As soon as it hit the video rental stores, my college friends and I rented it. And then rented it again. Because I was a poor college student, buying a movie on VHS as soon as it got released was like the ultimate honor I could pay to it. And this was one of those rare movies I just had to buy right away and have as my very own to watch whenever I wanted to, and who cares if it cost more than it would in a few months.
Of course, this was back when a movie finally was available to buy on VHS several months after it was available to rent (and it arrived at the rental shops six months or so after it was in the theater -- this is how we learned patience). So we'd been able to rent it quite a few times before I was able to own my own copy.
My roommates and I proceeded to watch my copy over and over and over. Friends frequently borrowed it. One friend had to buy her own copy at the end of the school year so she could watch it.
And why were we so obsessed with You've Got Mail?
We were all young women in our late teens or early twenties, and most of us were hoping to meet a nice guy at college and fall in love and get married. And I think that was a huge part of this movie's appeal: Tom Hanks can play really nice guys. Approachable guys. Guys who don't seem like they're out of the realm of possibility for an average girl to get together with. My friends and I were realistic about our chances of attracting a guy who looked like Tom Cruise or Brad Pitt (never happening), but Tom Hanks was just enough of an average joe that we would have a chance with him.
And who doesn't want to have someone fall in love with who you really are? Someone you can share your most whimsical, quirky, oddball, funky thoughts with? Someone who takes the time to understand you?
That's what You've Got Mail is all about.
And, for book nerds like me, all the bookish goodness was a total perk.
Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) runs a children's book store in New York City called Shop Around the Corner. She's warm and bubbly and quirky and feisty and complicated. She's been online pen pals with a stranger for months. They met in a chat room, bonded over loving NYC, and started exchanging their thoughts on various subjects, just for fun.
Kathleen's livelihood is threatened by the impending opening of a Fox Books mega bookstore nearby. Her boyfriend, an opinionated newspaper columnist (Greg Kinnear), helps her organize a protest campaign to block the "big box" Fox Books from opening and ruining the indie-stores-only vibe of the neighborhood.
Joe Fox (Tom Hanks) is the third-generation businessman running the family company, Fox Books. He's snarky and witty and sharp and kind and complicated. And about halfway through the movie, he discovers that the awful woman who is throwing roadblocks in his bookstore's way and mocking him in public and generally being a pain in his neck... is also the lovely woman he's been corresponding with for months and might be falling in love with.
And then things get complicated :-)
You've Got Mail is a remake of The Shop Around the Corner (1940). And I like it better than the original, mostly because both Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks are playing such approachable, nice people. The main characters in The Shop Around the Corner are both... kind of unlikeable. I know one of them is played by Jimmy Stewart, but this is cranky Jimmy Stewart, not cuddly Jimmy Stewart. I enjoy the movie, but I just don't love it like I love You've Got Mail.
Is this movie family friendly? Um, fine for older teens? Tom Hanks's character is living with his girlfriend. A minor female side character leaves her husband for a woman. There's some mild cussing and innuendo in dialog. No violence, no nekkid people, not bedroom scenes.
This has been my contribution to the Film. Release. Repeat. Blogathon hosted by myself and The Midnite Drive-In all weekend!




Nice review, Hamlette! I've also reviewed 'You've Got Mail' and remember how great the set design was for both bookstores!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sally! It's really kind of a nostalgia trip to watch now, remembering how shops and fashions looked in the late '90s.
DeleteOne of my favourite films. Like you, I also much prefer it to the original. Love the opening shot where they're on their way to work and keep crossing paths with one another.
ReplyDeleteI think it has just the right mix of romance, comedy and poignant moments.
Maddy
Maddy, it really holds up so well. And that opener is so good because it works the first time you see it... but WAY better the next time. Good filmmaking. And you're right, the script is amazingly balanced.
DeleteMaybe one day soon I'll break down and watch this... Not a fan of romantic movies, but I id like Meg Ryan back in her (and my) younger days.
ReplyDeleteQuiggy, if it helps, this isn't sugary. It's sweet, but a wholesome sweet like apples and pears, not pixie stix. My dad thought it was super funny.
DeleteI still haven't seen this one (though I have watched Sleepless in Seattle!) I ought to check it out. Fun review!
ReplyDeleteKatie, oh, I think this is head and shoulders above Sleepless in Seattle. In basically every way. I hope you can see it, and enjoy it!
DeleteI did sob at this one, and I loved your personal story.. thanks for another great blogathon.
ReplyDeleteGill, awww, yeah, it definitely can tug at the heartstrings!
DeleteGlad you had fun :-)
This movie! <3 I often say that I'm not a "young Tom Hanks" fan, as while I love his later works like Cast Away and Saving Mr. Banks, I tend to not like the earlier work like Splash and Sleepless in Seattle. This, however, breaks the pattern as it is one of my favorite rom-coms ever! The scene where she's recommending Ballet Shoes always gets me. </3
ReplyDeleteChloe, I tend to prefer Tom Hanks from about 1995 forward, myself. In his earlier movies, he's kind of too goofy and manic.
DeleteI had never heard of Noel Streatfeild before I saw this movie!
Can't believe I've never seen this one, although I have seen The Shop Around the Corner and In the Good Old Summertime many times. Now I finally have to see Meg and Tom in this one--they were great together in Sleepless in Seattle. Thanks for hosting the blogathon!
ReplyDelete-Chris
Chris, definitely watch this one sometime when you want to sort of wrap yourself in a blanket of nostalgia for the 1990s. Even if you haven't seen it before, it will probably feel very homey!
DeleteThanks for joining the blogathon -- it was a fun one :-)
I love this movie, and I like it so much more than The Shop Around the Corner. (Margaret Sullivan in the original movie just doesn't do it for me.) I was so enchanted by your review, I've dug out my DVD of You've Got Mail & plan to watch it again (for the umpteenth time) very soon.
ReplyDeleteYeah, Margaret Sullavan's character is just kind of... shrill? Strident? Not someone I'd want to be friends with, anyway. Unlike Kathleen Kelly ;-) Enjoy your rewatch!!!
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