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You've Got Mail [Region 2]
 
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You've Got Mail [Region 2] (1998)

Starring: Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan Director: Nora Ephron Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)   Format: DVD
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (615 customer reviews)


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Region 2 encoding (This DVD will not play on most DVD players sold in the US or Canada [Region 1]. This item requires a region specific or multi-region DVD player and compatible TV. More about DVD formats.)

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Product Details

  • Actors: Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Greg Kinnear, Parker Posey, Jean Stapleton
  • Directors: Nora Ephron
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: German (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Subtitles: German, English, Spanish, French, Italian
  • Region: Region 2 (Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (615 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004RYTG
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #210,446 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)
  • For more information about "You've Got Mail [Region 2]" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video

By now, Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan have amassed such a fund of goodwill with moviegoers that any new onscreen pairing brings nearly reflexive smiles. In You've Got Mail, the quintessential boy and girl next door repeat the tentative romantic crescendo that made Sleepless in Seattle, writer-director Nora Ephron's previous excursion with the duo, a massive hit. The prospective couple do actually meet face to face early on, but Mail otherwise repeats the earlier feature's gentle, extended tease of saving its romantic resolution until the final, gauzy shot.

The underlying narrative is an even more old-fashioned romantic pas de deux that is casually hooked to a newfangled device. The script, cowritten by the director and her sister, Delia Ephron, updates and relocates the Ernst Lubitsch classic, The Shop Around the Corner, to contemporary Manhattan, where Joe Fox (Hanks) is a cheerfully rapacious merchant whose chain of book superstores is gobbling up smaller, more specialized shops such as the children's bookstore owned by Kathleen Kelly (Ryan). Their lives run in close parallel in the same idealized neighborhood, yet they first meet anonymously, online, where they gradually nurture a warm, even intimate correspondence. As they begin to wonder whether this e-mail flirtation might lead them to be soul mates, however, they meet and clash over their colliding business fortunes.

It's no small testament to the two stars that we wind up liking and caring about them despite the inevitable (and highly manipulative) arc of the plot. Although their chemistry transcended the consciously improbable romantic premise of Sleepless, enabling director Ephron to attain a kind of amorous soufflé, this time around there's a slow leak that considerably deflates the affair. Less credulous viewers will challenge Joe's logic in prolonging the concealment of his online identity from Kathleen, and may shake their heads at Ephron's reinvention of Manhattan as a spotless, sun-dappled wonderland where everybody lives in million-dollar apartments and color coordinates their wardrobes for cocktail parties. --Sam Sutherland

From The New Yorker

A regrouping of the team that brought you "Sleepless in Seattle": director Nora Ephron and leading players Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. Once again, the story hinges on a couple who know each other for real only in the final minute-in this case, Joe Fox, who owns a chain of large bookstores, and Kathleen Kelly, who runs one small bookstore and finds herself put out of business. They meet and dislike each other without realizing that they've been waging a little light flirtation, under appropriate pseudonyms, via e-mail. The movie is sweetly undemanding, as you might expect, but the romantic suspense is zilch, and, compared with Ernst Lubitsch's "The Shop Around the Corner," on which Ephron based her script, everything feels spineless and slack. Hanks is badly underused, and it's left to the wonderful Steve Zahn (last seen in "Out of Sight"), as an employee in the small shop, to wring a little comic juice from the proceedings. The strangest performance, however, comes from the Upper West Side, which plays a neighborhood of uncomplicated bliss: gardens in bloom, happy street markets, an endless supply of literate conversationalists. Dream on, sister. -Anthony Lane
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker

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Customer Reviews

615 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (615 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
53 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hanks and Ryan Shine in a Slick But Charming Internet-Based Romance Ten Years Later in a Deluxe Edition DVD, February 5, 2008
A 10th Anniversary DVD seems a bit vaunted for this familiar 1998 romantic comedy since it continues to play repeatedly on TBS and other cable outlets. It's no wonder since Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan have the kind of ingratiating rapport that makes it easy to slip into one of their movies no matter what part you find yourself watching. Directed by the acerbic Nora Ephron, who helmed 1993's Sleepless in Seattle with the same pair, this movie gleams with the same kind of good-natured, Hollywood-style gloss that made the previous outing a hit. However, the pieces fit a little too perfectly for me, so much so that it feels packaged for maximum audience appeal. It really takes the combined skills of Hanks and Ryan to make this palatable, even likable, but it's not without its challenges.

As with Sleepless in Seattle, Ephron, along with her sister Delia as co-screenwriter, attempts to update a tried-and-true film classic, this time Ernst Lubitsch's The Shop Around the Corner (1940), about two people who are concurrently in an antagonistic professional relationship and also anonymous pen-pals fantasizing who the other may be in real life. The novelty this time is that the story takes place at the dawn of the Internet age when people automatically set up AOL accounts with incognito screen names. E-mail and instant messaging have replaced the need for the postal system to exchange anticipated love letters. The story focuses on Joe Fox, one of the wealthy owners of a mega-bookstore chain called Fox Books, a doppelganger for Borders or Barnes & Noble. On Manhattan's Starbucks-saturated Upper West Side, he is opening one of his monstrous stores in the vicinity of The Shop Around the Corner, a specialty children's bookstore owned by Kathleen Kelly.

Much of the movie has to do with her attempts to defend her antiquated turf and ward off the inevitable cannibalization of her small business. I actually found this part of the movie entertaining with nice tweaks in the verbal interplay on corporate greed. I especially liked the sharply scripted scene in the coffeehouse when Kathleen succinctly puts down Joe's business intentions. The other side of the film is the burgeoning love story between Joe and Kathleen on AOL where under their screen names `NYC152' and `Shopgirl', they find themselves bonding and falling in love. Similar to what occurs in the original movie and the Judy Garland musical remake, In the Good Old Summertime, Joe finds out who `Shopgirl' is before Kathleen realizes that he is `NYC152', allowing for an extended courting sequence from Kathleen's sickbed through the Union Square Greenmarket and other locales.

Hanks is a more avuncular presence as Joe and not as manically funny as usual except for a funny scene where he attempts to hide his identity in her bookstore. As Kathleen, Ryan is sometimes on twinkle overdrive, but she manages to come back to her innate malleability as an actress, a quality not all that common among the subsequent generation of rom-com heroines (for example, Kate Hudson in How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days or Hilary Swank in P.S., I Love You). Most importantly, even when the material feels like retread, the pair has definite chemistry. The supporting cast is adept and filled with strong players - Parker Posey as Joe's self-obsessed book editor girlfriend Patricia, Greg Kinnear as Kathleen's intellectually pompous boyfriend Frank, a young Dave Chappelle as Joe's colleague Keith, Jean Stapleton as Kathleen's eccentric partner.

The 2008 Deluxe Edition DVD maintains all the features of the previous 1999 DVD, specifically an entertaining commentary track by Ephron and producer Lauren Shuler Donner, a brief HBO short with Ephron, a music video of Carole King's "Anything at All", a music-only audio track, and an interactive tour of the filming locations in New York's Upper East Side. Unfortunately, there are no deleted or expanded scenes offered in either the old or new DVD releases. The print transfer on the new DVD is clean and vibrant, and there are two new featurettes offered as part of the package. The first is "Delivering You've Got Mail" where Hanks and Ryan - both looking good but not overly engaged - reminisce about the filmmaking experience a decade later. The second, "You've Got Chemistry", is really more about romantic comedy as a genre rather than anything particular about this production.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bouquets of sharpened pencils, indeed, July 19, 2004
By Toniann Scime "Librarian" (Amherst, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: You've Got Mail (DVD)
Here's the main and completely irrelevant reason to love this movie: New York City in the fall. Honestly, it should have no bearing whatsoever on the plot, but it does -- and it's impossible not to fall in love with the bright, sunshiny, orange-leaved sheer beauty of the city encapsulated in this movie. Without even resorting to shots of Central Park in all its glory (and really, who can resist that?), "You've Got Mail" takes you on a lovely scenic tour of the Upper West Side, Starbucks and all. Who can resist the street fairs, the parks, the stores, the dock? It's picture-perfect, and if it's a bit surreal, I won't admit it: New York really is rather lovely in the fall.

Aside from making me want to run away to the Big Apple and work in the children's section at Fox Books, "You've Got Mail" also features Meg Ryan at her most adorable ("Aren't daisies just the friendliest flower?"), Tom Hanks at his most charming, and a terrific supporting cast (Greg Kinnear and those typewriters!). The story, a modernized little "remake" of "The Shop Around The Corner", is more fairy tale than realism -- two people fall in love over email, in war in real life, and however can such a thing be solved -- but it's an enchanting story nonetheless. In a time when romance on the web seems all-too-seedy and in reality, sometimes frankly dangerous, this little tale of two people sharing their most intimate thoughts long before they share a single glance is like a breath of fresh air. Sure, the technology's a little faded, but the magic's still there.

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29 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love this!, March 8, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Mail (DVD)
Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks shine in this romantic comedy. This is the second time this duo have performed together (Sleepless in Seattle). Perhaps that helps create the smooth natural tone of the interactions between the two. Ryan plays a bookstore shop owner...a tiny little store first run by her mother. Hanks company is building a huge bookstore chain in the same neighborhood. The two cannot stand each other. Besides their business lives, the two are both chatting with an interesting person through the internet and believe they are falling in love with the person. Little do they know, it is really each other! Will they meet? And if they do, will they fall in love or be shocked and disturbed? Watch the movie to find out what happens!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Internet cute love story!
I bought this movie for my mother for christmas but I too enjoy this cute love story yet if you want to know whats it about watch it and find out.
Published 3 days ago by C. Tessler

5.0 out of 5 stars love this movie
Nora Ephron, Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, what more could anyone want in a Romantic Comedy?
Published 13 days ago by Bobbie

5.0 out of 5 stars you've got mail
Having seen this movie years ago I wanted it as part of my video library. Love Tom and Meg together. Dialogue realistic and storyline holds your interest. Read more
Published 21 days ago by Margaret L. Zesch

5.0 out of 5 stars I watch it over and over again
I literally watch it at least once a month, it's so charming, soothing, comforting, funny. As Mr. Fox asked "Is it cute though?" Yes, it is! I love it!
Published 23 days ago by trykorovy

4.0 out of 5 stars You've Got Mail (Deluxe Edition)
Kathleen Kelly, owner of a little and famous bookstore for children's books, has an affair. Being together with Frank Navasky, a well-known journalist, she betrays him by... Read more
Published 26 days ago by Arnita D. Brown

5.0 out of 5 stars "You've Got Mail" is superb!
I have always loved this film since the first time I saw it as a child. Getting the deluxe edition was a good choice for me because of the extra features, especially when they... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Aubrey Carson

5.0 out of 5 stars Happy with my purchase
I was very happy with the quickness of the delivery of this order. The dvd was in the condition stated and it arrived promptly. I am very satisfied with the product and service.
Published 1 month ago by Kari Thomas

4.0 out of 5 stars You've got mail
The procduct was no doubt great, just what I expected; however the delivery time is a different story. It took over a month to receive it. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Liliana Bharwani

4.0 out of 5 stars Funny romantic comedy has heart.
I don't exactly know why, maybe it's the chemistry between Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan, but I really like this movie. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Cean Colcord

5.0 out of 5 stars Still a Good Flick
I received my order promptly and in good condition. I've watched the movie several times flawlessly. I would buy again from this seller.
Published 3 months ago by Dennis E. Everett

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