while shooting even brief, minor scenes with Wilson. The latter is obvious from various bloopers and outtakes, among them a hilarious ad-lib exchange between Wilson and bit player Harry Dean Stanton. The half hour of bonus material also includes a spoof trailer that employs clever editing to make this harmless comedy seem -- rather convincingly, we might add -- like a horror movie, with Dillon appearing to be a homicidal maniac. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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