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 ColorClosed-captionedWidescreenDolby
 
 Description:
 
 Not to be confused with the 1990 comedy flop featuring Uma Thurman, this Where the Heart Is boasts a winning performance from Natalie Portman.  Novalee Nation (Portman), a pregnant teenager from Tennessee, is bound for  California with her worthless boyfriend, Willy Jack (Dylan Bruno). A pit stop at an Oklahoma Wal-Mart proves fateful when Willy Jack abandons her  there. She secretly sets up camp at the megastore and spends her days meeting  with kindly booster Sister Husband (Stockard Channing) and eccentric librarian  Forney Hall (James Frain). Her life takes another turn after she gives birth in  the store (clean up, aisle six!) and finds a best friend in sassy nurse Lexie  Coop (Ashley Judd). Meanwhile, Willy Jack has found a talent agent (Joan Cusack)  and tries to make some life changes of his own.
   Where The Heart Is offers charming, folksy fun; homespun wisdom; and an  obstacle course of plot development (if the Wal-Mart angle weren't enough,  there's also a kidnapping, a tornado, and at least half a dozen other major  events thrown in). Director Matt Williams, who produced the popular sitcoms  Roseanne and Home Improvement, takes television's cut-to-commercial route to make giant leaps in space and time from scene to scene.   It's disorienting, but the remarkable female cast (which includes Sally Field in  a cameo) lends plausiblilty to the muddle, even when you don't think anything  more could possibly happen. --Shannon Gee
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