RATING 4/10 BOTTOM LINE: Claiming to be a film about spiritual enlightenment, “Eat Pray Love” is anything but; despite some gorgeous scenery and images, the film is flat, boring, and long as we follow a self-indulgent woman around the world so she can find her inner peace. THE GOOD: Based on the novel by the same name, the film starts off in a good place by in essence starting with the idea of how to deal with finding one’s self in today’s world, particularly as a woman. Julia Roberts plays Elizabeth Gilbert, a woman who seemingly has it all, but she has no happiness or inner peace. After initiating a divorce from her husband, she dives in to a rebound relationship with a younger man, then goes on a trip to Italy, India and Bali for a year to re-discover herself and her senses. As a result of this voyage, numerous locales within the three countries she visits are shown off to great effect, and we get an insight in to the idea of a “fish out...
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Eat Pray Love

Sound (2)3.7 Plot (2)2.5 Cast (2)2.7 Special Effects (2)1.2 Length & Pace (2)2.4 Cinematography (2)4.4 |
Cast: Julia Roberts, Javier Bardem, James Franco, Billy Crudup, Richard jenkins, Viola Davis
Synopsis: While trying to get pregnant, a happily married woman realizes her life needs to go in a different direction, and after a painful divorce, she takes off on a round-the-world journey. Based on the memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert
Tagline: Let Yourself Go This August
Classification: PG-13 for language, sexuality , and rear male nudity
Release date: August 13th, 2010
Running time:
Language: English
Studio website: http://www.letyourselfgo.com/
Links: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0879870/
Categories: Drama
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Trailer


Eat Pray Love opened today. On the surface, it looks like a woman’s film about finding’s one balance, a search for happiness, and the eternal quest for self discovery. This is of course an internal journey, but in the film they’ve added in an actual amount of real physical travel. But going to some pretty interesting as well as visually attractive destinations like Italy, India, and Bali may help a viewer enjoy the film without necessarily giving the film any more depth. Directed by Ryan Murphy from the Elizabeth Gilbert book about her own journey to self-fulfillment, the film is sort of a search for all the new age answers in all the old if not familiar places. Emphasis on the old. The pretty visual postcards from the edges of Rome, the eternal city, an ashram in the heart of India, and the backwoodsy or jungle-esque tranquility of Bali are certainly memorable as well as beautiful. But even though we see Liz, played with her usual elan by Julia...
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