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Devil Wears Prada, The
Plazo | Por mes | costo de financiamiento | Total |
---|---|---|---|
24 meses | $15.52* | $107.98 | $372.64 |
18 meses | $19.18* | $80.72 | $345.38 |
12 meses | $26.86* | $57.70 | $322.36 |
9 meses | $34.34* | $44.46 | $309.12 |
6 meses | $49.53* | $32.55 | $297.21 |
3 meses | $95.19* | $20.91 | $285.57 |
DVD opciones adicionales | Edición | Discos | Precio de Amazon | Nuevo desde | Usado desde |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | $205.42 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | $264.66 | $264.66 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | Nuevo paquete | 1 | $233.78 | $216.16 |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 6 | $3,878.12 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 12 | $7,726.53 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 18 | $11,407.84 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 30 | $19,265.86 | — |
DVD
12 diciembre 2006 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 36 | $22,977.53 | — |
DVD
1 enero 2010 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | — |
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Formato | NTSC |
Idioma | Inglés, Francés |
Tiempo de ejecución | 1 hora y 49 minutos |
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Descripción del producto
Based on the hilarious best-selling novel, this sinfully funny movie starring Academy Award(r) winner Meryl Streep* and Anne Hathaway is "sensationally entertaining in every way" (maxim). As assistant to impossibly demanding New York fashion magazine editor Miranda Priestly (Streep), young Andy Sachs (Hathaway) has landed a job that "a million girls would die for." Unfortunately, her heaven-sent appointment as Miranda's personal whipping girl just might be the death of her!
Detalles del producto
- Producto descontinuado por el fabricante : No
- Idioma : Inglés, Francés
- Dimensiones del paquete : 18,03 x 13,76 x 1,48 cm; 90,72 g
- Formato de medios : NTSC
- Tiempo de ejecución : 1 hora y 49 minutos
- Fecha de lanzamiento : 12 diciembre 2006
- Doblados: : Español
- Subtítulos: : Inglés, Francés, Español
- Idioma : Unqualified (DTS ES 6.1), Inglés (Dolby Surround), Francés (Dolby Surround), Español (Dolby Surround)
- Estudio : FOX
- ASIN : B000J10GRC
- Número de discos : 1
- Opiniones de los clientes:
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Audio inglés español y francés
Subtítulo inglés español y portugués
Audio inglés español y francés
Subtítulo inglés español y portugués
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I used this flawed title for my review because for me it defines the pivotal moment in "The Devil Wears Prada" that establishes both the film's major strength and its ultimate flaw. Andy Sachs wants to be a journalist but ends up as the second assistant for Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep), editor in chief of "Runway" magazine (think of something beyond "Vogue") because maybe a smart "fat" girl can work where so many skinny well-dressed girls have not. Andy is fresh from the Midwest and has a level head on her shoulder, so she knows, as do we the audience, that Miranda and everybody else at "Runway" are pretentious, elitist snobs. Nigel (Stanley Tucci) is nice, but everybody else follows the lead of Emily (Emily Blunt) and treats Andy as somebody from another planet where nobody dresses well because they buy off the rack. Taking notes during a meeting that has descended to the question of which belt would be the proper accessory, Andy snickers. Miranda casts a withering stare at Andy and then proceeds to explain why the sweater Andy is wearing is a direct result of a similar decision made by the people in that room a few years earlier.
That is the point where Andy does the Kool-aid drinking, and it was the point at which this film version of the novel by Lauren Weisberger starts to get away from being totally predictable. When screenwriter Aline Brosh McKennna ("Laws of Attraction") and director Peter Howitt ("Sliding Doors") take the fashion business more seriously, which is to say when Andy starts to take it more seriously, "The Devil Wears Prada" gains considerably more weight. Everytime we get back to Andy's boy friend Nate (Adrian Grenier), best friend Lily (Tracie Thoms), and fourth wheel Doug (Rich Sommer), things are a lot less interesting than when she is at the office. Her job is clearly demanding and her friends take issue with the fact that it might possibly be considered rewarding. However, I was interested in the idea that Andy would find her niche rather than lose her soul working for Miranda. Unfortunately, in the end we get back to the predictable path the film laid out in the beginning and the mantra that no job is more important than family and/or friends. The problem is I do not accept that premise, thinking of plenty of jobs (e.g., teaching) that require you to put the job first (I think of Leo McCary in Season 1 of "The West Wing" telling his wife that the job he is doing is more important than his family at that point of time; Leo's wife left him, but I have always believed he was right).
The net result is that despite another great performance from Streep, Tucci having some fun, and what should be a breakout role for Blunt, "The Devil Wears Prada" ends up being nothing more than what it promised to be from the beginning. I might have liked this 2006 film more without my favorite scene, because at that point I was thinking the film was more ambitious than it turned out to be. I know that the film is probably just being faithful to how the novel ends, but I definitely liked the movie I thought they were making more than the one they were actually making. At the very least I would have liked to see them walk the tightrope a bit longer, so that the idea Miranda's world was worth living in could be maintained in the last half of the film. But the whole "Hell on Heels" bit proves too seductive and if Streep sets up another Oscar nomination by refusing to let her character descend into caricature, the same cannot be said by Hathaway's Andy and this anti-princess cautionary tale.