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Astaire & Rogers Collection Volume 1 (Flying Down to Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Top Hat, Follow the Fleet) [VHS] by Mark Sandrich, Thornton Freeland, William A. Seiter
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Product detailsActor: Dolores del Rio, Fred Astaire, Gene Raymond, Ginger Rogers, Irene Dunne Director: Mark Sandrich, Thornton Freeland, William A. Seiter Writer: Aladar Laszlo Writer: Alice Duer Miller Writer: Allan Scott Writer: Anne Caldwell Writer: Cyril Hume Edition: VHS Tape Audio: English (Original Language), Analog; French (Original Language); Italian (Original Language); Portuguese (Original Language); Russian (Original Language) Format: Black & White, Box set, NTSC Release Date: 2000-09-05 Audience Rating: Unrated Publisher: Warner Home Video Studio: Warner Home Video
VHS Movie Reviews of Astaire & Rogers Collection Volume 1 (Flying Down to Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Top Hat, Follow the Fleet) [VHS]Movie Review: Crime it's not available on DVD!!! Summary: 5 StarsWith all the cr@# they release on DVD these days it's a crime not to have these magnificent movies restored PROPERLY and released on DVD. Both collections are outstanding. Who could ever tire of this glamorous and talented pair. PLEASE! I beg for both sets to be released on DVD and restored with the respect these films deserve.
Movie Review: wonderful Summary: 5 StarsThese two may have had other leading men/ladies, but when they're together, it's nothing but... heaven, i'm in heaven...
Movie Review: Fred & Ginger Summary: 5 StarsPlease put this on DVD. I'll buy it in a second.
Movie Review: Beautiful collection!! A must have! Summary: 5 StarsIf you love movies with uplifting story lines and incredible dancing, this is for you!! I highly recommend the entire set. Astaire and Rogers are incredible! No one has come close to them since!!
Movie Review: I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket Summary: 5 StarsIt's great to see Astaire and Rogers finally getting their due with two boxed sets that represent all 10 of their films. This set represents the first five chapters of the greatest romance in movie history and shows the two performers growing from self-conscious youthful exuberance into the polished teamwork everybody remembers. With each film there is a fairly breathtaking advance in every area -- from acting and directing to sets and makeup, and of course in music and choreography. All five movies have wonderful things in them, but the standouts are "Roberta," a masterpiece of sparkling musical comedy with a brilliant score and phenomenal dancing, and "Top Hat," which remains the definitive Astaire/Rogers movie. Even "Follow the Fleet," burdened with a tedious script and leaden direction, comes alive in the superb musical numbers. If you have to choose between the two A/R sets, the other may have the edge, but this one is equally indispensible.
Summary of Astaire & Rogers Collection Volume 1 (Flying Down to Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Top Hat, Follow the Fleet) [VHS]This five-tape set includes Flying Down to Rio, The Gay Divorcee, Roberta, Top Hat, and Follow the Fleet. Fans of classic movie musicals will be in heaven with two five-video sets of the films of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, the quintessential dancing duo. Fred and Ginger weren't always stars--the former Broadway hoofer and studio chorus girl were cast as the second-tier "comic" couple in three of their early films (Flying Down to Rio, Roberta, Follow the Fleet), and the pace drags whenever they're not on the screen. The high points of the first set are The Gay Divorcee, which proved that the pair could carry a film, and Top Hat, generally considered their definitive movie. All the films mix light romantic comedy (usually centered around mistaken identities and ending, inevitably, in blissful wedding promises) with elegant dinner wear and surreal sets intended to transport '30s audiences away from the Depression to such locales as Rio, Paris, and Venice. But of course the real reason to watch these films is the sensational dancing set to great songs by the likes of Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, and Jerome Kern, numbers that are not merely entertaining but also innovative for their time in that they reveal character and advance the plot. The quintessential romantic duet "Night and Day," the grand ensemble number "The Continental," the definitive tuxedo setting "Top Hat, White Tie, and Tails," the famously feathery "Cheek to Cheek," and the epic show-within-a-show "Let's Face the Music and Dance" are some of the best musical moments ever set to celluloid. --David Horiuchi
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