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20th Century Fox
$39.99
Amazon.com New: from $13.83 Used: from $12.98
Description
Disc 1: Widescreen Feature Film **Commentary by Director Jason Reitman and Writer Diablo Cody

**DELETED SCENES with Optional Commentary by Director Jason Reitman and Writer Diablo Cody: -Mrs. Rancik -Juno Hitchhikes -Intro to Family -Carry Chair to Bleekers / Sit in Car drinking -Cafe Triste -Bleekers Bedroom with Juno -Lorings in Bathroom -Mark Plays Guitar -Juno Plays Guitar -Montage -Mark's Loft

**Gag Reel **Gag Take **Cast & Crew Jam **Screen Tests **Way Beyond "Our" Maturity Level: Juno - Leah - Bleeker **Diablo Cody is Totally Boss **Jason Reitman For Shizz **Honest to Blog! Creating Juno **FOX MOVIE CHANNEL presents Casting Session: Juno **FOX MOVIE CHANNEL presents WORLD PREMIERE... Juno

Disc 2: Digital Copy

Amazon.com
Somewhere between the sharp satire of Election and the rich human comedy of You Can Count On Me lies Juno, a sardonic but ultimately compassionate story of a pregnant teenage girl who wants to give her baby up for adoption. Social misfit Juno (Ellen Page, Hard Candy, X-Men: The Last Stand) protects herself with a caustic wit, but when she gets pregnant by her friend Paulie (Michael Cera, Superbad), Juno finds herself unwilling to terminate the pregnancy. When she chooses a couple who place a classified ad looking to adopt, Juno gets drawn further into their lives than she anticipated. But Juno is much more than its plot; the stylized dialogue (by screenwriter Diablo Cody) seems forced at first, but soon creates a richly textured world, greatly aided by superb performances by Page, Cera, Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman as the prospective parents, and J.K. Simmons (Spider-Man) and Allison Janney as Juno's father and stepmother. Director Jason Reitman (Thank You For Smoking) deftly keeps the movie from slipping into easy, shallow sarcasm or foundering in sentimentality. The result is smarter and funnier than you might expect from the subject matter, and warmer and more touching than you might expect from the cocky attitude. Page's performance is deceptively simple; she never asks the audience to love her, yet she effortlessly carries a movie in which she's in almost every scene. That's star power. --Bret Fetzer