Your Ad Here

Locale Selector - Click for default
| us | ca | uk | de | fr | jp |
ttStore Home
Show Featured Items
us Music

 Save the Last Dance (Special Collector's Edition)

Add to Amazon Shopping Cart
Buy from Amazon.com
Save the Last Dance (Special Collector's Edition)
Actor(s):

Julia Stiles,  Sean Patrick Thomas,  Kerry Washington,  Fredro Starr,  Terry Kinney


Director(s):

Thomas Carter (II)


Label: Paramount
Publisher(s):

Paramount


Studio: Paramount
Manufacturer: Paramount
Binding: DVD
Brand: Paramount
MPN: PARD119804D
Format(s): AC-3,  Collector's Edition,  Color,  Dolby,  DVD-Video,  Special Edition,  Subtitled,  Widescreen,  NTSC
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
List Price: $12.98
Our Price: $10.49
Availability: Usually ships in 7 to 10 days

Similar Items:


Save the Last Dance 2

Save the Last Dance 2

Step Up (Widescreen Edition)

Step Up (Widescreen Edition)

Center Stage (Special Edition)

Center Stage (Special Edition)

10 Things I Hate About You

10 Things I Hate About You

Honey (Widescreen Edition)

Honey (Widescreen Edition)

Take the Lead

Take the Lead

Coyote Ugly

Coyote Ugly

Dirty Dancing (20th Anniversary Edition)

Dirty Dancing (20th Anniversary Edition)

Love and Basketball (New Line Platinum Series)

Love and Basketball (New Line Platinum Series)

The Prince and Me (Widescreen Edition)

The Prince and Me (Widescreen Edition)


Editorial Reviews



Description


Sara (Julia Stiles) wants to be a ballerina, but her dreams are cut short by the sudden death of her mother. She moves in with her father (Terry Kinney), who she has not seen for a long time, in Chicago, mainly in the ghetto. She gets transferred to a new school where she is the only white girl there. Her life takes a turn for the better when she is friends with Chenille (Kerry Washington). Later, she falls in love with Chenille's brother, Derek (Sean Patrick Thomas).

Amazon.com


Save the Last Dance enjoyed a profitable release in early 2001, with box-office earnings that exceeded anyone's expectations. Its performance illustrates the staying power of a formulaic movie that avoids the pitfalls and clichés that would otherwise render it forgettable. Since there's nothing new here, you'll appreciate the original quirks in a character-based plot that's just around the corner from Flashdance, and just as familiar. Sara (Julia Stiles) gave up a promising ballet career when her mother was killed while rushing to attend her daughter's crucial audition to Juilliard; Sara blames herself for the accident, and at her new, mostly African American high school in Chicago, she's uncertain of her future.

Derek (Sean Patrick Thomas) has no such doubts; his own future is bright, and his attraction to Sara is immediate; they connect (predictably), and Sara's dormant funk emerges, with Derek's coaching, as she learns hip-hop dancing in a local club. Obligatory subplots are equally routine: Derek's sister (Kerry Washington) is a single mom struggling with her child's absentee father; Derek's best friend (Fredro Starr) feels trapped in his gangsta lifestyle; and Sara's once-estranged father (Terry Kinney) is doing his best to correct past mistakes. Within the confines of this standard follow-your-dream drama, director Thomas Carter capitalizes on a script that allows these characters to be real, intelligent, and thoughtful about their lives and their futures. It's obvious that Stiles's dancing was intercut with that of a professional double, but that illusion hardly matters when the rest of the movie's so earnestly positive and genuine. --Jeff Shannon


Customer Reviews

arrived quickly

Rating


Movie is a very good movie, send a good message to young adults. Very good acting.


Outstanding performance by Julia Stiles

Rating

I love to watch movies about gifted artists living out their dream. This was one of them, with struggle and twists and turns along the way. I loved the incorporation of hip-hop and the main character's "struggle" to fit into a mostly-black school.

There was some violence, but it was incorporated into a very good story line.


GAG!!! Full of Stereotypes!!! Just Plain Stupid!!! GAG!!!

Rating

I hate this movie with a passion. A blond girl moves to the ghetto and her black boyfriend helps her to regain courage to dance. OMG!!! Somebody save me. This movie was full of stereotypes. Stiles' best friend, a black teenage mother. The black females in the movie were either portrayed ghetto ready to fight girls or teenage mothers. It's very offensive. This was seriously a yawner, especially watching stiles trying to do the dances. The guy's acting was boring too. I couldn't believe his acting. yawn yawn yawn.


The Humble and the Haughty

Rating

On the surface, this is a movie about a poor white girl, who
uses black people, expropriating African American culture, to
get into Julliard's. But dig deeper, and you will find that
this movie is even shallower. She says to him, at one point,
"We spend more time defending our relationship than having
one." In other words, I know you like me, so just enjoy the
ride while I use you to get into Julliard's.


The choreography is spell-binding, and her dancing is amazing.
No, I have not seen many ballet performances, but if ballet
looked like her audition in this movie, would not ballet theatres
be packed? Must we, the "great unwashed" go to night clubs with
names like 'Platinum Fox' to catch a glimpse of this "ballet"?
Talented dancers like Sara, tend to get lured away to night clubs
with names like 'Platinum Fox', which pay more than "ballet
company". But Sara is not like that. In fact, she slips
a guy a twenty in order to get into a night club, to dance, for
free. She's a "Sister of Charity". Perhaps, "ballet company",
is a state of mind? Sara even dances in a yard, under a bridge:
Per chance, a "Julie yard", between two worlds.


Derek has faith in her, and her dad loves her. Together, they give
her hope. Tragically, though Derek has faith in his other friend,
his friend does not have somebody to give him love, support, and so
seeks other ways to "get respect". His friend gives up on living,
and Derek leaves him there, as he takes the subway to see Sara.
Bullets and ballet don't mix.


The poverty of the soul is far more horrific than a welfare check,
or the lack thereof. But instead of seeking spiritual riches, some
will settle, for respect, instead. But what they seek is respect
from others, rather than self-respect, as in that song, 'Respect
Yourself', which may also be a dance.


What Sara does on stage, is in stark contrast to what her dad does,
which is work, work so much, that he is rarely home. It is
sacrifice, it is love. He's not building a castle, he's just trying
to keep a dream alive. Trying to keep the eviction notice from
arriving. Trying to keep from drowning, in shallow waters.


Life without love is not living, but like a plant without water, is
dying. And so he sacrifices "jazz" for work, so that Sara might live.
He gives her what she needs, love. And it also happens to be the
strength whereby she might live (dance). What will it take to save
the last dance? Her life, at Julliard's. She seeks respect from
judges, but without that respect, would she still dance? Would she
still live? Her life, at "Julie Yards". Derek's friend is not able
to find self-respect, and so he tries to find respect from others,
and ends up being arrested: He "slips up", and is "taken down".


What will it take to save "the last dance"? Faith in a dream? Love?
Or a Hope that that dream is very real, and the poverty of a sofa-bed
is the illusion. Her room, poignantly, has no walls, stressing freedom
of movement. It's a sign. "You go, girl," in all directions. She's a
humble haughty.


In one scene, she looks down upon her foot which is bleeding, next to
an inviting bathtub. A hope of victory, and a fear of failure: They
are a contrast, the blood and the water. When you add up all those
minutes of performing on a stage, they may add up to a few days in
the life of a ballet dancer, compared to the years of training it
took to get there. Life is a temporal phenomenon. People build sand
castles, knowing they won't be around later. But stardust is real,
and eternal, even if you can't see it.


Pain is objective, whereas pleasure is subjective. What do you
delight in? Ballet? Or watching ballet? For one activity is less
painful than the other, but the other is where the magic happens.





EARTH SEA

Rating

EARTH SEA IS THE BEST BOOK I HAVE TO READ!:) I LIKE GED HE IS RELLY COOL BECUASE HE CAN DO MAGIC AND I RELLY LOVE A LOT!:) I BELVE THAT WIZARDS ARE NOT A MITH. MIRABAI


PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT SOME OF THE CONTENT THAT WE MAKE AVAILABLE TO YOU THROUGH THIS APPLICATION COMES FROM AMAZON WEB SERVICES. ALL SUCH CONTENT IS PROVIDED TO YOU "AS IS." THIS CONTENT AND YOUR USE OF IT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND/OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
Powered by PNAmazon © 2003-2007 ttgapers.com