Sheltering Sky

Sheltering Sky
by Bernardo Bertolucci

Sheltering Sky
List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $6.98
You Save: $8.00 (53%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $1.37 (click here)
Category: VHS Video
See more movie releases


(Click here)
Buy this VHS video movie at online store in your country
Canada

Product details

Actor: Campbell Scott, Debra Winger, Jill Bennett, John Malkovich, Timothy Spall
Director: Bernardo Bertolucci
Edition: VHS Tape
Audio: Arabic (Original Language); English (Original Language), Analog; French (Original Language)
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC
Running Time: 139 minutes
Release Date: 1997-11-10
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Studio: Warner Home Video

VHS Movie Reviews of Sheltering Sky

Movie Review: Paul Bowles Novel Comes to the Screen
Summary: 4 Stars

Sheltering Sky is a great novel; the atmospherics of "place" -- Sahara desert -- play a big role. The film combines Bernardo Bertolucci and John Malkovich and is perfect, but dark. Lots of footage on the lives of Sahara nomads interpersed with the plot. Supporting cast is excellent. I think it helps to have read the book.

Movie Review: THE FABULOUS BERNARDO
Summary: 5 Stars

Dear Guys and gals, searching for an evening to relax with a wonderfeul movie. Then go nowhere else. Sit back in your couch, an arm round your girl friend, and view Bernardo Bertulucci's 'The Sheltering Sky'. It is a fabulous movie which I am sure you will enjoy very much. Think i'm jokin'? nah.. why should I . My aunt in India, a Carnatic Musician(what a mouthful), is gonna send me The DVD of The Sheltering Sky as soon as she gets it. The Amazon US guys, are very prompt. I only hope, the amazon guys do not send the DVD by Courier. I once had a terrible experience with the Indian Couriers. They open packs, and do all kinds of....stuff!
I hope the US Amazon guys, send it by good ol' postal service.
NALINI THILAK

Movie Review: Finding Meaning While Following the Lost
Summary: 3 Stars

I couldn't find the edition I read of "The Sheltering Sky" here on [...] but my copy includes an introduction by Paul Bowles written a year or so before he died. In the introduction, he says "the less said about the film version, the better."

(His only other comment about the film was to mock the filmmakers for trying to make Debra Winger look like his wife Jane and sell the story as a thinly-veiled account of their trip into the Sahara...a trip that Bowles swears he never took with Jane).

I'd seen the movie before reading the book and was intrigued with the story enough to read the novel. Then I watched the movie again. The film is certainly more interesting if you've read the book. That's probably because you can follow the inner thoughts and feelings (or lack of feelings) of the characters, something you'd only have to guess at while watching the film otherwise. It seemed to me that some really good dialogue was left out of the film between Port and Kit, especially in their final scenes. (That some of this dialogue was given to the author during his cameo at the beginning and end of the film didn't make it any easier either).

I love John Malkovich but I think he's not really right for Port. Port comes across (to me) as a vain, handsome but empty man stubbornly trying to free himself from his privileged existence. Malkovich is too intense and interesting, too unpredictable to be a pretty boy foolishly blundering through the Sahara to shake himself off. He's a great actor but his talents obscures this character (again, my opinion).

And I've really learned to appreciate Debra Winger. She really is one of this country's finest actresses, taking on some really tough roles and making them work. When she's left to carry the movie by herself, I wished there had been more scenes earlier to draw her character out more. Three years after this film, she was also great in "Shadowlands" with Anthony Hopkins.

The brutality of the novel is downplayed when Kit wanders off to join a caravan late in the film. In the movie, she becomes involved with an Arab trader like a mini-romance where she eventually gives herself to him. In the novel, she's immediately passed between the two men leading the caravan and accepts her total loss of identity. I think you'll agree there's a huge difference between a romance and a rape, right?

But the film follows the storyline somewhat faithfully and has some really wonderful photography of the Sahara Desert. I thought the ending was a little confusing...until I read the book and rewatched it. I'm sure the movie will be more interesting if you did that...I'm just not sure you'd want to invest that much time in it.

I thought it was worth it.

Movie Review: Quick Sand
Summary: 3 Stars

I love Bertolucci and I love Paul Bowles, but I think this movie fails both artists. It is, of course, a stunning visual masterpiece, as usual it must be said, because of the cinematographer. It is luscious and hypnotic, no doubt about that. I think the weakness is in the cast who, although talented in their own ways, really fail here. Winger is capable of greatness; she is terrific in many films, but here she seems so weak, no passionless. Malkovich is the darling of the art set, but doesn't really have it as far as I am concerned. His is a peculiarly neurotic sort of masculine power. He pouts and purses his lips, and sulks. By now he has got this down as though it were a comic routine. He seems all wrong for this role. I liked the scenes of Winger out in the desert with the Bedouin; this is a real S/M fantasy if there ever was one, but I don't think the ending has much resonance. When she runs back into the casbah, it isn't clear in the movie as it is in the novel that she has nothing to go back to. Partly this is due to the odd framing device with the elderly Bowles reading from the text in that awful monotone voice of his. Nostalgia is not the right note to strike but there it is. Bowles by himself, and the entire scene suddenly becomes romanticized, like a TV commercial for Lucky Strike.

Movie Review: Bertolucci's most underrated film, and a masterpiece...
Summary: 5 Stars

This is definitely Bertolucci's most underrated film. It's a real masterpiece. It's incredibly cinematic, well acted, deep, and mysterious. John Malkovich, Debra Winger, Campbell Scott, and Timothy Spall gives great performances, and it's another film that showcases Bertolucci's brilliant camera work (again lensed by Vittorio Storario), and Bertolucci's mastery of erotic cinema. The last 45 minutes or so of this film has almost no dialogue (unheard of in a film released by a major studio), but you are mesmerized by it anyway. It's a real ambiguous film, leaving you with more questions than answers. I have not read the original novel, but reportedly Bowles was unhappy with it. A friend of mine who did read the original novel and saw the film loved them both. I think this film got dissed a bit because it was done right after The Last Emperor, so maybe critics felt that they had to take Bertolucci down a notch. Another great Bertolucci film....

Summary of Sheltering Sky

Master filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci applies his considerable talent to this haunting adaptation of the Paul Bowles novel. John Malkovich and Debra Winger play Port and Kit Moresby, characters loosely based on Bowles and his wife Jane, who flee New York for North Africa, where they hope to find mystical truths that will reignite the spark of their marriage. But instead they lose their moral bearings (with help from a friend, played by Campbell Scott, who has an affair with Kit) while traveling deeper and deeper into the Sahara. Before long, what started as a vacation at exotic lodgings has descended into a tour of hell, as they stumble farther and farther into an unknowable spiritual territory. Though long and at times slow-moving, the film features marvelously nuanced acting by Malkovich and Winger and visionary filmmaking that makes the landscape at once picturesque and threatening. --Marshall Fine

Erotic Video

Video Genres
Movies most talked about in Erotic Video
Playboy - Testing the Limits (Unrated) ImagePlayboy - Testing the Limits (Unrated)
Playboy Home Video; Release date: 2000-07-11; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $159.00
The Getaway (Uncut, Unrated Version) ImageThe Getaway (Uncut, Unrated Version)
Universal Studios; Release date: 1995-03-14; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $4.00
Price in other shops: $9.98
Getaway (1993) ImageGetaway (1993)
Universal Studios; Release date: 1998-09-01; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $5.48
Price in other shops: $9.98
Virtual Desire ImageVirtual Desire
Triboro/American Home; Release date: 1995-10-31; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $9.95
Virtual Desire ImageVirtual Desire
Triboro/American Home; Release date: 1995-10-31; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $9.95
Dark Tide (Rated Version) ImageDark Tide (Rated Version)
Vidmark / Trimark; Release date: 1997-06-20; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $12.98
Paradise (1982) ImageParadise (1982)
MGM (Video & DVD); Release date: 1998-01-13; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $19.36
Dark Tide (Unrated) ImageDark Tide (Unrated)
Vidmark / Trimark; Release date: 1997-06-20; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $12.99
Castaway (1987) ImageCastaway (1987)
Warner Home Video; Release date: 1998-09-01; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $19.98
M Butterfly ImageM Butterfly
Warner Home Video; Release date: 1997-11-10; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $66.95
Similar Video, DVDs, Audio CDs
The Lives of Others ImageThe Lives of Others
Sony; Release date: 2007-08-21; DVD
Best price: $12.22
Price in other shops: $19.94
La Vie en Rose (Extended Version) ImageLa Vie en Rose (Extended Version)
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2007-11-13; DVD
Best price: $17.50
Price in other shops: $27.95
There Will Be Blood ImageThere Will Be Blood
Paramount; Release date: 2008-04-08; DVD
Best price: $8.49
Price in other shops: $29.99
The Conformist (Extended Edition) ImageThe Conformist (Extended Edition)
Paramount; Release date: 2006-12-05; DVD
Best price: $7.46
Price in other shops: $14.99
1900 (Special Collector's Edition) Image1900 (Special Collector's Edition)
Paramount; Release date: 2006-12-05; DVD
Best price: $12.38
Price in other shops: $19.99
Besieged ImageBesieged
Warner Brothers; Release date: 1999-12-09; DVD
Best price: $15.98
Price in other shops: $24.98
The Dreamers (Original Uncut NC-17 Version) ImageThe Dreamers (Original Uncut NC-17 Version)
Release date: 2004-07-13; DVD
Best price: $4.24
Price in other shops: $9.98
Stealing Beauty ImageStealing Beauty
TYLER,LIV; Release date: 2002-01-08; DVD
Best price: $4.61
Price in other shops: $9.98
Lust, Caution (Widescreen, NC-17- Rated Edition) ImageLust, Caution (Widescreen, NC-17- Rated Edition)
Universal; Release date: 2008-02-19; DVD
Best price: $13.09
Price in other shops: $29.98
The Sheltering Sky ImageThe Sheltering Sky
by Paul Bowles
Harper Perennial; Published: 1998-04-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $3.89
Price in other shops: $14.00
Compare prices and read customer reviews for more than one million DVD titles.
Oscar 2005 Winners