Tangled

DVD : Tangled

Tangled

starring: Rachael Leigh Cook, Shawn Hatosy, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Estella Warren, Lorraine Bracco
directed by: Jay Lowi



 : Tangled
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Brand: COOK,RACHAEL LEIGH
EAN: 0786936204209
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Dimension Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: Dimension Home Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Dimension Home Entertainment
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2003-01-14
Studio: Dimension Home Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: 2002



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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great acting, great plot, great movie

It's definitely a must-see. Very climatic, mysterious thriller/love story which will leave you fascinated long after watching.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Love Triangle Thriller
Tangled is a smart and edgy thriller with a talented young cast.
A college student, David (Shawn Hatosy),wakes in a hospital bed to tries to recall the events leading to his severe injuries to a detective (Lorraine Bracco) who is investigating the disappearance of David's girlfriend Jenny (Rachael Leigh Cook). David's tells his story is told in flashbacks.
When Estranged best friends david and Alan (Jonathan Rhys Meyers)meet again they end up fighting for the affections of david's crush jenny. The mysterious Alan wins her heart but soon his love for jenny becomes a obsession David must help her threw Alan's dangerous behavior but still also still tries to help Alan. But than things goes terribly wrong.
This movie is exciting hip,edgy,sexy thriller you get sucked into the plot as the truth is revealed you see the truth behind the obsession.
I give this **** four Stars



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Not Good: Very Weak and Inept as Love Story or as Thriller
Though I like Rachel Leigh Cook, and like her turn as a sulky (but really sweet) girl in 'She's All That,' and love to see her in anywhere you name it, 'Tangled' is a wrong choice. As a thriller, it is not intriguing; as a love story, it is too familiar. And the story is, as the film says, too tangled to take it seriously.

It is about a love-triangle that got tangled -- David (Shawn Hatsey), Alan (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers) and Jenny (Rachel Leigh Cook), all juniors at a college. Jenny and David are seeing each other when Alan, handsome and reckless, steps into their college life out of the blue. Quiet boy David (who studies poetry) and Alan were in fact friends when much younger, but because of some incidents in the past, their relations was an awkward one. And because of Jenny's ambiguous attitudes to Alan, and Alan's seductive attitudes to Jenny, things get more complicated, and more dangerous.

That's what the opening of the film implies, by the choppy shots of flashbacks. The film follows the memories of David, who, now hospitalized after some (still unknown) terrible accident, recounts his story before the investigator Lorraine Bracco. So, here, the film also tries to give a twist to the otherwise mundane story, using flashbacks that slowly reveals the key events in the past.

The original intention is good, and there is a decent film buried behind the film (which I am afraid no one in English-speaking coutries have seen in theater). There are some good shots that suggest the emotional tense between the characters. And Rachel Leigh Cook is as sweet as before, and sexy at times.

But, unbelievably, the film takes almost one hour to explain the relations between the three, which is not particularly original. And after that, it drifts into the revelation of the facts, in the style that faintly resembles 'Rashomon.' But what can you do in thirty minutes with that format when you need more time to present the shifting viewpoints that challenge our perception of reality?

My overall reaction to 'Tangled' was like -- What happened to RLC? She is as busy as before, as far as I can see her filmography on internet, but living in Japan, I hear about less and less. Please, no more this, or 'Get Carter' or 'Anti-Trust.'

By the way, Estella Warren appears, but her role is very small, and her turn is not very outstanding. Sorry.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - COMPLEX
TANGLED IS ACTUALLY A REALLY GOOD MOVIE. YOU HAVE TO PAY ATTENTION OR YOU'LL GET LOST IN THE PLOT BUT OTHER THAN THAT IT WAS A GREAT MOVIE.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Mediocre College Love Triangle Thriller
I really like Shawn Hatosy, so I really wanted to like this movie; unfortunately, I was very disappointed. In essence, "Tangled" is yet another college love triangle. David (Shawn Hatosy) is in love with his best friend, Jen (Rachael Leigh Cook), but she falls for one of David's friends, Alan (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers). David is the protypical "nice" guy, who Jen considers to be just a friend. David's jealousy flairs when she falls for Alan, who may be just a touch insane. The story is told in flash-back after David is found beaten in the woods. The movie tells of the beginnings of these relationships, as well as the inevitable disintegration.

On the plus side, Shawn Hatosy is solid in the lead and likeable. The movie also features some good music and decent cinematography. Unfortunately, Rachael Leigh Cook comes across as a vapid ditz, and Jonathan Rhys-Meyers engages in some serious scenery-chewing (as does Lorraine Bracco, slumming from the "Sopranos"). The plot is not particularly believable and tries too hard to have a supposedly "shocking" resolution (which is pretty predictable). I also found that I didn't even remotely care about the characters or what happened to them. Recommended only for fans of Shawn Hatosy and/or tepid romance thrillers.



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For years, architects have gone to great lengths to protect their buildings from marauding skaters. But as aesthetic trends move toward folded planes that transition seamlessly from wall to ceiling and back to wall, designers have been looking to their former adversaries for a lesson in flow.

"We have this fascination with buildings becoming topography," says Alejandro Zaera-Polo, a partner at London's Foreign Office Architects, "and skateboarders have that physical experience." So for a park in Barcelona, his firm extended paving stones up the sides of small hills—to shield vegetation from salty sea breezes. At least that's what it told city officials. But skaters got the message. The resulting quarter-pipe landed on the March 2006 cover of Transworld Skateboarding.

Architect Zaha Hadid shares the love. She wanted her Phaeno Science Center in Germany to be an all-inclusive venue for pedestrians and skateboarders alike. Liability issues prevented skate-park designation—though you'd never guess it from the YouTube videos of pro skaters "visiting" the museum. "We design spaces that are flowing and continuous, and—just by coincidence—skateboarders look for that kind of continuity," Dillon Lin, an architect (and skater) at Hadid's firm, says with a wink.

And though the new Oslo Opera House (shown here) was inspired by the image of two glaciers colliding, the architects at Snøhetta didn't call on glaciologists to help fine-tune the details. They enlisted real experts in twisted planes: skateboarders. "We spoke to them about surface textures and the areas they prefer," architect Simon Ewings says. His firm followed up the conversation with a statement in stone.

Snøhetta used different finishes of marble to guide skaters looking for rideable surfaces. Acoustically sensitive parts, like above the auditorium, got rough marble that's unpleasant to wheel over. But other areas silently beckon skaters. Surfaces rise up all over the place to become ledges, curbs, and benches—like the jagged facets of a glacier (or skate park). One particularly tempting spot is a 3-foot-wide railing of smooth stone. Snøhetta architect Peter Dang is, ahem, absolutely sure it's skatable. "Just make sure to fall toward the inside," he advises.

Tricked Out

The new Oslo Opera House is much more than a temple to the vocal arts. It's a palace of thrash, with as many gnarly facets as the best skate parks. Here are some key features and suggested moves.

Stair Ledge =
50-50 Grind
Marble Bench =
Kick Flip
Sloped Plaza =
Bert Slide
Upper Level =
Acid Drop
Pedestrian Ramp =
Downhill Slalom
Walkway Balustrade =
Switch Crook

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Tangled

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