Eat Pray Love

3.00
    Eat Pray Love
    2010

    Synopsis

    Liz Gilbert had everything a modern woman is supposed to dream of having – a husband, a house and a successful career – yet like so many others, she found herself lost, confused and searching for what she really wanted in life. Newly divorced and at a crossroads, Gilbert steps out of her comfort zone, risking everything to change her life, embarking on a journey around the world that becomes a quest for self-discovery. In her travels, she discovers the true pleasure of nourishment by eating in Italy, the power of prayer in India and, finally and unexpectedly, the inner peace and balance of true love in Bali.

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    Cast

    • Julia RobertsElisabeth 'Liz' Gilbert
    • Javier BardemFelipe
    • James FrancoDavid
    • Billy CrudupSteven
    • Richard JenkinsRichard
    • Viola DavisDelia Shiraz
    • I. Gusti Ayu PuspawatiNyomo
    • Hadi SubiyantoKetut Liyer
    • A. Jay RadcliffAndre
    • Mike O'MalleyAndy Shiraz

    Recommendations

    • 75

      Tampa Bay Times

      Eat Pray Love is like one of those rich dishes Liz consumes in Italy; robustly flavored and guiltily pleasurable.
    • 63

      Orlando Sentinel

      Eat Pray Love isn't a bad movie -- just a spiritually dead one, wearing and wearying.
    • 60

      New York Daily News

      Director Ryan Murphy achieved a major casting coup in landing Julia Roberts to play Gilbert - or Liz, as she's called here. As it turns out, though, a lesser star may have been a better choice.
    • 58

      Entertainment Weekly

      If only Roberts' warmth, coupled with Javier Bardem's scruffy sexiness as Felipe, were enough to compensate for the folded-map flatness of this production.
    • 50

      Arizona Republic

      The general dippiness isn't helped by the dialogue: "Every word in Italian is like a truffle!" Gilbert exclaims as she learns the language. Equally annoying is the gauzy lighting, which gives Roberts a sweetly angelic glow most of the time.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The film never ventures, even once, into a situation that does not reek of comfy familiarity.
    • 50

      Variety

      Director Ryan Murphy's superficial take on Elizabeth Gilbert's phenomenally successful memoir is an exotic junk-food buffet that offers few lasting pleasures or surprises, let alone epiphanies.
    • 50

      Austin Chronicle

      Roberts, wearing that beatific half-smile of hers that suggests inner peace and wisdom before she's even begun her journey, is too open-faced with her emotions to signal the complexities of Gilbert's distress – over her divorce, her control issues, her rootlessness, and inability to live in the moment.

    Loved by

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