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Frances, a 35-year-old writer just got divorced after her husband confessed to have an affair. With the offer of her best friend, Frances joins a tour of Tuscany in order to escape reality and recover herself. She decides to buy a villa in Tuscany countryside and start a new life here. On the way to accomplish the villa, Frances again finds the joy of life and fulfill her dream of a new love.
... some of the most beautiful photography in any film I've seen this year.
September 29, 2003
Combustible Celluloid
Offers Americans the ultimate fantasy vacation. It's a beautiful, sunny, fresh air trip to Europe without the jet lag, language problems, money problems, or any other trivialities.
"Under the Tuscan Sun" is an amiable film that, in the tradition of escapist fiction, provides a nice, scenic getaway with just enough drama to keep the story from getting stagnant.
a romantic abomination wherein the main character's best friend is a pregnant Asian lesbian who comes to Italy to visit and ends up ruining the story's only semi-romantic aspect, and extends its painful length for an extra half-hour in the process.
It is a glorious refreshment to spend time with characters who aren't twenty-something eye bait, someone's virtuous, whiny wife or other reductive archetypes.
September 26, 2003
Slate
The movie is sweet but deeply suspect: It's like Lost Horizon re-imagined by a realtor.
Under the Tuscan Sun pretends to be juicy, but it doesn't allow any dribbles. It purports to make love all over us, but not without laying down lots of paper towels first.