In an ordinary suburban house, on a lovely tree-lined street, in the middle of 1970s America, lived the five beautiful, dreamy Lisbon sisters, whose doomed fates indelibly marked the neighborhood boys who to this day continue to obsess over them.
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Please note this is a region 2 DVD and will require a region 2 (Europe) or region Free DVD Player in order to play. In 1970s suburbia lived the five beautiful Lisbon sisters, whose doomed fates indelibly marked the neighborhood boys. Therese, Mary, Bonnie, Lux and Cecilia were everything desired and unattainable due to their parents' strict household rules. From afar, the boys watched the girls, until they witnessed something that would shake their souls: angelic Cecilia plummeting from her bedroom window. In the wake of Cecilia's suicide, the Lisbons shut out the world. The boys no longer wanted to just watch the Lisbon girls; now they wanted to save them and, by extension, their own doomed youth and innocence. This is a story of love and repression, fantasy and terror, sex and death, memory and longing. Sofia Coppola makes a stunning directorial debut with this haunting story about the strange demise of five beautiful teenaged sisters. Theatrical Trailer Interactive Menu Scene Selection Actors James Woods, Kathleen Turner, Kirsten Dunst, Josh Hartnett, Scott Glenn, Michael Pare, Danny DeVito & Lee Kagan Director Sofia Coppola Certificate 15 years and over Year 1999 Screen Widescreen 1.66:1 Anamorphic Languages English - Dolby Digital (2.0) Stereo Subtitles English For The Hard Of Hearing Duration 1 hour and 33 minutes (approx)
The debut film from Sofia Coppola (daughter of 'Godfather' director Francis), 'The Virgin Suicides' tells the story of a group of teenage boys and their fascination with the Lisbon girls, five beautiful sisters, kept behind closed doors by an over-protective mother, who each eventually commit suicide. Using music by French popsters Air, a vivid recreation of 1970s suburban details, and Edward's Lachman's sun-drenched photography, Coppola's film bathes the tragic events it depicts in a magical, elegiac atmosphere.
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