The 40-Year-Old Virgin -Unrated- -Blu-ray-

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TE401176
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Product Description Andy Stitzer (Steve Carell) has gone 40 years without "doing it." Now his pals are making it their mission to help him score…fast! Can he survive their hilariously bad advice? Will he land in the arms of the way-too experienced or the way-too-drunk? Or can he find true love where he least expects—from a gorgeous grandmother (Catherine Keener)? With both the Unrated and Theatrical version, The 40-year-Old Virgin on Blu-ray Hi-Def makes the pleasure last forever! Bonus Content: Deleted Scenes The First Time Tales from the Stock Room You Know How I Know You're Gay? With Commentary by Director/Co-Writer Judd Apatow and Actor/Co-Producer Seth Rogen Date-A-Palooza Line-O-Rama Gag Reel Judd's Video Diaries Waxing Doc My Dinner with Stormy Raw Footage Poker Game Rehearsal Auditions Reel Comedy Roundtable Cinemax (R) Final Cut: "The 40 Year Old Virgin" 1970's Sex Ed Film Trailer Rated Feature Commentary with Director/Co-Writer Judd Apatow, Actor/Co-Writer Steve Carell and Cast U-Control - Picture in Picture Unrated Feature Commentary with Director/Co-Writer Judd Apatow, Actor/Co-Writer Steve Carell and Cast Amazon.com Cult comic actor Steve Carell--long adored for his supporting work on The Daily Show and in movies like Bruce Almighty and Anchorman--leaps into leading man status with The 40 Year-Old Virgin. There's no point describing the plot; it's about how a 40 year-old virgin named Andy (Carell) finally finds true love and gets laid. Along the way, there are very funny scenes involving being coached by his friends, speed dating, being propositioned by his female manager, and getting his chest waxed. Carell finds both humor and humanity in Andy, and the supporting cast includes some standout comic work from Paul Rudd ( Clueless, The Shape of Things) and Jane Lynch ( Best in Show, A Mighty Wind), as well as an unusually straight performance from Catherine Keener ( Lovely & Amazing, Being John Malkovich). And yet... something about the movie misses the mark. It skirts around the topic of male sexual anxiety, mining it for easy jokes, but never really digs into anything that would make the men in the audience actually squirm--and it's a lot less funny as a result. Nonetheless, there are many great bits, and Carell deserves the chance to shine. -- Bret Fetzer