Angels in America with Al Pacino: DVD Cover
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Angels in America Director: Mike Nichols Cast: Al Pacino, Meryl Streep, Emma Thompson, Mary-Louise Parker

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  • DVD Release Date: 09/14/2004
  • Original Release: 2003
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 6,266

Viewer Rating: (22 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Plot" See All

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; [None specified]

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Chapter 1
2. Chapter 2
3. Chapter 3
Side #2 --
1. Chapter 4
2. Chapter 5
3. Chapter 6

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Extravagantly mounted on a budget that reportedly topped $60 million, this small-screen adaptation of Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning play is an extraordinarily complex and rewarding work of art. Set during the mid-'80s, when America was being battered by the first wave of AIDS deaths, it depicts the variegated reactions of numerous people whose contact with the dread disease, however ephemeral, irrevocably changes their lives. One of them is the infamous McCarthyite lawyer Roy Cohn (ferociously played by Al Pacino), himself an AIDS sufferer who personifies the hypocrisy and callousness of the "official" response to the plague. His lack of empathy is stunning; even on his own deathbed, he castigates his gay nurse (Jeffrey Wright, reprising his Tony-winning stage role) and taunts the spirit of the woman he helped put to death, accused Communist spy Ethel Rosenberg (Meryl Streep, who essays three major roles). Another patient, Prior Walter (Justin Kirk), is visited by an angel (Emma Thompson) after being deserted by his self-pitying lover, Louis (Ben Shenkman). Louis becomes involved with closeted gay man Joe Pitt (Patrick Wilson), a Mormon lawyer whose distraught wife (Mary-Louise Parker) eventually becomes delusional. These characters periodically collide as the plot develops, and their interactions are memorable, thanks largely to the cast's uniformly superb delivery of Kushner's witty, direct, and occasionally poetic dialogue. Angels in America reflects the anger so deeply felt by AIDS activists, and its implicit and explicit indictments of Reagan-era inaction fix blame for the epidemic's spread on the federal government. There's no denying the power of its brilliantly realized presentation, and one critic called this HBO presentation "a transcendent work of art" with ample justification. It's a thought-provoking, unforgettable film that will leave a lasting impression on all who see it. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Really worth those 6 hours!by Ethell

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March 16, 2009: I enjoyed everything about it, I cannot believe Al Pacino was this good at what he does. Meryl Streep; pure excellence! The whole plot of it is really emotional but true and I think people really need to watch this to know what I'm talking about. Well worth my time and you should definitely watch this.

A great message wrapped in a beautiful packageby Anonymous

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March 08, 2007: This is one of the most faithful film/television adaptations out there of a literary work of any kind. The cast is simply superb. Mary-Louise Parker in particular surpised the hell out of me with her tender, vulnerable performance. Broadway veteran Patrick Wilson also shows he has some great acting chops. Streep and Pacino are outstanding as ususal. Basically, the whole cast is excellent and it would take too much room to mention them individually. Tony Kushner's words and message are brought brilliantly to life by Mike Nichols and it just goes to show that a lot of money for production can go a really long way and achieve something great in the proper hands. As to those who are "tired of the subject matter" I say to you: WAKE UP!!! These are real issues that real people who live outside of your thoroughly homogenized, double-shot of esspresso, WASP-ish, bible-thumping, blinders on, W-is-great lives are dealing with everyday. Tired of the subject matter? Are you kidding me? This play, lik RENT, was written to make everyone aware of the very real threat of AIDS and HIV and is intended as a message to the public to get off their collective behinds and do something about it. Look, if you are uncomfortable with what the play and the mini-series has to say, then don't read or watch it. Go home and listen to Rush Limbaugh and read Left Behind and pretend that nothing exists outside of your own little world and dream of the day that you and your ridiculous ilk will go to heaven and live happily ever after and all sinners like me and Tony Kushner will....blah, blah, blah.


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