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Adventure (1945) [VHS] by Victor Fleming
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Product detailsActor: Clark Gable, Greer Garson, Joan Blondell, Thomas Mitchell, Tom Tully Director: Victor Fleming Writer: Anthony Veiller Writer: Casey Robinson Writer: Clyde Brion Davis Writer: Frederick Hazlitt Brennan Writer: John Lee Mahin Writer: Vincent Lawrence Writer: William H. Wright Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Unknown), Analog; English (Original Language), Analog Format: Black & White, NTSC Running Time: 135 minutes Release Date: 1998-09-01 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Publisher: MGM (Warner) Studio: MGM (Warner)
VHS Movie Reviews of Adventure (1945) [VHS]Movie Review: "Gable's back, and Garson's got him!" Summary: 5 Stars I am a BIG Greer Garson fan, and I think this movie was superb! I thought the chemistry between Gable and Garson was wonderful. I really believed every moment of this movie.
This film marks the only teaming of Greer Garson and Clark Gable. It was so good that I'm sad they didn't do more movies together.
This movie is all about a sailor named Harry Patterson (Gable) who finally decides to take leave in San Francisco. There, he meets the beautiful Emily Sears (Garson), a librarian, who seems very content with her life: single and miserable. After awhile, the two realize they love each other, and get married in Reno. But Harry can't fight his love of the sea, and he leaves his wife, not knowing when he will return.
I cry every time I see this movie. It's so heart-warming and real, despite the fact that it was made during WWII and times have definatly changed.
Don't forget to look for the part where Harry and Emily steal the chickens! It's funny to watch Greer Garson make chicken sounds!
This movie has a magnificent cast including Joan Blondell and Thomas Mitchell. A must see!
Movie Review: Mis-Adventure, more like. Summary: 1 StarsClark Gable was sure lucky that this mess of a movie didn't end his career, being that it was his first venture after returning from active duty in WWII. The main trouble with the movie is his attitude; for some reason, Metro tried to revive the style of the younger carefree Gable in this film, the sort of fellow he was in "It Happened One Night"--even Metro's memory was faulty, because that persona had already been replaced by the mature man of 1939' "Gone with the Wind". Here, he's just too old and had been through too much in real life (the war and the earlier death of his wife Carole Lomabard) to cavort around like he does in the movie, and with Greer Garson no less! I don't understand why the studio, having taken such pains to shape her image as a gentlewoman, had her buffooning around either. Check out the better post-war Gable of "Homecoming" and "The Hucksters", and leave "Adventure" on the shelf.
Movie Review: They Just didn't get it Summary: 5 Stars...and neither did Leonard Maltin. This movie is better with each passing year... I think it is a pre-noir, pre-"reality" - psychological drama of intense beauty. Clark Gable stars as a staunchly confirmed sea dog, crew leader (called a bos'n) and womanizer who is totally unprepared to meet Greer Garson's character, who forever changes his vision of what is possible in finding love with a woman. Academy Award winner, and beloved character actor Thomas Mitchell ("Uncle Billy" in "It's A Wonderful Life (1946)") plays his too-sensitive-for-this-world sidekick, who becomes Gable's conscience, but at a price. The script of this drama is lyrically sublime, subtle and quite deep. The fire between the stars is evident and haunting. True 'soul-mate' love is the overt theme of this movie. Existence, conscience, and facing the pain and limits of life, so that you may truly pass into adulthood, are more themes explored here. I view this film regularly once a year and am always inspired by its deep message and raw powerful performances. This isn't your stock Gable. This is a bittersweet post-war love poem.(Really! E. B. Browning is quoted to great effect!) ***Gable's "Harry Patterson" has seen tragedy and loss (as had Gable himself, recently losing the love of his life, wife Carole Lombard). He is made restless in search of "it" which he believes only exists in the danger and perils of sea voyaging. He is sickened by the way shipwrecked people, alive and on edge, once resued, quickly become bored and lose that passionate awareness of their own lives. He is searching for that life where he stays excited and in the passionate present (probably true of many returning war soldiers in 1945). ***In Garson's "Emily Sears" he sees "it" for the first time in a woman's eyes. He is intrigued by her equivalent strength and wit, and simultaeously threatened by the risk of pain in losing her. Their love develops as a series of intense battles. She sees a "caged animal" and for the first time a man she might really respect, even though she feels he needs to be reached through all of his rebellion...and rescued. His actions are escapist (and make great movie scenes)...but sailing away to forget his new "queen," he finds things have changed and we know, as do the other characters, that it is the end of his former life ...even if he doesn't. "Emily" bravely allows "Harry" to figure it out for himself. She doesn't demand any change in him, instead she sends him off to find "it" and risks being without the man that she loves for the rest of her life. Her majesty the queen of MGM, Greer Garson, has never been lovelier. ***Joan Blondel is a juicy, ripe 'tomato'. ***Lina Romay makes an incredible "girl in distant port" and even sings a bit! ***Thomas Mitchell is the stand out support. He plays Mudge, the soul and conscience of the free spirited Gable and perhaps of the whole film. He brilliantly helps unite a lost sailor & seeker with what his heart truely seeks. Watch this film and let it be poetry... just let it play as you marvel at the writing and the actors' eyes. I predict that this movie is about to be rediscovered in a big way. ( By you?)
Movie Review: Garson puts the 'able' in Gable and this film Summary: 3 StarsBeing a fan of Greer Garson I found this movie amusing for its departure from her "Metro's Glorified Mrs." (her terms) standards, although Gable's performance seems uneven and the mutual lack of affection between the two actors in real-life is subtely apparent. The ending is a stretch for the Gable character, and altogether the script lacks in cohesion. Great individual scenes, however, in the library and in the country home. 3 stars for Garson's plot-rescue attempts and for outstanding bits of acting from supporting players.
Movie Review: I loved this movie! Thought it was great! Summary: 5 StarsI just saw this movie and it left me wanting to see it again. Clark Gable plays a sailor that just looks for a good time at every port he sails to. He doesn't even realize that he fell in love with Greer Garson who is a librarian until the end. It made me cry twice and it was worth seeing even in black and white.
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