The Amati Girls (PG)
This movie's unhurried pace might bore kids.
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- Studio: Providence Entertainment
- Directed By: Anne DeSalvo
- Cast: Cloris Leachman, Sean Young
- Running Time: 91 minutes
- Release Date: 10/04/2001
- Video/DVD Release Date: 10/04/2001
- Genre: Drama
- MPAA Rating: PG
- MPAA Explanation: mild language and brief sensuality
Parents need to know
Families can talk about the sisters' bonds, and how they worked through their problems and came together when things got tough.
Message
Social Behavior:
Amati girls aren't exactly career girls; those who seek independent jobs (in each case in the arts) rather than settling down to marriage are considered eccentric.
Consumerism:
Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco:
Beer drinking in a bar.
Violence
After an unexpected family death, one grief-stricken character desecrates a Catholic shrine. One Amati sister, suffering some vague neurological disorder, becomes unmanageable in times of stress.
Sex
Two young people fondle each other's chests on a first date.
Language
Infrequent mild religiously-themed profanity.
Common Sense says
What's the story?
Reviewed by Charles Cassady, Jr.
Is it any good?
Thus, this non-violent ensemble brings viewers the loving, churchgoing but earthy Amatis as a friendly alternative to the corrupt, amoral Capones, Sopranos, and Corleones fighting endless mob wars. That's all fine, but one viewer complained that this movie's depiction of sauce-making mamma mias is no less of a stereotype than Little Italy hoods making Offers You Cannot Refuse.
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