Dear John

Channing Tatum  Actor Amanda Seyfried  Actor Richard Jenkins  Actor Henry Thomas  Actor D.J. Cotrona  Actor

PG13

MPAA Rating: PG13
Contains:Violence,Sexual Situations

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Dear John

Theatrical Release Date: 2010 02 05 (USA)

UPC: 043396343443

Studio: Sony Pictures

MPAA Rating: PG13   Contains:[Violence, Sexual Situations]

Summary: Director Lasse Hallstr?m and screenwriter Jamie Linden collaborate to adapt author Nicholas Sparks' novel about a young soldier who falls for an idealistic college girl. Savannah Curtis (Amanda Seyfried) was on spring break when she first met John Tyree (Channing Tatum), who was home on temporary leave. For the smitten soldier it was practically love at first sight. Over the course of the next seven years, when each deployment seemed more treacherous than the last, the love letters that Savannah sent to John were one of the only things that kept him going. However, those loving and heartfelt correspondences would ultimately yield consequences that neither the brave soldier nor his one true love could have ever foreseen. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Category: Drama

Features: Alternate ending
Outtakes
Deleted and alternate scenes
A conversation with Channing Tatum, Amanda Seyfried, and Lasse Hallstr?m

Dear John

Format: DVD

Release Date: 05/25/2010

Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 2.40:1

Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1

Runtime: 108 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: English

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Chapters: Disc #1 -- Dear John
1. Scene 1 [5:16]
2. Scene 2 [2:41]
3. Scene 3 [4:32]
4. Scene 4 [1:01]
5. Scene 5 [4:22]
6. Scene 6 [4:16]
7. Scene 7 [2:40]
8. Scene 8 [4:34]
9. Scene 9 [1:30]
10. Scene 10 [3:32]
11. Scene 11 [4:12]
12. Scene 12 [1:26]
13. Scene 13 [5:24]
14. Scene 14 [2:09]
15. Scene 15 [3:50]
16. Scene 16 [4:09]
17. Scene 17 [4:32]
18. Scene 18 [3:00]
19. Scene 19 [2:45]
20. Scene 20 [3:22]
21. Scene 21 [5:08]
22. Scene 22 [2:44]
23. Scene 23 [4:23]
24. Scene 24 [4:41]
25. Scene 25 [4:18]
26. Scene 26 [4:21]
27. Scene 27 [:49]
28. Scene 28 [2:29]

Perry Seibert

For a film that fits so snugly into the tried-and-true formula of star-crossed lovers, Dear John is full of pleasant surprises. The setup is a familiar one: In February of 2001, 21-year-old Special Forces officer John Tyree (Channing Tatum) meets college student Savannah Curtis (Amanda Seyfried) while he's on leave and she's on spring break. After a two-week courtship, they have sworn their eternal love and promise to get back together in one year after his tour is up and she graduates with a special education teaching degree. In the meantime, they exchange letters -- since he's being transferred all around the globe, snail mail turns out to be the most intimate, reliable form of communication they have (besides, an old-fashioned love story is no place for texts and e-mails). Everything seems to be on track for their eventual happy ending, until the terrorist attacks of September 11 prompt Tyree to re-up, a decision that breaks Savannah's heart -- and leads her to eventually write him the kind of "Dear John" letter he never expected to receive. For a plot as ancient as this one to work, the leads need to sell the deep romantic attachment, and Seyfried and Tatum accomplish this right from the start; from the moment they first see each other on the beach, their chemistry has a sweet fizz. The opening 20 minutes establishes their connection in a very low-key, realistic series of scenes in which they get to know each other a little bit at a time -- just as the audience does. But as any savvy moviegoer knows, the trick to a great romance is to make the forces -- either external or internal -- that keep our lovebirds apart believable. And in that way, Dear John offers up something rather unique -- the dynamic between Tyree and his autistic father, played by the ever-reliable Richard Jenkins. Though the film never comes right out and says it, Tyree's inability to express himself, his awkwardness and discomfort with emotional directness, stems more from being raised by an autistic single parent than from some old-school "man's man" approach to the world. It's a refreshing approach to a stereotypical character, and Tatum, who has never shown this much range or subtlety in the past, rises to the occasion. His tearful moments are heartbreakers, not because the director pushes the audience by ladling a syrupy score over the scenes or prods his actors toward histrionics, but because Tatum and the screenwriter have created a unique three-dimensional character whose terse exterior makes it so difficult for him to release the pent-up emotions roiling inside him. Be aware, this is a markedly somber movie. Because it treats Tyree's internal life with such clear-eyed intimacy, Dear John is as much a psychological drama as it is the kind of love story that will resonate with hopeless romantics, and everyone involved deserves credit for finding just the right tone to keep both these elements at the forefront. It's a surprisingly effective spin on a very old-fashioned story. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Lasse Hallström  Director 
Jeremiah Samuels  Executive Producer 
Tucker Tooley  Executive Producer 
Toby Emmerich  Executive Producer 
Wyck Godfrey  Producer 
Michele Weiss  Executive Producer 
Deborah Lurie  Composer (Music Score) 
Ryan Kavanaugh  Producer 
Jamie Linden  Screenwriter 
Marty Bowen  Producer 
Channing Tatum  Actor 
Amanda Seyfried  Actor 
Richard Jenkins  Actor 
Henry Thomas  Actor 
D.J. Cotrona  Actor 
Cullen Moss  Actor 
Gavin McCulley  Actor 
Jose Lucena  Actor 
Keith Robinson  Actor 
Scott Porter  Actor 
Leslea Fisher  Actor 
William Howard  Actor 
David Andrews  Actor 
Mary Rachel Dudley  Actor 
Bryce Hayes  Actor 
R. Braeden Reed  Actor 
Luke Benward  Actor 
Tom Stearns  Actor 
Michael Harding  Actor 
Brett Rice  Actor 
David Dwyer  Actor 
Anthony Osment  Actor 
Jim Wenthe  Actor 
Matt Blue  Actor 
Lauree Bradway  Actor 
Glenn M. Tatum  Actor 
Martin Coleman Bowen  Actor 
Steven O'Connor  Actor 
Maxx Hennard  Actor 
Jessica Lucas  Actor 
Teresa Smith  Actor 
Shelley Reid  Actor 
Cenk Otay  Actor 
Russell A. Turner  Actor 
Lisa Burrascano  Actor 
Mary Fischer  Actor 

Country: USA