|  |     HAH!! I'll respond to my own note!!....we saw "Beautiful Girls" last
    Friday and loved it.  
    The main characters are 4 men in their early 30's who don't want 
    to grow up and their cavalier attitudes about women. Terrific performances
    by the entire cast (only 3 I can name right now are Rosie Odomnell(sp?),Tim
    Hutton, and Matt Dillon).  
    
    The movie is kind of a guys movie in that it follows 4 friends lives,
    for a few days, living in a small town in the 60's. It provides a 
    glimpse into what they are looking for in their lives and 
    relationships...lots of humor, some 4 "letterers" but overall I'd even
    call it a lovely movie.  (some lessons learned, some values changed; that 
    sort of thing) 
   
    I think the more past 30 you are, the more you'll enjoy the movie.  A
    friends daughter in her late 20's didn't appreciate it as much because
    she hasn't entirely lived thru that period in her life.
    
    That's all from me for now!
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|  |     
    Also could be subtitled, "You Can Take The Boy Out Of The High
    School, But..."
    
    Possible spoiler...
    
    
    Good flick, and good performances all around, especially by Lauren
    Holley and Matt Dillon, whose affair makes you feel cheap just
    watching it.  The wintry New England scenery is beautiful, Uma Thurman
    is radiant, and Rosie O'Donnell is actually _funny_, which is a
    first -- for me, anyway.  Three stars (out of four).  
    
    Bill
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|  | 	I most definitly agree with the previous replies, this is
	a good movie.  A few corrections though to .1, the characters
	(at least the one going to their 10th high school reunion)
	are in their mid/late 20's, not 30-something.  Also I got
	the impression that this was not set in the 1960's (based
	on the automobiles it's at least 80's or 90's, and the
	issue of Penthouse Rosie's character flips through open
	to the camera).
	The actors that got front of the video box billing are:
	Matt Dillan, Lauren Holly, Timothy Hutton, Rosie O'Donnell,
	Natalie Portman, Michael Rapaport, Mira Sorvino, and Uma Thurman.
	As a previous reply said, this movie is really about the
	male characters in this film.  Sadly that resulted in
	the women, especially my favorite, Mira Sorvino, not getting
	much screen time (who looks pretty good in her underwear,
	or anything for that matter).
	Also regarding the previous comments about the good performance
	by the young actress who played the next door neighbor Marty
	(named after a Grandfather she never knew), I remember Siskel &
	Ebert when they reviewed this film when it first came out, also
	praised her performance.  It was kind of a strange relationship
	there for a bit between her character and Tim Hutton's character,
	maybe some Woody Allen influence there ....
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