Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 
  
 Description:
  Tony Kushner's prize-winning play Angels in America became the  defining theatrical event of the 1990s, an astonishing mix of philosophy,  politics, and vibrant gay soap opera that summed up the Reagan era for an  entire generation of theater-goers. Post-9/11 would  seem to be too late for a film version--philosophy and politics don't  always age well--but this 2003 HBO adaptation, ably directed by Mike Nichols  (The Graduate), provides a time capsule of the '80s and reveals the  deep emotional subcurrents that will give the play lasting power.   The story centers around Prior Walter  (Justin Kirk) and Louis Ironson (Ben Shenkman), a gay couple that falls  apart when Prior grows ill as a result of AIDS. But cancer is not the only  thing invading Prior's life: He begins to have religious visions of an  angel (Emma Thompson, Sense and Sensibility) announcing that he is  a prophet. Louis, who doesn't cope well with disease and suggestions of  mortality, leaves and starts a relationship with Joe Pitt (Patrick  Wilson), a closeted Mormon who works for Roy Cohn (Al Pacino, Dog Day  Afternoon)--the real-life right-wing lawyer, notorious for his  ruthless behind-the-scenes machinations. Add in Joe's depressed and  hallucinating wife Harper (Mary Louise Parker, Fried Green  Tomatoes), his determined but open-minded mother Hannah (Meryl Streep,  Adaptation), a fierce drag queen/nurse named Belize (Jeffrey  Wright, Basquiat, reprising his celebrated performance from the  Broadway production), and you've still only begun to discover the wealth  of characters and storylines in Kushner's ambitious work.    The  powerhouse cast (also featuring James Cromwell, Michael Gambon, and Simon  Cowell) is uniformly superb. The script has its weaknesses--some of the  fantastic elements, including Prior's journey to Heaven towards the end,  fall flat--but even what doesn't work is bristling with ideas and a  ferocious desire to capture human existence in this time and place.  --Bret Fetzer
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