SwapaDVD logo
 
 

Search - Peaches on DVD


Peaches
Peaches
Actors: Hugo Weaving, Jacqueline McKenzie, Emma Lung, Matthew Le Nevez, Sam Healy
Director: Craig Monahan
Genres: Drama
UR     2006     1hr 49min

Steph embarks on an emotional journey to uncover her familys past with her mothers diary & a forbidden love affair with a much older man as her only guide. Studio: Image Entertainment Release Date: 03/06/2007 Starri...  more »

     
3

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actors: Hugo Weaving, Jacqueline McKenzie, Emma Lung, Matthew Le Nevez, Sam Healy
Director: Craig Monahan
Creators: Craig Monahan, Don Reynolds, Judith McCann, Margot McDonald, Nicolas Stiliadis, Roslyn Walker, Sue Smith
Genres: Drama
Sub-Genres: Drama
Studio: Image Entertainment
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen
DVD Release Date: 07/18/2006
Original Release Date: 01/01/2004
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2004
Release Year: 2006
Run Time: 1hr 49min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 4
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: English

Similar Movies

Proof
Director: Jocelyn Moorhouse
   R   2004   1hr 26min
Little Fish
Director: Rowan Woods
   R   2006   1hr 54min
After the Deluge
Director: Brendan Maher
3
   UR   2004   1hr 43min

Similarly Requested DVDs

Diary of a Mad Black Woman
Widescreen Edition
   PG-13   2005   1hr 56min
   
Junebug
Director: Phil Morrison
   R   2006   1hr 46min
   
Smother
Director: Vince Di Meglio
   PG-13   2009   1hr 32min
   
Precious Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire
Director: Lee Daniels
   R   2010   1hr 49min
   
The Next Three Days
Director: Paul Haggis
   PG-13   2011   2hr 2min
   
Love's Abiding Joy
Director: Michael Landon Jr.
   PG   2007   1hr 27min
   
Things We Lost in the Fire
Director: Susanne Bier
   R   2008   1hr 58min
   
Bride Wars
   PG   2009   1hr 29min
   
Duplicity
Director: Tony Gilroy
   PG-13   2009   2hr 5min
   
 

Movie Reviews

An Opposing Viewpoint...In Favor of This Film
Crowjane29 | New England, USA | 12/17/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"No one should take either of the other two reviews presetly posted for this DVD seriously. Both betray a certain level of political correctness run amuck and failure to understand what this film is trying to achieve. Peaches is a beautifully realised character drama filled with deeply affecting performances. I'm a fairly cynical person, and fairly intolerant of film cliches...though the film vaguely covers territory a few other films touching on some of Peaches' themes cover, I didn't find it cliched or overstated, and I know many people agree with me...they just don't feel a particular need to validate their opinions through blowzy Amazon reviews.



Both other reviewers' snarky descriptions (one filled with laughable pseudoacademic jargon) of the romantic subplot in the film betray their real issue with the film, namely that they disapprove of the onscreen sexuality and of the age disparity of the characters involved. (Perhaps if George Clooney had played Alan there wouldn't have been so much whining on this general subject.) Plenty of viewers I've talked to have had no problem finding Steph's desires, or her frustration at growing up in a town with no perceived future, plausible. It's refreshing that any film these days can address this sort of sexuality without judgment or a presumption of female victimhood. Yes, the affair is doomed to fail, but one understands why these characters were drawn to one another, and what they gained from the experience. (Also, no matter how much you hate any film, posting major plot spoilers is tasteless and crass.)



Nor are are the script or performances melodramatic--in fact they're admirably restrained, and Weaving and MacKenzie do a great job of playing characters across two decades. Compared to much of what passes for character study in mainstream American films, Peaches is a revelation in its depth and lack of hand-wringing over its characters. It's not quite as astonishing as Craig Monahan's first film, The Interview, and not for all tastes, but deserves to be seen more widely than it has been, and deserves a break from the snide mischaracterizations of some reviewers who prefer opacity or imposed moral platitudes."