Drama
To Sir, with Love
by James Clavell
from RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video
Novelist James Clavell wrote, produced, and directed this 1967 British film (based on a novel by E.R. Braithwaite) about a rookie teacher who throws out stock lesson plans and really takes command of his unruly, adolescent students in a London school. Poitier is very good as a man struggling with the extent of his commitment to the job, and even more as a teacher whose commitment is to proffering life lessons instead of academics. The spirit of this movie can be found in such recent films as Dangerous Minds and Mr. Holland's Opus, but none is as moving as this one. Besides, the others don't have a title song performed by pop star Lulu. --Tom Keogh
Odyssey
by Andrei Konchalovsky
from Hallmark Entertainment
Andrei Konchalovsky's expansive television mini-series production of Homer's epic poem gets off to clumsy start as he tries to squeeze the Trojan War into a mere half hour, but once the arrogant but honorable Odysseus (strikingly played by Armand Assante) and his loyal crew begin their doomed voyage home, this film turns into a fantastical adventure. Integrating often-stunning special effects with inventive art design, Konchalovsky achieves a beautiful look on a limited budget as he follows the 10-year ordeal of Odysseus from his battles with the Cyclops and the magical Circe (Bernadette Peters) to his secret homecoming and his confrontation with the treacherous Eurymachus (Eric Roberts). Isabella Rossellini appears as his spiritual guide, the goddess Athena, with Greta Scacchi as Odysseus's faithful wife and Vanessa Williams as the seductive Calypso. The rest of the cast includes Geraldine Chaplin, Jeroen Krabbé, Christopher Lee, and Irene Papas. The production was shot on location in and around the Mediterranean, making for a lush, lovely visual experience. --Sean Axmaker
Enchanted April (1991)
by Mike Newell
from Paramount
This lovely, 1991 adaptation of Elizabeth Von Arnim's novel has a superb cast and a tone so mellow you can feel your pulse get slower. Josie Lawrence and Miranda Richardson play a pair of unhappily married women who rent an Italian villa for a month, sharing the rent with a crusty Englishwoman (Joan Plowright) and a lonely aristocrat (Polly Walker). Sun, rest, sinking into the green grass for long naps--they all have a soulful effect on the quartet, and then on the men in their lives who make a surprise visit. Mike Newell (Into the West) directs with seeming effortlessness, and it is impossible not to be swayed by the promise of restoration for these burdened characters--or for anyone alive. Wonderful performances all around, including a particularly sensitive one by Alfred Molina and a very funny one by Jim Broadbent. --Tom Keogh
Fantasia
by Wilfred Jackson
from Walt Disney Video
Groundbreaking on several counts, not the least of which was an innovative use of animation and stereophonic sound, this ambitious Disney feature has lost nothing to time since its release in 1940. Classical music was interpreted by Disney animators, resulting in surreal fantasy and playful escapism. Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra provided the music for eight segments by the composers Tchaikovsky, Moussorgsky, Stravinsky, Beethoven, Ponchielli, Bach, Dukas, and Schubert. Not all the sequences were created equally, but a few are simply glorious, such as "Night on Bald Mountain," "The Sorcerer's Apprentice," and "The Nutcracker Suite." The animation ranges from subtly delicate to fiercely bold. The screen bursts with color and action as creatures transmute and convention is thrust aside. The painstaking detail and saturated hues are unique to this film, unmatched even by more advanced technology. --Rochelle O'Gorman
Yentl
from MGM (Video & DVD)
Barbra Streisand made her directorial debut with this 1983 adaptation of the Isaac Bashevis Singer story about a young Eastern European woman (Streisand) who disguises herself as a male at the turn of the century in order to get an education. Except for an excessive musical score with too many songs and Streisand's tiresome tendency to play characters who suppress their beauty, the film is crisp and engaging, and the gender-bending love story complications are fun, if gimmicky. Streisand gives a smart, vulnerable performance and gets fresh work from costars Mandy Patinkin and Amy Irving. --Tom Keogh
Sarah Plain And Tall
by Glenn Jordan
from Republic Pictures
The most-watched made-for-television movie of the 1990s (50 million viewers upon first broadcast in 1991), this fine adaptation of Patricia MacLachlan's novel stars Glenn Close as Sarah, a Maine schoolteacher who responds to a Kansas farmer's newspaper ad seeking a bride. Set in 1910, the story follows Sarah's trial run as stepmother to the children of the widowed Jacob Witting (Christopher Walken). The tough part of the experiment is the conflicting expectations the would-be couple have over Sarah's role in the household. The kids, too, have their doubts about a substitute for their mother, and Jacob isn't ready, emotionally, for a new beginning. But in short order the strong-willed Sarah brings happiness and vitality into the house, and love and understanding eventually blossom between the two lonely adults. Everything is right about this Hallmark production, from a bright script cowritten by MacLachlan to Glenn Jordan's sensitive direction and a pair of first-rate leads making every moment worth watching. A wholesome tale from the heartland, this is a good movie for any viewing situation, from an audience of one to an entire family. --Tom Keogh
Resurrection
by Daniel Petrie
from Universal Studios
Released at a time when psychic auras, near-death experiences, and Kirlian photography were all the rage among early New Age proponents, Resurrection achieves a spiritual depth rarely found in Hollywood movies. In one of her finest performances, Ellen Burstyn stars as Edna McCauley, a transplanted farm girl who develops healing powers following an accident that left her widowed and paralyzed. Returning to her Kansas homeland, she attracts awe and controversy, performing healings while deflecting any pretense of religion. That's a risky position in the Bible belt, and even Edna's new beau Cal (Sam Shepard) responds with zealous incredulity, fearing what he can't understand while others embrace Edna with unquestioning faith. Through it all, Edna remains calmly resolute as the conduit of an extraordinary gift.
Sensitively written by Lewis John Carlino (The Great Santini), Resurrection tenuously mixes spiritual significance with John Ford's homespun tradition, but for the most part it works: Burstyn superbly conveys Edna's heartfelt determination, and both she and stage veteran Eva LeGallienne (in a rare and final film performance, as Edna's grandma) deservedly earned Oscar nominations. The movie dares to suggest that miracles reside within everyone, and that pure grace will manifest itself in unexpected ways. To that end, Richard Farnsworth is warm and wise in a brief but perfect role; Burstyn's final scene with Roberts Blossom (as her disapproving father) is a heartbreaker; and the film ends with an act of compassion that brings the story full circle as an affirmation of life's greatest mysteries. --Jeff Shannon
The Jungle Book
by Wolfgang Reitherman
from Walt Disney Video
Disney's 1967 animated feature seems even more entertaining now than it did upon first release, with a hall-of-fame vocal performance by Phil Harris as Baloo, the genial bear friend of feral child Mowgli. Based on fiction by Rudyard Kipling, the film goes its own way as Disney animation will, but the strong characters and smart casting (George Sanders as the villainous tiger, Shere Khan) make it one of the studio's stronger feature-length cartoons. Songs include "The Bare Necessities" and "Trust in Me." --Tom Keogh
Bebés:Películas infantiles:VHS infantiles
brinquedo: CDs_e_DVDs_Infantis : VHS
cameras: Câmeras_de_vídeo : VHS
cameras: Filmadoras : VHS
Electrónica, Audio y Video:Video Cámaras:Compact VHS
Electrónica, Audio y Video:Video Cámaras:S-VHS
Electrónica, Audio y Video:Video Cámaras:VHS
electronics: Accessories & Supplies, Blank Media, Video, VHS
eletronico: Câmeras_de_vídeo : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Autografados : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Axé_ : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Axé : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Blues_e_Jazz : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Infantil : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Música_Romântica : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : MPB : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : New_Age : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Outros : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Pop_e_Rock_Nacional : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Pop_Internacional : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Rap_e_Hip_Hop : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Reggae : VHS
filmes-musica: CD : Rock_Internacional : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Ação_e_Aventura : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Animes : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Épicos_e_Bíblicos : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Cinema_Nacional : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Clássicos_e_Cults : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Comédia : VHS
filmes-musica: DVD : Desenhos_Animados_e_Cartoons : VHS
MercadoLibre Argentina :
Ver ítems en:
- DVD Películas → Drama
- Películas → Drama
- Películas → DVDs → Drama
- Películas_Otros_Formatos → Drama
- Libros → Antiguos → Novelas
- De_colección → Antiguos → Novelas
- De_Colección → Antiguos → Novelas
- Ficción → Novelas
- AudioCar → Acción y Aventura
- Ficción → Novelas → Acción y Aventura
- Idiomas → Literatura en Inglés
Tiene algo para ofrecer en venta?
click aquí para Registrarse Gratis en MercadoLibre
Webmaster: Gana $$ con tu sitio Web!
→ ML Affiliate Program
oprima Ctrl-D para marcar este tópico en favoritos
press Ctrl-D to bookmark this topic



