Product Details
One Special Night

One Special Night
Directed by Roger Young

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


20 new or used available from $4.39

Average customer review:

Product Description

Reunited for the first time since "Victor/Victoria," Academy Award winner Julie Andrews and Emmy Award winner James Garner portray two strangers who take refuge in a small cabin during a stormy winter night and, despite their differences, or because of them, they are undeniably drawn to one another in this holiday classic that demonstrates once again the charisma that has made them two of the world's most beloved stars.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1285 in DVD
  • Brand: MTI
  • Released on: 2002-11-26
  • Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 92 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
If the title It Happened One Night hadn't already been taken for Frank Capra's romantic comedy classic, it would've worked just as well for this holiday charmer. Catherine (Julie Andrews) is a widowed pediatric physician (with no children of her own) and Robert (James Garner) is a contractor with a wife suffering from Alzheimer's disease. Due to an accident of fate (a winter storm), they end up spending Thanksgiving together in an abandoned cabin, away from their family and friends. The two initially wary strangers soon find they have more in common than either could have anticipated. The subplot concerning Robert's adult daughters is fairly extraneous (and predictable) but doesn't distract from the tender relationship at the heart of this made-for-TV movie. Andrews and Garner have worked together before, in The Americanization of Emily and Victor/Victoria, and it shows in the chemistry generated by their sympathetic, believable performances. --Kathleen C. Fennessy


Customer Reviews

It's a special night with One Special Night...5
Julie Andrews and James Gardner are at their very best in this charming holiday tale of two lonely people finding their way to each other after the loss of their respective spouses to Alzheimer's and heart disease. Julie plays a fiesty surgeon who values her independence. James plays a construction foreman with a few old-fashioned notions about what women can/can't do, and the clash is inevitable! It's hilarious, sweet, and funny all at the same time. You'll LOVE watching this video and will surely want to add it to your personal collection. It's a classic for Julie Andrews fans!

Julie Andrews And A Touching Christmas Story; The Perfect Combination5
I only came across this beautiful little television movie a few months ago but after a viewing last week I can honestly say it's a pleasure to welcome Julie Andrews back in the kind of acting vehicle which suits her perfectly. Reteamed with veteran actor James Garner for the third time this pair of experienced movie pros work wonders with a touching and quite thought provoking story about loss in its many forms and how different people tend to handle it. Filmed in a chilly Montreal "One Special Night", takes us into the lives of two very different people who's lives have taken some unexpected turns for the worse and how during the lead up to the Christmas season these two individuals happen to find not only each other but also themselves at the same time. Romance between two older people hasn't been portrayed on screen as well in a long time and Julie Andrews and James Garner display that wonderful chemistry that they enjoyed together so well in their earlier teamings in "The Amercianization of Emily" and in "Victor/Victoria".

As the story opens we find these two individuals, Robert (James Garner) and Catherine (Julie Andrews), living and working in the same part of Montreal without knowing each other. Just as the Christmas season is getting underway Robert becomes stranded at the hospital after visiting his wife who is suffering from dementia and alzheimers due to a sudden heavy blizzard. Hospital worker Catherine impulsively offers him a lift home in her car and to say the pair immediately have a clash of wills is an understatement as they disagree on everything to do with life and people however the pair face an even worse dilemma when Catherine's car slides off the road and the pair become lost. After an amusing trip on a tractor the pair seek refuge in an unoccupied cabin and are forced to stay the night there as the blizzard increases in ferocity and communications have been cut. However after the initial antagonism the pair; so very different in every way, over the course of the evening find a great source of comfort in each others company as they talk about their families and their own lives and especially their partners, in Robert's case a terminally sick wife and in Catherine's case her deceased but much missed husband. After spending the evening in the cabin the pair are finally rescued in the morning by Robert's son in law and they make a date to meet in a week's time at a coffee house they both know. However the best laid plans often go astray and the day they are due to meet Robert's wife dies and Catherine believes he decided against further contact. It takes the approaching delivery of Robert's grandchild to finally reunite the pair just as Christmas begins when at the hospital Catherine finally discovers the real reason why Robert didn't arrive at the coffee house. All ends happily when the actual birth of the child at which Catherine is present cements the future relationship that this couple never expected to have happen to them at this supposedly "late" period of their lives

Despite the story of "One Special Night", being opened out with an examination of the family problems among the siblings of James Garner's character this film is very much a two character study from beginning to end. I often feel that because of her extraordinary musical talents and her huge string of successes in that area with classics like "Mary Poppins", and "The Sound of Music", Julie Andrews' dramatic abilities are often strangely overlooked. You only have to go back to the first collaboration between Julie and James Garner "The Americanisation of Emily", to see what she was capable of if given a strong dramatic role. Here in "One Special Night", she is again given a similiar opportunity to shine dramatically and as in her work in another earlier television movie she made with Ann Margaret titled "Our Sons", which dealt with the effects of A.I.D s on two families she proves what a superb dramatic actress she truly is. As the lonely Catherine still not dealing with her husband's passing she is both strong and vulnerable and is always very identifiable to anyone who has suffered a similar loss. Her chemistry with James Garner in "One Special Night", is vivid as always and it is a credit to these two gifted performers that their three films together have all been so different in content and the demands they have placed on them as performers with both coming up trumps each time. James Garner gives I believe one of his finest recent performances and is on a par with his superlative work in the tragic television movie "Heartsounds", which he made with Mary Tyler Moore many years back. The screenplay despite dealing with a Christmas themed story never shirks from displaying real human emotion and the romance between Catherine and Robert is never a smooth sailing affair but is one that experiences numerous misunderstandings and crossed signals that do threaten to end the connection these two older people have made with each other. "One Special Night", abounds with many beautiful moments that will touch your heart, some standouts being Julie/Catherine's venture into the coffee shop to hopefully meet up again with Robert to enjoyed the establishment's famed chocolate chip pancakes only to miss Robert who is called to the hospital by his wife's deteriorating condition, and especially when Catherine arrives at the hospice to spend time in her late husband's room as she often does only to be told the room is now taken by a new patient indicating that life outside her little world is moving on. The look of this television film is also one of its very special qualities with the city of Montreal itself playing a big role in providing the type of chilling environment that is the vital crux for how these two people meet, spend time together, and gradually fall in love.

Veteran performers Julie Andrews and James Garner are just at the right age now to make this romantic story both touching and very believable. Both their characters in the screenplay are not perfect and to a certain extent are comfortable in their ways and routines when their characters unexpectedly meet. "One Special Night", is really your perfect Christmas story but it does go far beyond simply celebrating the festive season in it's story. It instead gives a detailed examination of human resilience in times of tragedy and through periods of loneliness. Certainly it celebrates the belief that opposites can attract and its strong message that love can unexpectedly find you at any age is a welcome relief in our present youth oriented society. Julie Andrews is always a delight on screen and teaming with pal and former co star James Garner the two make a memorable screen team yet again in role svery different to their previous collaborations. For the perfect Christmas story laced with romance and warm feeling you can't go past the touching "One Special Night". Enjoy!

A Blessing5
What I love about this movie is that it is so personal (although I shouldn't assume to know): the peanut butter by the bed, her harsh depiction of herself as a child, her description of painting and her love of trees, her beliefs in what men and woman actually are (human beings), her praying for another child and God's answer, the perception of her as "mascaline" stemming from her intelligence and strong will, her concern about how people perceive her, the Channel perfume. I thank her for her vulnerability.

A scene I find most moving is her berating herself in bed, at night, alone. Well, that and her at the hospital, listening to him say that he was at the restaurant and the looks crossing her face as her emotions fluctuate from surprise, to distrust, to disgust, and finally to that sadness which is uniquely hers. Constantly cheering people up may have its rewards, but one must imagine the loneliness.

She and Jim obviously enjoy each other very much making the banter between them perfect. This movie is a keeper which people, little and big, will enjoy. It makes a great holiday tradition.