Wolfe has selected Dec. 6 as the domestic DVD debut date for
Italian filmmaker Maria Sole Tognazzi’s delightful romantic comedy, Me,
Myself and Her.
Marina (Sabrina Ferilli — The Great Beauty) and
Federica (Margherita Buy — Mia Madre) are two absolutely gorgeous
“middle-aged” women, living together for the past five years in Rome. They have the perfect home, seemingly the perfect
relationship and they both have careers — Marina an actress and Federica is a
successful architect.
Perfect, except for one little problem, Federica is reserved
and has carefully navigated the potentially rough waters of their
relationship. She is divorced, has an
adult son and just wants things to be the way they are — in a word: peaceful.
But, when Marina is offered an important
film role, coupled with a magazine piece that more than hints at her
relationship with Federica, it is simply too much.
The question then becomes, can they work through
this, or has their relationship run its course … can they find that perfect
balance again, or is there more going on here than meets the eye!
This award-winner is presented in Italian with English
subtitles.
Wolfe also announced this past week that Nov. 15 will be the
DVD debut date for writer/director Rob Williams’ Shared Rooms. It is the holiday season and a trio of
stories involving gay couples all intertwine and head to breezy and
light-hearted resolution at a New Year’s Eve gathering in the City of Angels. This is fun, no Kleenex or drama needed.
Cal (Alec Manley Wilson) and Laslo (Christopher Grant
Pearson) are a married couple who desire something more … all of their friends
are moving on (you can’t be a “thirtysomething” forever) and they need to be
more of a “family.” That bit of joy
comes, perhaps, from a very unexpected source!
Meanwhile, an online dating couple, Gray (Alexander Neil
Miller) and Sid (Justin Xavier), who have an instant chemistry, but discover
that they have even more in common than the physical attraction.
And the final thread in our narrative is that of Dylan
(Robert Werner) and Julian (Daniel Lipshutz), who have an unspoken “thing” for
each other, but suddenly finding themselves having to “explore” that “thing”
when they end up sharing, quite unexpectedly, a room together during the
holidays.
Bonus features include commentary from writer/director Roy
Williams (Out to Kill, The Men Next Door, Back Soon, etc.) and a blooper
reel.
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