Known for the gross-out hit AMERICAN PIE and the charming dramedy ABOUT A BOY, director Paul Weitz once more teams up with several actors from his previous films for this satire about the state of America in 2006. Hugh Grant is perfectly cast as Martin Tweed, the greedy, self-despising producer and host of AMERICAN DREAMZ, an AMERICAN IDOL-like television program that chooses contestants more on the basis of their ratings potential than genuine talent. Unapologetic and calculated, Tweed recognizes something of himself in Ohio-bred, ruthlessly conniving contestant Sally Kendoo (Mandy Moore).
Dennis Quaid plays a pajama-clad President Staton, a character clearly modeled after George W. Bush. After taking a sudden interest in reading the newspaper, Staton grows confused and troubled by what he learns about his country and its international affairs. With the president refusing to leave his bedroom for weeks, the first lady (Marcia Gay Harden) and the Chief of Staff (Willem Dafoe) grow increasingly worried. Fearful that the president's laziness and newfound political awareness will cost him points in the public eye, the two orchestrate a plan that involves force-feeding him antidepressants and scheduling him for a spot as a guest judge on the finale of AMERICAN DREAMZ. Meanwhile, a terrorist plot unfolds, involving a planned assassination by another one of the show's contestants, the Broadway-dancing, theatre-loving Omer (Sam Golzari). AMERICAN DREAMZ boldly pokes fun at such touchy subjects as terrorism and takes humorous (and sometimes disturbingly accurate) stabs at such public figures as Simon Cowell, President Bush, Laura Bush, and Dick Cheney. By emphasizing the staged, false nature of both the political and entertainment realms, AMERICAN DREAMZ suggests that these worlds have more in common than first meets the eye.
Theatrical Release: April 21, 2006
DVD Features:
Region 1
Snap Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby Digital Surround Sound 5.1 - English, French, Spanish
Subtitles - English SDH, French, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary: Sam Golzari - Star, Paul Weitz - Director
Featurette:
1. Deleted Scenes
2. "Center Stage: Sally Kendoo"
3. "Dance Dreamz"
Stars
Mandy Moore: American Singer and Actress
Hugh Grant: British Actor
Willem Dafoe: American Actor
Dennis Quaid: American actor, FREQUENCY (2000)
Chris Klein: Actor
Marcia Gay Harden: Oscar winning american actress, POLLOCK
Jennifer Coolidge:
Shohreh Aghdashloo: Actress, MARYAM (2002)
Judy Greer:
John Cho: Actor, FANGS (1998)
Bernard White: Sri Lankan-born American actor, director
Sam Golzari: Actor, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Tony Yalda: Actor, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Noureen DeWulf: Star, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Director
Paul Weitz: Director/Playwright/Screenwriter, AMERICAN PIE (2000)
Producer
Rodney Liber: Producer
Paul Weitz: Director/Playwright/Screenwriter, AMERICAN PIE (2000)
Chris Weitz: Director/Actor/Writer, DOWN TO EARTH (2001)
Screenwriter
Paul Weitz: Director/Playwright/Screenwriter, AMERICAN PIE (2000)
Composer
Stephen Trask: Actor, HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH (2001)
Editor
Myron I. Kerstein: Editor, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Director of Photography
Robert Elswit: Director of Photography, GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK (2005)
Executive Producer
Andrew Miano: Executive Producer, IN GOOD COMPANY (2004)
Production Designer
William Arnold: Production Designer, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Costume Designer
Molly Maginnis: Costume Designer, AMERICAN DREAMZ (2006)
Review 1:
"[C]ertainly topical....The comedy handles each of its targets with equal contempt."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.40 06/01/2006
Review 2:
"[A] blithe, funny and engaging movie....Weitz has made the shrewd move of staging the film on a human scale, in the homespun wackadoo spirit of a '40s screwball comedy." -- Grade: B+
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.115 04/28/2006
Review 3:
"[I]ts farcical elements hit their mark....AMERICAN DREAMZ lampoons the public's appetite for mindless entertainment and easy distraction from serious concerns."
Source: USA Today
p.8E 04/21/2006
Review 4:
"Paul Weitz's good-natured satire of pop, politics and our bloated sense of entitlement lampoons the great American disconnect from reality by locating the place where all these things intersect."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.E1 04/21/2006