Actors & Directors
- Bernadette Flynn
- Michael Flatley
- David Mallet
- Daire Nolan
- Helen Egan
- Gillian Norris
Release date: 1996-10-21 Run time: 92 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £1.48
Review Michael Flatley - Lord Of The Dance [1996] / Vision Video Ltd.:Billed as an updating and retelling of Irish folk legend, Lord of the Dance is less Erin Go Bragh than Hooray for Hollywood. Michael Flatley, lately of Riverdance, gives us the old razzle-dazzle, fashioning a Celtic-influenced spectacular that wanders faraway from its Riverdance roots. The light-show presentation is closer kin to another contemporary Irish musical group, U2. Flatley himself has gone designer chic. With close-cropped haircut, earring, buffed abs,and tight black pants he bears more than a passing resemblance to Bono. But you have to hand it to the guy-he works hard for the money, as does his attractive corps. The one maddening aspect of this glitzy, entertaining 90-minute festival is the overzealous editing. No image remains on screen for more than a few seconds. Neither Flatley nor his talented troupe deserves to have such craftsmanship sliced and diced like an MTV music video. -Richard Natale Billed as an updating and retelling of an Irish folk legend, Lord of the Dance is less Erin Go Bragh than Hooray for Hollywood. [+]
Michael Flatley gives us the old razzle-dazzle, fashioning a Celtic-influenced spectacular that wanders far away from its Riverdance roots. The light-show presentation is closer kin to another contemporary Irish musical group, U2. Flatley himself has gone designer chic, too: with close-cropped haircut, earring, buffed abs and tight black pants he bears more than a passing resemblance to Bono. But you have to hand it to the guy-he works hard for the money, as does his attractive corps. The one maddening aspect of this glitzy, entertaining 90-minute festival is the overzealous editing. No image remains on screen for more than a few seconds. Neither Flatley nor his talented troupe deserves to have such craftsmanship sliced and diced like an MTV music video. -Richard Natale, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Walter Abel
- Mark Sandrich
- Fred Astaire
- Bing Crosby
- Marjorie Reynolds
Release date: 2005-11-28 Run time: 101 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £12.90
Review Holiday Inn [1942] / Universal Pictures UK:Holiday Inn is a perennial, Christmas-season favourite from 1942 teamed Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire as entertainers (and rival suitors of Marjorie Reynolds) running an inn that is only open on holidays. It's a great excuse for lots of singing and dancing, seamlessly wrapped in a catchy story, and Astaire's frequent director Mark Sandrich (Top Hat, Shall We Dance?) doesn't let us down. The Irving Berlin numbers (each one connected to a different holiday) are winners. Crosby's warm performance of "White Christmas" is a movie touchstone. -Tom Keogh "A Couple of Song and Dance Men" is a 45-minute conversation between author-historian Ken Barnes and Ava Astaire McKenzie, Fred's daughter, recapping the careers of Astaire and Crosby. It's a bit wooden, but not without charm, and has some interesting early footage, chiefly of Crosby (presumably because of studio rights issues). There's also a seven-minute discussion of how sound has been recorded for movie musicals, and specifically how it was done for Holiday Inn's "I'll Capture Her Heart. " Barnes's commentary track offers bits of trivia (they had originally wanted Ginger Rogers for one of the roles, and yes, the title inspired the hotel chain) and incorporates some archival quotes by Astaire and Crosby. The remastered picture is a noticeable improvement over the earlier double-feature DVD, which paired Holiday Inn with Crosby's Going My Way. -David Horiuchi.
Actors & Directors
- John Kerr (II)
- Joshua Logan
- Mitzi Gaynor
- Juanita Hall
- Rossano Brazzi
- Ray Walston
Release date: 2000-03-13 Run time: 143 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £2.97
Review South Pacific [1958] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:The dazzling Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, brought to lush life by the director of the original stage version, Joshua Logan. Set on a remote island during the Second World War, South Pacific tracks two parallel romances: one between a Navy nurse (Mitzi Gaynor) "as corny as Kansas in August" and a wealthy French plantation owner (Rossano Brazzi), the other between a young American officer (John Kerr) and a native girl (France Nuyen). The theme of interracial love was still daring in 1958, and so was director Logan's decision to overlay emotional moments with tinted filters-a technique that misfires as often as it hits. The comic relief tends to fall flat and an overly spunky Mitzi Gaynor is a poor substitute for the stage original's Mary Martin. But the location scenery on the Hawaiian island of Kauai is gorgeous and the songs are among the finest in the American musical catalogue: "Some Enchanted Evening", "Younger than Springtime", "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outta My Hair", "This Nearly Was Mine". That's Juanita Hall as the sly native trader Bloody Mary, singing the haunting tune that launched a thousand tiki bars, "Bali H'ai". The movie is based on stories from James Michener's book Tales from the South Pacific. -Robert Horton, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Dolores del Rio
- Gene Raymond
- Fred Astaire
- Ginger Rogers
- Raul Roulien
- Thornton Freeland
Release date: 1998-02-09 Run time: 85 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £6.96
Review Flying Down To Rio [1933] / 4 Front Video:In 1933, RKO Pictures had the bright idea of pairing Dolores Del Rio and Gene Raymond for their new musical blockbuster, Flying Down to Rio. The film was a smash, but not for the reasons anyone expected. The fourth and fifth-billed stars were an RKO bit player and a Broadway man breaking into Hollywood. Their names were Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire, and their pairing in this and eight subsequent RKO films would help to rewrite cinematic history. Most of Rio's screen time is spent on a humdrum romantic triangle involving Del Rio, Raymond and Raul Roulien, but Fred (as Fred Ayres) and Ginger (as Honey Hayes) are still able to establish many of the trademarks of their later films. Ginger fronts the band (with Fred on accordion) in the saucy "Music Makes Me", and Fred does some solo tap then sings and leads the band for the spectacular airborne finale featuring chorus girls perched on the wings of biplanes. The heart of the film is "The Carioca", a company dance extravaganza that would be imitated by "The Continental" and "The Piccolino" in later films. Here Fred and Ginger take the floor together for the first time; their eyes meet and their foreheads touch. Their dance lasts only a few minutes, but it was the highlight of the film and audiences wanted more. A prophetic moment occurs toward the beginning of the dance, when, after watching for a while, Fred grabs Ginger and tells her, "I want to try this. [+]
Come on, Honey". She declares, "We'll show 'em a thing or three". They did indeed. It was magic, and it was only the beginning. -David Horiuchi, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Stanley Donen
- Tommy Rall
- Howard Keel
- Jeff Richards
- Russ Tamblyn
- Marc Platt
Release date: 2000-03-27 Run time: 98 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £1.86
Review Seven Brides For Seven Brothers [1954] / Warner Home Video:Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, starring MGM soprano Jane Powell and handsome baritone Howard Keel, has retained a remarkably loyal following among fans of the musical film ever since its release in 1954. Although it was filmed in state-of-the-art CinemaScope, Stanley Donen was obliged to direct much of the film on Metro's sound stages, where the artificial sets and painted backdrops don't inevitably live up to the scenes shot on location in Oregon. Viewers coming fresh to the picture may find this visual discrepancy jarring and some too may find Miss Powell's singing a shade plummy. The screenplay, by husband and wife team Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich with Dorothy Kingsley, tells the story of seven brothers living in the Oregon hills and their adventures to find themselves wives. The casting of each brother with his rugged, masculine looks and ability to dance with grace and athleticism, presided over by an authoritative Howard Keel, gives the film a dynamic impetus second to none in an MGM musical. The lengthy barn-raising episode under choreographer Michael Kidd's intrepid direction, where the music and the incredibly agile and energetic male and female dance ensemble unite as one, produces a square dance without parallel. The music and lyrics by Gene De Paul and Johnny Mercer-including the mating chorus, "Spring, Spring, Spring", the rollicking "Bless You're Beautiful Hide", the rousing "Sobbin' Women" and the visually enchanting "June Bride"-are both tuneful and mindful of the plot's exposition. Adolph Deutsch and Saul Chaplin won the Academy Award in 1954 for their arrangements and conducting. On the DVD: The digital remastering has created a clearer picture of what had been a faintly muddy Ansco colour system on the original print while the polish and attack with which the MGM Studio Orchestra play the music on this full-bodied stereophonic soundtrack remains a thing of wonder. Howard Keel, standing tall and erect in his 80s, hosts the "making of" documentary. [+]
Director Donen, choreographer Kidd, Jane Powell and several of the dancers recall how the film was considered a "sleeper" during production and wasn't expected to do as well as Brigadoon, in production at the same time. The documentary also highlights the care taken over the casting of the brothers, two of whom including Keel were not dancers and their often brave and brilliant feats of acrobatic dancing executed on precarious planks and other props. When Howard Keel takes his farewell walk down the main street lot at MGM, breaking into a few brief dance steps, it's impossible not to feel a moment of regret that the curtain had to come down on MGM's most treasured possession. -Adrian Edwards.
Actors & Directors
- Dolores Gray
- Monty Woolley
- Vic Damone
- Ann Blyth
- Howard Keel
- Stanley Donen
- Vincente Minnelli
Run time: 108 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £13.46
Review Kismet [1955] / MGM Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Julie Andrews
- Peggy Wood
- Christopher Plummer
- Anna Lee
- Robert Wise
- Richard Haydn
Release date: 1992-07-13 Run time: 165 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £6.93
Review The Sound Of Music [1965] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:The most widely seen movie produced by a Hollywood studio, The Sound of Music grows fresher with each viewing. Though it was planned meticulously in pre-production (save for the scene where Maria and the children take a dipping in an Austrian lake that nearly cost a life), on each viewing one is struck anew by the spontaneous almost improvisatory air of the acting, notably of Julie Andrews under Robert Wise's direction. There are also the little human touches he brings to, for instance, the scene where Maria leads the children to the hills, over bridges and along tow paths where the smallest boy trips up and momentarily gets left behind: it creates a feeling that most of us have encountered. From the opening pre-credit sequence of muted excitement as the camera roves over the Austrian Alps (photographed in magnificent colour), where little phrases from the wind instruments on the soundtrack are flung as if on the breeze, foreshadowing the title song to follow, the production never puts a foot wrong. On the DVD: On the first disc the film itself has never looked or sounded better since its original presentation in Todd AO (prints of which are said to have disappeared forever). The disc also contains a separate audio guide that takes the viewer through the film sequence by sequence, with director Robert Wise commenting on the weather, the production design by Boris Leven, the sequences filmed on location and in Hollywood (like the interiors of the Von Trapp villa), and the naming of other actors who were eager for the lead roles, notably Doris Day and Yul Brynner. On the second disc there are the documentaries. "Salzburg Sight and Sound" was Charmian Carr's own record of her time on location in the summer of 1964, playing Liesl, the eldest Von Trapp daughter. "From Fact to Fiction", running two hours, begins with the birth of Maria in 1905 who inspired the film, charts her subsequent marriage to Captain Von Trapp, their escape from Nazi Germany not across the Alps but via a train across the Italian boarder, their home in Vermont and thence to the German film of the family that was brought to the attention of Rodgers and Hammerstein as an ideal vehicle for a stage musical. A second group of documentaries covers previews, television and radio commercials and a 1973 interview with Wise and Andrews. [+]
Overall, this is a marathon package but in its way is as compelling as the film itself. -Adrian Edwards.
Actors & Directors
- Shani Wallis
- Oliver Reed
- Mark Lester
- Carol Reed
- Ron Moody
- Harry Secombe
Release date: 1993-04-05 Run time: 139 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £6.46
Review Oliver [1968] / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment:Film buffs and critics can argue until their faces turn blue about whether this lavish Dickensian musical deserved the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1968, but the movie speaks for itself on grandly entertaining terms. Adapted from Dickens's classic novel, it's one of the most dramatically involving and artistically impressive musicals of the 1960s, directed by Carol Reed with a delightful enthusiasm that would surely have impressed Dickens himself. Mark Lester plays the waifish orphan Oliver Twist, who is befriended by the pickpocketing Artful Dodger (Jack Wild) and recruited into the gang of boy thieves led by Fagin (played to perfection by Ron Moody). The villainous Bill Sikes (Oliver Reed) casts his long shadow over Oliver and his friends, but the young orphan is still able to find loving care in the most desperate of circumstances. Full of memorable melodies and splendid lyrics, Oliver! is a timeless film, prompting even hard-to-please critic Pauline Kael to call it "a superb demonstration of intelligent craftsmanship", and to further observe that "it's as if the movie set out to be a tribute to Dickens and his melodramatic art as well as to tell the story of Oliver Twist. " -Jeff Shannon Film buffs and critics can argue until their faces turn blue about whether this lavish Dickensian musical deserved the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1968, but the movie speaks for itself on grandly entertaining terms. Adapted from Dickens's classic novel, it's one of the most dramatically involving and artistically impressive musicals of the 1960s, directed by Carol Reed with a delightful enthusiasm that would surely have impressed Dickens himself. Mark Lester plays the waifish orphan Oliver Twist, who is befriended by the pick-pocketing Artful Dodger (Jack Wild) and recruited into the gang of boy thieves led by Fagin (played to perfection by Ron Moody). The villainous Bill Sikes (Oliver Reed) casts his long shadow over Oliver and his friends, but the young orphan is still able to find loving care in the most desperate of circumstances. Full of memorable melodies and splendid lyrics, Oliver! is a timeless film, prompting even hard-to-please critic Pauline Kael to call it "a superb demonstration of intelligent craftsmanship," and to further observe that "it's as if the movie set out to be a tribute to Dickens and his melodramatic art as well as to tell the story of Oliver Twist". [+]
-Jeff Shannon, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Faith Esham
- Julia Migenes
- Plácido Domingo
- Ruggero Raimondi
- François Le Roux
- Francesco Rosi
Release date: 2002-07-01 Run time: 149 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £9.71
Review Carmen [1985] / 4 Front Video:This movie version of Bizet's popular opera Carmen was filmed on location, conveying a kind of atmosphere, a sense of space, movement, and presence that's hard to achieve in a staged performance. It takes the action out of doors for many scenes, with the opening titles superimposed on the bloody conclusion of a bullfight. Elsewhere the changing of the guard, the crowd scenes, the dance number that opens Act 2, and the panoramic scenery of the smugglers' mountain hideout all benefit from the freedom granted by movie cameras. It's an exciting Carmen, too, with a young-looking Placido Domingo in top form for a role he has sung hundreds of times. For Julia Migenes, though, it was her first performance in a role she would have trouble performing in an opera house. Her voice does not fit easily into Carmen's range, and she spent months training it, very successfully, before singing the role in a recording studio where the soundtrack was taped before the film was shot. Casting her in the role was a gamble, but it worked; she is a convincing actress. Unlike most opera-house performances this movie version uses the opera's original opera comique form with some spoken dialogue rather than recitatives. -Joe McLellan, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Liza Minnelli
- Gene Kelly
- Jack Haley Jr.
- Sammy Davis Jr.
- Ray Bolger
- Mikhail Baryshnikov
Release date: 1995-03-13 Run time: 103 min. Price: £10.99
Review That's Dancing [1985] / MGM Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Donald O'Connor
- Howard Keel
- Fred Astaire
- Gene Kelly
- Cyd Charisse
Release date: 1998-09-07 Run time: 100 min. RRP: £7.99 Price: £11.98
Review Hollywood Musicals Of The 50's / Laserlight Video:
Actors & Directors
- Robert Iscove
- Whoopi Goldberg
- Whitney Houston
- Bernadette Peters
- Jason Alexander
- Victor Garber
Release date: 1998-06-22 Price: £10.99
Review Rodger & Hammerstein's Cinderella / Walt Disney Home Video:
Actors & Directors
- Jim Sharman
- Richard O'Brien
- Susan Sarandon
- Barry Bostwick
- Tim Curry
- Patricia Quinn
Release date: 1998-08-17 Run time: 169 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £3.66
Review The Rocky Horror Picture Show [1975] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:If a musical sci-fi satire about an alien transvestite named Frank-n-Furter, who is building the perfect man while playing sexual games with his virginal visitors, sounds like an intriguing premise for a movie, then you're in for a treat. Not only is The Rocky Horror Picture Show all this and more, but it stars the surprising cast of Susan Sarandon and Barry Bostwick (as the demure Janet and uptight Brad, who get lost in a storm and find themselves stranded at Frank-n-Furter's mansion), Meat Loaf (as the rebel Eddie), Charles Gray (as our criminologist and narrator) and, of course, the inimitable Tim Curry as our "sweet transvestite from Transsexual, Transylvania". Upon its release in 1975, the film was an astounding flop. But a few devotees persuaded a New York cinema to show it at midnight, and thus was born one of the ultimate cult films of all time. The songs are addictive (just try getting "The Time Warp" or "Toucha Toucha Touch Me" out of your head), the raunchiness amusing and the plot line utterly ridiculous-in other words, this film is simply tremendous good fun. The downfall, however, is that much of the amusement is found in the audience participation that is obviously missing from a video version (viewers in cinemas shout lines at the screen and use props-such as holding up newspapers and shooting water guns during the storm and throwing rice during a wedding scene). Watched alone as a straight movie, Rocky Horror loses a tremendous amount of its charm. Yet, for those who wish to perfect their lip-synching techniques for movie cinema performances or for those who want to gather a crowd around the TV at home for some good, old-fashioned, rowdy fun, this film can't be beat. -Jenny Brown.
Actors & Directors
- Henry Levin
- William Demarest
- Barbara Hale
- Ludwig Donath
- Larry Parks
- Bill Goodwin
Release date: 2002-07-01 Run time: 91 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £12.90
Review Jolson Sings Again [1949] / 4 Front Video:
Actors & Directors
- Pat Hingle
- Season Hubley
- Kurt Russell
- Shelley Winters
- John Carpenter
Run time: 163 min. Price: £10.99
Review Elvis The Movie [1979] / 2 Entertain Video:
Actors & Directors
- Alice Faye
- Ethel Merman
- Henry King
- Jack Haley
- Tyrone Power
- Don Ameche
Release date: 1994-07-04 Run time: 102 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £21.58
Review Alexander's Ragtime Band [1938] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Norma Crane
- Paul Mann
- Topol
- Norman Jewison
- Molly Picon
- Leonard Frey
Release date: 2001-02-26 Run time: 171 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £5.80
Review Fiddler On The Roof [1971] / MGM Entertainment:This rousing musical, based on the stories of Sholem Aleichem, takes place in pre-revolutionary Russia and centres on the life of Tevye (Topol), a milkman who is trying to keep his family's traditions in place while marrying off his three older daughters. Yet, times are changing and the daughters want to make their own matches, breaking free of many of the constricting customs required of them by Judaism. In the background of these events, Russia is on the brink of revolution and Jews are feeling increasingly unwelcome in their villages. Tevye-who expresses his desire for sameness in the opening number, "Tradition"-is trying to keep everyone, and everything, together. The movie is strongly allegorical-Tevye represents the common man-but it does it dextrously, and the resulting film is a stunning work of art. The music is excellent (it won Oscars for the scoring and the sound), with plenty of familiar songs such as "Sunrise, Sunset" and "If I Were a Rich Man," which you'll be humming long after the movie is over. Isaac Stern's violin-he provides the music for the fiddler on the roof-is hauntingly beautiful. And despite the serious subject matter, the film is quite comedic in parts; it also well deserves the Oscar it won for cinematography. -Jenny Brown Fiddler on the Roof arrived in cinemas in 1971, seven years after the Sheldon Harnick/Jerry Bock musical about Jewish life in a pre-Revolution Russian village first gripped Broadway. Based on the stories of Shalom Aleichem, with its potent mixture of sentiment and religious and historical context, it remains one of the most popular shows of the modern age. [+]
With the help of an outstanding performance from Topol as Tevye-the milkman with five daughters kicking at the constraints of tradition-Norman Jewison's captivating film retains a moving intimacy in its portrayal of relationships in changing times. But it also stretches the possibilities of location shooting-in this case the countryside of the former Yugoslavia-further than any musical movie before or since. The villagers are played by the inhabitants of the area, lending a poignant realism to the vibrant crowd scenes. And the cinematography is spectacular, with Jewison's clever use of distance generating an epic feel that helps to explain the story's continuing resonance and popularity. Topol's career-defining star turn is balanced by the warmth and sensitivity of the surrounding performances, particularly Norma Crane as his abrasive wife Golda. British sitcom fans will spot early appearances by Roger Lloyd Pack, and Ruth Madoc as the demonic butcher's wife, Fruma Sarah. At nearly three hours, it's a long emotional haul, but aided by some of the most beautiful songs in musical history, Jewison's Fiddler is ageless. On the DVD: Fiddler on the Roof Special Edition is presented on DVD in widescreen with a Dolby soundtrack that makes a mighty meal of John Williams' Oscar-winning musical adaptation. The most fascinating extras are a making-of documentary that shows a youthful, slightly tetchy Jewison at work, and a 2003 reminiscence in which all of his passion and feel for the piece has survived intact. He shares a commentary with Topol crammed with vivid memories and context. There is also a photographic gallery showing the resources that were used to give the film its authenticity, and Jewison reads extracts from original Aleichem stories. -Piers Ford.
Actors & Directors
- Warner Oland
- Otto Lederer
- Eugenie Besserer
- May McAvoy
- Alan Crosland
- Al Jolson
Run time: 84 min. Price: £10.99
Review The Jazz Singer [1927] / Warner Home Video:
Actors & Directors
- Ned Beatty
- Tara Fitzgerald
- David McCallum
Run time: 102 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £39.95
Review Hear My Song / Paramount Home Video:Ned Beatty stars as legendary singer Jospeh Locke who fled to Ireland to escape the clutches of the taxman and Plice Chief Jim Abbot (David McCallum). Now Micky O'Neill (Adrian Dunbar) is desperate to save his ailing nightclub. The solution? To SOMEHOW bring the infamous Joseph Locke back!.
Actors & Directors
- Marianne McAndrew
- Gene Kelly
- Barbra Streisand
- Danny Lockin
- Walter Matthau
- Michael Crawford
Release date: 2002-05-20 Run time: 139 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £4.00
Review Hello Dolly [1969] / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:
| Models & Brands: Michael Flatley - Lord Of The Dance [1996], Holiday Inn [1942], South Pacific [1958], Flying Down To Rio [1933], Seven Brides For Seven Brothers [1954], Kismet [1955], The Sound Of Music [1965], Oliver [1968], Carmen [1985], That's Dancing [1985], Hollywood Musicals Of The 50's, Rodger & Hammerstein's Cinderella, The Rocky Horror Picture Show [1975], Jolson Sings Again [1949], Elvis The Movie [1979], Alexander's Ragtime Band [1938], Fiddler On The Roof [1971], The Jazz Singer [1927], Hear My Song, Hello Dolly [1969] |