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Harrison's Flowers (2001)
Released By: Universal Studios Home Video   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Universal Studios Home Video
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Elie Chouraqui
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: 1/21/2003
Cast: Alun Armstrong, Andie McDowell, David Strathairn, Diane Baker, Scott Anton
Published ID: 229138
UPC: 025192178726, 031398214069, 824255000918, 824255050166,
Plot: French director Elie Chouraqui adapts the novel of the same name into this drama, that, although set in 1991, became tragically topical in the weeks before its release due to the murder of {~Wall Street Journal} reporter Daniel Pearl. Andie MacDowell stars as Sarah, a photo editor for {~Newsweek} and the happily married wife of Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Harrison Lloyd (David Strathairn). Harrison has been reconsidering his career of covering the world's war zone hot spots in order to spend more time with his family, and is accused by his colleague, Kyle (Adrien Brody), of playing it too safe in his risky profession. Harrison elects to accept one more combat assignment to cover the simmering tensions in Croatia, a conflict that quickly erupts into a full-scale, genocidal Civil War. Informed that Harrison is believed to have been killed in the fighting, Sarah refuses to accept her husband's death and becomes convinced that she's seen him, alive, in a news broadcast. She travels to Croatia on a quest to find him, and is eventually aided by Kyle, as well as two of Harrison's other colleagues, Yeager (Elias Koteas) and Stevenson (Brendan Gleeson). The group, armed with cameras instead of weapons, witnesses the horrors and atrocities unfolding in the region, while tracing the elusive path of Harrison, who may well be dead already. Harrison's Flowers was distributed by Universal Focus, the art house division of Universal Pictures that previously released Mulholland Drive (2001) and Billy Elliott (2000). ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Harrison"s Flowers
Added 6/15/2009

I ordered this DVD of Harrison's Flowers. Then found out it was discontinued. sellers need to check their inventory to make sure they have it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Harrison's Flowers is a Touching Film
Added 6/11/2008

David Strathairn-Harrison (Delores Claiborne) and Andie MacDowell-Sarah (Four Weddings And A Funeral) star in this touching film about a Prize-winning photojournalist who comes up missing while on a dangerous assignment in war-torn Yugoslavia. One can only admire Sarah's courage as--when Harrison is presumed dead, she goes on a mission, risking her own life in a war ravaged country to find him. This film is filled with drama and suspense, as we see the realities of war and those who fall victim to the tyrany and oppression. Perhaps the most touching element in this story though, is when a shell shocked Harrison--is brought back to his loving family by his flowers his son lovingly tended to in his father's absence. Warning: There are gory scenes involving war injuries, army tanks, guns, and war violence. This movie is not suitable for children, and sensitive individuals. This review applies to the full-length film.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
What CNN missed . . .
Added 3/4/2008

This 2-hour French production with an American cast is an odd combination of a blithely impossible action plot played against a chilling reality. When a world-famous photographer is reported killed in the war-torn former Yugoslavia, his wife flies off from their comfortable home in Westchester to find him and bring him back alive. The best that can be said about this Hollywood-style storyline is that it provides a reason to accomplish something very different - to portray the ghastly truth of ethnic warfare as it took place in the Balkans in the early 1990s and the role of news photographers who risked their lives to capture it with their cameras.

Plunged into Croatia as Vukovar was being overrun by Serbs, the characters take the audience into a hell where everyone - men, women, children - must kill or be killed. We are witness to atrocities and inhumanities that take the breath away. While war in the movies has often been played for thrill-packed adventure - even anti-war films - this one leaves you with a sense of powerlessness in the face of unimaginable horror. Urban warfare and ethnic cleansing cease being abstract concepts. We see their portrayal with our own eyes, and the efforts of one American woman to retrieve her husband in the midst of it all are dwarfed by comparison. Worth seeing anyway for what CNN missed.

4 out of 4 people found this helpful.
Harrison's Flowers
Added 2/28/2008

I only watched this, as Gerard Butler had a very small part. However, I did not like the movie, and the editing could have been better.
0 out of 2 people found this helpful.
balkans movies
Added 1/25/2008

War footage is uncannny in its reality. They must have gone to post Bosnia war areas to get footage of destruction that they showed. Delivers a powerful reminder of the ugliness of the Bosnian war that happened in the civilized western neighbourhood only 18 years ago.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Harrison"s Flowers
Added 6/15/2009

I ordered this DVD of Harrison's Flowers. Then found out it was discontinued. sellers need to check their inventory to make sure they have it.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Harrison's Flowers is a Touching Film
Added 6/11/2008

David Strathairn-Harrison (Delores Claiborne) and Andie MacDowell-Sarah (Four Weddings And A Funeral) star in this touching film about a Prize-winning photojournalist who comes up missing while on a dangerous assignment in war-torn Yugoslavia. One can only admire Sarah's courage as--when Harrison is presumed dead, she goes on a mission, risking her own life in a war ravaged country to find him. This film is filled with drama and suspense, as we see the realities of war and those who fall victim to the tyrany and oppression. Perhaps the most touching element in this story though, is when a shell shocked Harrison--is brought back to his loving family by his flowers his son lovingly tended to in his father's absence. Warning: There are gory scenes involving war injuries, army tanks, guns, and war violence. This movie is not suitable for children, and sensitive individuals. This review applies to the full-length film.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
What CNN missed . . .
Added 3/4/2008

This 2-hour French production with an American cast is an odd combination of a blithely impossible action plot played against a chilling reality. When a world-famous photographer is reported killed in the war-torn former Yugoslavia, his wife flies off from their comfortable home in Westchester to find him and bring him back alive. The best that can be said about this Hollywood-style storyline is that it provides a reason to accomplish something very different - to portray the ghastly truth of ethnic warfare as it took place in the Balkans in the early 1990s and the role of news photographers who risked their lives to capture it with their cameras.

Plunged into Croatia as Vukovar was being overrun by Serbs, the characters take the audience into a hell where everyone - men, women, children - must kill or be killed. We are witness to atrocities and inhumanities that take the breath away. While war in the movies has often been played for thrill-packed adventure - even anti-war films - this one leaves you with a sense of powerlessness in the face of unimaginable horror. Urban warfare and ethnic cleansing cease being abstract concepts. We see their portrayal with our own eyes, and the efforts of one American woman to retrieve her husband in the midst of it all are dwarfed by comparison. Worth seeing anyway for what CNN missed.

4 out of 4 people found this helpful.
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