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50 First Dates |  | Director: Peter Segal Actors: Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore, Rob Schneider, Sean Astin, Lusia Strus Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Category: Movie
Buy New: $5.99 as of 9/8/2010 15:17 CDT details

Seller: Amazon Video On Demand Rating: 332 reviews Sales Rank: 5313
Genre: Comedy Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Media: Video On Demand Running Time: 100 Minutes
ASIN: B00190L018
Theatrical Release Date: February 12, 2004 Release Date: May 6, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Synopsis:
Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore star together for the first time since The Wedding Singer in one ofthe funniest romantic comedies in years. Henry (Sandler) lives an enviable life in a Hawaiian paradise, spending every night with a beautiful tourist in search of an island fling. It's a sweet life with no strings attached...until he meets Lucy (Barrymore). He and Lucy hit it off from the get-go, but the next day she acts like she doesn't know him. Has his karma come around to kick him in the butt or what? Actually, Lucy has short-term memory loss so every night all memory of her day is erased. But a man in love will go to any lengths to win over the girl of his dreams, and if that means having to find imaginative ways of doing it over again every day, then Henry's up for the challenge. Rob Schneider (Big Daddy) and Sean Astin (The Lord of the Rings trilogy) co-star in 50 First Dates, which will win you over every time you watch it! |
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 332
It's Adam Sandler August 15, 2010 Geoff4rfc If you like Sandler movies, this is a great one. If you liked the wedding singer, you'll like this one too.
The blu-ray version is awesome, great definition and clarity of picture and the audio leaves nothing to be desired.
AMERICA'S CRITIC May 14, 2010 David R. Lingard (memphis tn) 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
I HATED THIS MOVIE TO THE FULLEST!!!!! ITS LIKE GROUNDHOG DAY ANOTHER I JUST CANT STAND!!!!,,, I WOULD NEVER RECCOMEND THIS MOVIE AS A MATTER OF FACT I DONT THINK ANY1 IS GOING TO REWATCH THIS MOVIE!!!!
"Forgetful Lucy... cracked your head like Gary Busey." April 25, 2010 H. Bala (Carson - hey, we have an IKEA store! - CA USA) 50 FIRST DATES is one of Adam Sandler's sweetest comedies and Drew Barrymore's presence has got a lot to do with that. The story is set in Hawaii, so plenty of those nice, evocative sunsets. Barrymore is Lucy Whitmore, a cheerful art teacher whose automobile accident severely damages her temporal lobe, this causing her to relive the same day over and over (think of it as a less wintry GROUNDHOG DAY). Blake Clark and Sean Astin are terrific as, respectively, her father and brother, who sacrifice their lives to play along, resetting things at the end of every damn night, so that Lucy's life is made as uncomplicated as possible. No surprises for Lucy, goes the mandate. She wakes up to the same day, which is her father's birthday. But what's fair, really? And how do you toe that moral line between easing a devastating trauma and outright living a lie?
In steps Henry Roth, womanizing feller and yet sympathetic. Henry is a marine-life vet working at an aquatic park which means we're privy to amusing animal shenanigans with the walrus and the dolphins and such. Adam Sandler plays Henry as quite likable and I even buy that he falls so hard for Lucy that he foregoes his lecherous, commitment-phobic ways. And what strikes a girl's fancy swifter than the notion of a guy having to win the same girl every day all over again. As for the tone of the film, it's not as much that Sandler's leaning for crude frat-boy humor is toned down as much as it's mitigated by an underpinning of warmth. And, really, put that down to Drew Barrymore. As in THE WEDDING SINGER, Sandler and the marvelously expressive Barrymore demonstrate an irresistible chemistry. These two make a fun, fun couple.
Thing is, I'm still the kind of guy who busts a gut at sophomoric gags. I think Rob Scneider is awesome as Ula, Henry's good-natured but pretty messed-up assistant; he provides plenty of the belly laughs. Surprisingly, Sean Astin, not exactly acclaimed for the funny, is hilarious as Lucy's roided-up brother. Throw in Sandler's sweet "Forgetful Lucy" song and a great surprise ending, and 50 FIRST DATES crosses off key items on the checklist: a head-turning premise; a terrific cast; a winning romance; a touch of heartbreak; a picturesque tropical setting; and laugh-out-loud humor. And then there's Ten Second Tom. And you thought Lucy's plight was horrible...
Charming March 27, 2010 D. J. Nardi (Washington, DC) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
50 First Dates is absolutely charming. Adam Sandler's girlfriend (Drew Barrymore) loses her short-term memory, so he must find a way to save their relationship when she doesn't remember it. Of course, it's totally unrealistic, but nonetheless heart-warming. This is a light-hearted movie and doesn't really get philosophical about amnesia and love, but it's good for a relaxing date movie.
The movie also has adorable penguins and walruses and other animals, which make great supporting characters. Rather than Adam Sandler seeking advice from wise old men, he asks the walruses - with bizarre consequences!
Cute, tender... but irritating! March 8, 2010 Robert Schmidt (Honolulu, HI USA) Henry Roth (Adam Sandler) is a womanizing veterinarian working on Oahu and preying on visiting tourists. Lucy Whitmore (Drew Barrymore) is a school teacher who suffered a traumatic head injury that results in her keeping her long-term memories prior to the accident, but wipes her short=term memories clean every 24 hours.
Roth falls for her, but finds himself having to get her to like him every day... 50+ first dates! Sandler and Barrymore demonstrate a mutual chemistry that makes you believe they like each other! And the secondary characters in this film, from Whitmore's father and steriod-using brother to
This is a cute romantic comedy, but Adam Sandler's crude banter got a bit tedious for a character supposed to be tender and supportive. This persona fits him perfectly in, say, Happy Gilmore. However, it is a leap to expect that a philander changes his lifestyle so abruptly. Ah, Hollywood! And there is a strangeness with the secondary characters in this film. Lucy Whitmore's father and steriod-using brother, as well as the employees at the cafe where Lucy goes every Sunday (and for Lucy, now every day is that Sunday)\) are so caring and protective of Lucy. Henry Roth's friends, however, are crude or... strange.
Still, it was a fun movie to watch, and the ending is surprising and upbeat.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 332
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