Product Details
Under the Tuscan Sun (Widescreen Edition)

Under the Tuscan Sun (Widescreen Edition)
Directed by Audrey Wells

List Price: $14.99
Price: $10.49 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

104 new or used available from $2.69

Average customer review:
Based on the book, but a little more entertaining, she lives the new American dream: come to Italy, buy a house, and fall in love

Product Description

From the studio that brought you SWEET HOME ALABAMA comes the extraordinary romantic comedy starring Academy Award(R) nominee Diane Lane (2002 Best Actress, UNFAITHFUL). Based on the #1 New York Times best-selling book, UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN follows San Francisco writer Frances Mayes (Lane) to Italy as a good friend offers her a special gift -- 10 days in Tuscany. Once there, she is captivated by its beauty and warmth, and impulsively buys an aging, but very charming, villa. Fully embracing new friends and local color, she finds herself immersed in a life-changing adventure filled with enough unexpected surprises, laughter, friendship, and romance to restore her new home -- and her belief in second chances.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1935 in DVD
  • Brand: BUENA VISTA HOME VIDEO
  • Released on: 2004-02-03
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 113 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Though she made her first movie at the age of 13, Diane Lane has only blossomed into a true star in her 30s, and Under the Tuscan Sun marks her full flowering. After a brutal divorce, Frances (Lane, Unfaithful, A Walk on the Moon) is persuaded by her friend Patti (Sandra Oh) to take a tour of Italy--where, on a whim that she hopes will rescue her from her desperate unhappiness, she buys a rundown villa and sets out to renovate it. Along the way, she gets advice from a former Fellini actress, meets a scrumptious Italian lover, and helps support Patti after her own relationship derails. The conclusion of Under the Tuscan Sun holds no surprises, but the deft turns and observations along the way are delightful. Lane carries the film effortlessly but surely, exuding both heartbreak and re-awakening passion. --Bret Fetzer

From The New Yorker
A soft-core renovation fantasy for educated women. Frances (Diane Lane), a San Francisco writer and teacher dumped by her adulterous husband, goes on a bus tour of Tuscany and falls in love with a crumbling old villa. After many blissfully undramatic episodes-an ancient wall falls down, a toilet mysteriously emits boiling water-the house gets scraped, plastered, painted, and gardened back into shape. It's Frances's life, of course, that really needs work. Luckily, in Rome, she finds Marcello (Raoul Bova)-yard-wide shoulders, blue eyes, all of Italian manhood in a white suit-and drives off with him in his Alfa Romeo convertible. There's a lot more of this sort of harmless, pleasant, inconsequential stuff, with much of it redeemed by the good humor of the writer-director Audrey Wells, who serves up clichés and makes fun of them at the same time. With Sandra Oh as a sharp-tongued Bay Area lesbian friend of Frances's who arrives in Tuscany to have a baby. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

The best chick flick in a long time!5
I am peturbed that Amazon would spotlight two bad reviews. This was an awesome movie that kept me watching it from beginning to end. I haven't read the book, but after watching that movie, I do intend to. It's amazing how uplifting this spirited movie was. Diane Lane was supurb without coming across as trying too much. We never get to see her husband "Tom" who screwed her over royally in the divorce, which I think was a good decision. The movie stays in the present looking ahead to the future with a sense of hope and promise. Pick up this movie for an excellent movie night - even if you're not a chick!

Loved and Beloved by All4
What starts out as an Italian "Money Pit" with all the attendant broken pipes, crumbling walls and incompetent handymen makes a turn for the better about a third of the way through: a more emotionally centered and revealing movie,"Under the Tuscan Sun."
The luminescent Diane Lane stars as Frances, an intelligent, loving women with close and committed friends who finds herself in a situation that many people do: with a mate who has fallen out of love, wants a divorce as well as possession of a much loved and painstakingly renovated house, this one in San Francisco. After the divorce Frances goes to Tuscany on a lark, falls in love with a villa there, buys it and proceeds to renovate it. The villa then is the physical manifestation of the shedding of her old life and marriage and the hope for the renovation and rehabilitation of her love life as well as her life in general.
That she probably places too much faith in the physical to solve the emotional does not detract at all from the guts and hope that it takes to do so. And Lane is so psychically centered and open as Frances that you cannot help but be moved by her situation.
There are some silly plot lines and performances that I wish weren't, but with a central performance as attractive and genuinely loving and feminine as Lane's, "Under The Tuscan Sun" is as warm and inviting as bread just out of the oven.

Come for Diane Lane. Stay for a cute movie.3
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2003 (SNEAK PREVIEW)--After her amazing, Oscar-nominated turn in "Unfaithful," I was hoping that the Hollywood system would give Diane Lane a chance at real stardom, and it has arrived with "Under The Tuscan Sun." A perfect star vehicle, the film is laid-back and charmingly funny, and it casts Lane as something believable: a near-40 writer going through a midlife crisis after her divorce. It's nice to see that studios can finally find a decent place for her after dumping her into the shoes of far too many ill-fitting characters: an abused, drug-addled wife in the horrible "Glass House," a secret-service agent (!) in the "thriller" "Murder At 1600," and many more forgettable fictional ciphers. Now, Lane's first true chance at leading role stardom has arrived, and it's about darn time. The story finds author Frances Mayes (Lane) taking an impromptu trip to Tuscany, where she buys an old, run-down house on impulse, and, after her relocation there is finalized, she begins to meet a colorful array of characters, including her strange Polish handymen (who help rebuild the house), her pleasant Italian neighbors, and a strange, older white woman (Lindsay Duncan) who becomes her guide. While this woman, Katherine, may seem like an odd character at first, her place in the story is a necessity. Subconsciously, Frances sees in Katherine a deep happiness that has come with surviving life in a foreign country for so long and therefore believes she must have all the secrets to doing so. Of course, as Frances learns, making it in Italy is something she's going to have to figure out for herself. While I did quite enjoy this movie, and its house-repairing metaphor for life-rebuilding, I'm sad to say it's far from perfect. While appreciably warm, it does tend towards sap at times, most egregiously in the subplot involving two young lovebirds straight out of the worst `70s romances. Also, things can be slow at times, and while there are plenty of laughs, you won't find yourself doubled over in hysterics at any point. Still, I would certainly recommend the film to anyone. It's fun and lighthearted, and Diane Lane is pitch-perfect, hitting every comic moment and dramatic footnote with amazing skill and accuracy. As well, watch out for Sandra Oh as Frances' best friend Patti, a strong-willed, pregnant lesbian with perfect comic timing.