Release Date: Aug 5, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 132 mins Studio: Universal Studios Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] FRENCH: Dolby Digital Surround
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: [None] Packaging: Keep Case Rating: R Features:
Spotlight On Location: The Making Of Erin Brockovich Erin Brockovich: A Look At A Real Life Experience Deleted Scenes With Director's Comments Theatrical Trailer Production Notes Cast and Filmmakers DVD-ROM Features
A lone woman, armed only with indomitable sass and her native wit, goes up against the corporate big boys and beats the bejesus out of them. As a story line it's hardly new, but Steven Soderbergh's film keeps it exhilaratingly fresh and lively--thanks not least to his lead actress. Seizing the role of the smart, mouthy, aggressively working-class Erin Brockovich with both hands, Julia Roberts gives it everything she's got and then some. She's well matched by Albert Finney as her grouchy but good-hearted boss and Aaron Eckhart as a sympathetic biker. The story's based--by all accounts fairly closely--on actual events, when the real Erin (who appears briefly in the film as a kindly waitress) brought a massive lawsuit against utilities giant Pacific Gas and Electric for spreading toxic pollution. Rather than confine the action to courtroom shenanigans, Soderbergh takes us out under Southern California's pitiless skies and along the dirt-poor roads where most of PG&E's blue-collar victims live, letting us feel the ground-down exhaustion of their lives. But though it's rooted in reality, the film's anything but solemn. The script's sharp and funny, full of unexpected twists; and Roberts, flaunting herself outrageously in an eye-popping array of push-up bras and micro-miniskirts, has never been better. --Philip Kemp
Animated Menus Deleted Scenes With Directors Commentary Filmographies Isolated Score Making Of Featurette Theatrical Trailer The Real Erin Brockovich Featurette