Dear Friends. We Updated Our Site Looks and Its Features.!

P.S. I Love You (2007)

P.S. I Love You backdrop
P.S. I Love You
Movie P.S. I Love You (2007)
Real Title P.S. I Love You
Rating 7.2
Aired 2007-11-15
Duration 126 Min
Languages ENGLISH
Quality Bluray
Subtitle English Subs
Sources IMDB | TMDB

Countries

United States of America

Genres

Drama, Romance, Hollywood Movies, English Movies

Companies

Wendy Finerman Productions, Alcon Entertainment, Warner Bros. Pictures, Grosvenor Park Films LLP, Summit Entertainment

Stars

Hilary Swank, Gerard Butler, Lisa Kudrow, Harry Connick Jr., Gina Gershon, Jeffrey Dean Morgan

Directors

Richard LaGravenese

Writers

Richard LaGravenese, Steven Rogers

Taglines

Taglines: His life ended. Now, a new one will begin.

Tags

dying and death, loss of loved one, job-hopping, letter, ireland

Description

A young widow discovers that her late husband has left her 10 messages intended to help ease her pain and start a new life.

Reviews

Reviews:

Author: Geronimo1967
Scots-born Gerard Butler ("Gerry") sports an American accent and comes from Ireland so maybe this isn't going to be the most plausible rom-com? He has a fiery but loving relationship with his wife "Holly" (Hilary Swank) who can't decide if she wants kids or not. Sadly, his active role in the film is cut short and she is left to deal with the consequences of widowhood. She's not alone on her new journey, though. "Gerry" had anticipated her predicament and left some letters to help her get through the grief and set off on a new path - however reluctantly she might want one. At first it's a cake for her birthday then as more arrive we start to appreciate more about how they met and fell in love. Some disastrous karaoke, temper tantrums and his downright hostile relationship with her mother "Patricia" (Kathy Bates). A trip to Ireland helps her to recalibrate though, and a meeting with local musician "William" (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) makes he realise that her life has plenty of legs in it yet. At home, lifelong friend "Daniel" (Harry Connick Jr.) presses his suit and makes her think even more about her future. Can she find love again? Connick is on decent form as is Bates, but the remainder of this is just a bit too sentimental for mea and the humour doesn't land often enough. There's little by way of chemistry on display and though the letter-writing concept is quite original, the execution becomes just a bit too episodic and Butler tries too hard to make this work. It's perfectly watchable, but is too workmanlike to be memorable.

P.S. I Love You in Multiple Formats