The Love Letter

1999 "No one knows who sent it. No one knows who it's for. But everyone's getting the same message."
5.5| 1h28m| PG-13| en
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A romantic comedy about a mysterious love letter that turns a sleepy New England town upside down.

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Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Lucybespro It is a performances centric movie
Ceticultsot Beautiful, moving film.
Catangro After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
Clay Loomis If you rated male, marital indiscretions on a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being forgetting to take out the trash, and 10 being adultery, being forced to watch this movie is the punishment you'll get for level 9.Any woman can probably watch and enjoy this with no problem. The stars, crew and production values are fine. But for me it's like you distilled all the worst horrors of Bridges of Madison County and anything from a Tori Spelling TV movie and injected them straight into my pain center.If you tried to make a movie a straight man couldn't watch without being repelled, you could not do better. I can only hope there is a movie out there somewhere that affects women equally. Probably something starring Robert Z'Dar, or maybe a Godzilla flick. Perhaps Monster a-Go Go (No, that's an equal opportunity nightmare).My mission is clear. I must avoid all level 9 indiscretions.
thekarmicnomad My girlfriend sneaked this on when I put the kettle in and tricked me into watching it. I am glad she did.This is a well made, tender, lovely story about a small community in 'no-where' USA.The lead is outstanding (she seemed familiar but took me ages to place her - she was Willie In Temple of Doom) The story is quite abstract and floats gently around the characters rather than pulling them along. Everything about this movie is understated and tender. I found the characters captivating and as seemingly trivial events (in movie terms) affect their lives we shared their emotions.I think the problem some people may have with this film is it is EXCEEDINGLY gentle, even for a chick-flick. There is no action, high drama or big revelations. If you get bored or fidgety easily or are not in the right mind-set you may wish to save this for another day.
FloatingOpera7 The Love Letter (1999): Starring Kate Capshaw, Tom Everett Scott, Tom Selleck, Ellen De Generes, Gloria Stuart, Blythe Danner, Jessica Capshaw, Alice Drummond, Bill Buell, Erik Jensen, Margaret Ann Brady, Walter Covell, Patrick Donnelly, Lucas Hall, Christian Harmony, Christopher Nee, Breanne Smith, Marilyn Rockafellow, Sasha Spielberg, Jack Black.....Director Peter Chan, Screenplay Maria Maggenti.Based on the novel "The Love Letter" by Cathleen Schine, Director Peter Chan's film version, released in 1999, was not a big box-office draw, not even for a romantic movie with some comedy elements. While it was not as popular in theaters, it soon became a beloved film on cable television and on VHS/DVD. Set in a seaport town in the good old USA (I forget the exact location), this is the story of a mysterious, passionately written love letter who sparks emotions and confusion among the principal characters, each who think the letter is personally addressed to them. By the end of the film, we don't know who the lover or the beloved is but the power of the letter has altered the lives of nearly everyone in the small town. The cast is made up of wonderful actors who have fared well on TV and film, among them Kate Capshaw in the lead role of middle-aged beauty Helen, a bookstore owner, comedienne Ellen DeGeneres as her friend/employee Janet Hall, young hottie Tom Everett Scott as Johnny, the young 20 something guy who falls for the older Hellen and an older Tom Selleck as the firefighter George Matthias who must compete with Johnny for Helen's affections. There are cameo roles by veteran old Hollywood actress Gloria Stuart, who is best known to modern audiences as the elderly Rose in "Titanic" (1997) and a cameo by Kate Capshaw's own daughter (with husband Steven Spielberg) Jessica Capshaw. The love triangle is between a middle-aged woman, an older man and a young man, each of whom feel as passionately for Helen as the writer of the mysterious letter. The conflict lies in Helen's indecision. Will she choose the right person ? Which man has the most to offer her ? Johnny is in a relationship with a girl his age who loves him with a passion all her own, and is in fact, a kind of reminder of what Helen was like at her age. George is in the process of divorcing his wife and has lived a worldly and eventful life. A cultured intellectual, he takes Helen on an opera date, where the tragic death of Puccini's ultra-Italian heroine Tosca moves Helen to explosive tears. There are lots of beautiful vistas of the charming coastal town, rendered beautifully by cinematographer Tami Reiker. The score is a paradise of romantic and lovely songs - " I've Never Been In Love Before", "I'm In The Mood For Love" and "Only The Lonely". Ellen DeGeneres as Janet Hall, who is consistently late to her job at Helen's bookshop, who endlessly dates men without being able to find the right guy , is simply wonderful. She has not lost her comedic flair, even though at this point in her career she was not appearing much on TV or film because only about two years before her hit mid-90's TV show "Ellen" was cancelled because of her "coming out" as a lesbian and the new lesbian subject matter of the show. Here you even find comedian Jack Black, long before he made it big, in the bit part of a fisherman. This is a moving film about human emotions and making decisions that are significant, about the human need for a passionate consuming love and the general love of escapism brought not only through books, letters, and music, but through a genuinely loving and secure relationship. This is a great film with wonderful moments and an infectious romantic spirit.
moonspinner55 Divorced single mom in picturesque seaside town finds an anonymous love letter and allows it to spur into action her dormant love life. Pet project for actress/co-producer Kate Capshaw, who gives a warm, nicely-modulated lead performance, yet this story is so slim and the direction and editing so erratic that a faint dissatisfaction creeps in. Initially, Capshaw's Helen envisions several of her friends reading the love letter to her (an interesting visual joke) but the first person they do this ploy with is Ellen DeGeneres, who doesn't play a lesbian but who comes off as one because of this gimmick. Different ideas are flayed about in the hopes that one would stick, and the continuity is extremely choppy. Supporting cast (including Tom Selleck and Tom Everett Scott, who mostly acts with his shirt off) is very good, but they can't save the final act, which is disappointing. Low-keyed, in a quirky, pleasant way, but it is blandly good-natured, nothing more. **1/2 from ****