by Acorn Media
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 10576 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $37.99 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Alastair Reid |
| Release Date: | 2003-02-25 |
| Label: | Acorn Media |
| UPC: | 054961542499 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | Acorn Media |
| ASIN: | B00006BT1A |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
A funky apartment house in the freewheeling san francisco of the 1970s provides the backdrop for a story about a colorful cast of characters in search of love. Studio: Acorn Media Release Date: 02/25/2003 Starring: Olympia Dukakis Laura Linney Run time: 300 minutes
Amazon.com
"The City" in question is San Francisco, and the tales are novelist Armistead Maupin's, his romantic, affectionate, and spirited homage to the glory days of his hometown. Maupin's idea of SF's glory days isn't the drug-filled Summer of Love (1967), but rather the drug-filled lust-in of the late '70s. Replacing acid with coke and ludes, psychedelia for disco, this six-hour miniseries (which caused controversy for its open drug use, nudity, and direct depiction of homosexuality upon its initial airing on PBS) follows the romantic struggles and identity crises of a colorful cast of characters. The action--as addictive as the drugs the characters ingest--is seen mostly from the innocent point of view of Mary Ann, the city's newest culture-shocked resident--so its presentation is rather decadent and hedonistic. Because the story originally ran as a daily serial in the San Francisco Chronicle before being compiled into a novel, its serialized structure suffers from typical soap-opera mawkishness and the need to shock with ridiculous revelations. Thankfully, this degeneration mostly occurs during the final two hours, allowing you to just enjoy the personalities and hilarious and often-touching interactions of the richly drawn characters before they're manipulated by plot devices. The performances are all outstanding, especially Chloe Webb's spacey ex-hippie Mona, Marcus D'Amico's romantically doomed Michael, and Olympia Dukakis's Anna Madrigal, the enigmatic mother hen/landlady of many of the film's central characters. --Dave McCoy
Customer Reviews
Classic Gay life, coming of age, coming out and growing up! - Reviewed on 2008-09-18
This series, adapted from the book series, are a must see for all people, but particularly those coming to grip with their own (homo)sexuality. The film series captures the essence of the books very well and while altered slightly, and storylines mingle, they are a great watch and make you wish life could be simpler for us all. The books (film series) are engaging, heartwarming, thought provoking, full of interesting and allurring characters; some of which we see as pieces of ourselves some are our friends, neighbors, etc... You will find yourself aligning with a character or two right away (unless of course you are straight and you say 'who are these people?' no, just kidding, not to worry, there are a few of you in there too ;-)
Most anyone will find a way to resonate with Maupin and his cast of oddballs ;-) He has captured his audience for years in his writing and with the film adaptation of this ever popular series of books. ( There are 2 more sets 'More tales of the City,' and 'Further Tales...')
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Book Subjects
- Adult Humor
- Adult Language
- Adult Situations
- Bittersweet
- Bohemian Life
- Color
- Comedy Drama
- Comedy of Manners
- Drama
- Easygoing
- English
- Ensemble Film
- Feature
- Feature Film-drama
- Gay and Lesbian
- Gift Set
- Irreverent
- Looking For Love
- Love Triangles
- Movie