Release Details

Title: Real Women Have Curves

Release Date: 09/06/2005

Label/Distributor: Warner Home Video

Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)

Retail Price: $14.96

Genre: Drama

Cast: America Ferrera, Lupe Ontiveros, Ingrid Oliu

Director: Patricia Cardoso

Running Time: 86

DVD Video Options: Color, Closed-captioned

DVD Audio Options: English, Dubbed

UPC Code: 026359297229

A $6 million box office theatrical run followed awards and acclaim at the Sundance Film Festival. Should Ana leave home, go to college and experience life? Or stay home, get married, and keep working in her sister's struggling garment factory? It may seem like an easy decision, but for 18 year-old Ana, every choice she makes this summer will change her life. Right now, she may be making clothes for less shapely women. But Ana is about to discover that real women take chances, have flaws, embrace life, and above all have curves!


Tipsheet Reviews
Video

Real Women Have Curves

DRAMA

Color, PG-13 (language, sexual situations, mature themes), 86 min. VHS rental, DVD $24.98

DVD: director/actors' commentary, additional scenes

Street: April 22, Prebook: April 1

First Run: L, Dec. 2002, $5.8 mil.

Cast: America Ferrera, Lupe Ontiveros (Chuck & Buck), Ingrid Oliu (Flatliners), George Lopez (Bread and Roses), Brian Sites (The Newman Shower)

Director: Patricia Cardoso

HBO/WARNER

Story Line: Ana (Ferrera), an intelligent Mexican-American from a working-class family, has the chance to be the first in her family to attend college. First, however, she must battle the traditional beliefs of her mother (Ontiveros), who would rather she work in a factory and get married.

Bottom Line: This charming coming-of-age tale won the audience award at Sundance last year, which says everything about its appeal to the general public. The inevitable comparison is to last year's blockbuster My Big Fat Greek Wedding, considering not only the titles, but also the subject matter of a young woman trying to walk the line between old cultural beliefs and modern life. However, whereas Wedding was a full--out comedy with plenty of laughs, Real Women is more melodramatic, tackling very serious subject matter such as women's self--esteem, the conflicts that arise in mother/daughter relationships and the financial struggles of a blue-collar family. Don't expect this film to reach the same numbers as Wedding, but it should do quite nicely on its own--which it deserves. Women everywhere will embrace its empowering message and be captivated by the very real Ferrera. Positioned correctly, the crossover appeal for the film, HBO Film's first theatrical release, is high. --Mayna Bergmann

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