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Annie Hall (1977)

Starring
     Woody Allen and Diane Keaton
Director
     Woody Allen

Awards
     Academy Awards
          Best Actress - Diane Keaton
          Best Director - Woody Allen
          Best Picture
          Best Screenplay - Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman
     Academy Award Nominations
          Best Actor - Woody Allen

Plot Synopsis
     A neurotic New York Jew is set up with a midwestern woman. He's a stand-up comedian, she an aspiring singer, and at first the cultural gap seems insurmountable. But despite their differences, they fall in love. As they get to know one another, they invariably attempt to change each other, causing friction and their eventual split. The film watches them try new relationships, as they reluctantly pull away from each other.

Film Notes
     "Annie Hall is one of the truest, most bittersweet romances on film. In it, Woody Allen plays a thinly disguised version of himself: Alvy Singer, a successful, if neurotic, television comedian living in Manhattan. Annie (the wholesomely luminous Dianne Keaton) is a Midwestern transplant who dabbles in photography and sings in small clubs. When the two meet, the sparks are immediate, if repressed. Alone in her apartment for the first time, Alvy and Annie navigate a minefield of self-conscious "is-this-person-someone-I'd-want-to-get-involved-with?" conversation. As they speak, subtitles flash their unspoken thoughts: the likes of "I'm not smart enough for him" and "I sound like a jerk." Despite all their caution, they connect, and we're swept up in the flush of their new romance. Allen's antic sensibility shines here in a series of flashbacks to Alvy's childhood, growing up, quite literally, under a rumbling roller coaster. His boisterous Jewish family's dinner table shares a split screen with the WASP-y Hall's tight-lipped holiday table, one Alvy has joined for the first time. His position as outsider is uncontestable he looks down the table and sizes up Annie's "Grammy Hall" as "a classic Jew-hater."
     The relationship arcs, as does Annie's growing desire for independence. It quickly becomes clear that the two are on separate tracks, as what was once endearing becomes annoying. Annie Hall embraces Allen's central themes, his love affair with New York (and hatred of Los Angeles), how impossible relationships are, and his fear of death. But their balance is just right, the chemistry between Allen's worry-wart Alvy and Keaton's gangly, loopy Annie is one of the screen's best pairings. It couldn't be more engaging." (Susan Benson, Amazon.com )

VHS Rated: PG
Edition Details: 1977
• NTSC format
• Color, HiFi Sound
• Number of tapes: 1




Annie Hall $11.21
DVD Rated: PG
Edition Details: 1977
• Region 1 encoding
• Color, Closed-captioned, Digital Sound
• Theatrical trailer(s) and production notes
• Full-screen and widescreen letterbox formats
• Number of discs: 1
Annie Hall $17.49