Glamour Girls: The Leading Ladies (1935)
Facts
|
Glamour Girls: The Leading Ladies (Love Me Tonight / The Blue Angel / Pandora and the Flying Dutchman / The Good Fairy / Lured)
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Oct 10 20:42 EDT (details)
|
| Directed by | Rouben Mamoulian, William Wyler, Preston Sturges, Douglas Sirk and Josef Von Sternberg |
| Cast | Ava Gardner, Marlene Dietrich, Lucille Ball, Jeanette MacDonald, Margaret Sullavan, Maurice Chevalier, Myrna Loy and James Mason |
| Theatrical Release | February 18, 1935 |
| DVD Release | November 21, 2006 |
| Running Time | 506 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 738329051129 |
| Buy this item | $44.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 10 20:42 EDT (details) 5 DVD, Kino Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Black & White, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 12 new from $30.28, 5 used from $34.83 |
About Glamour Girls: The Leading Ladies
Love Me Tonight is the best movie musical you've never heard of, a deliciously clever 1932 romp with Maurice Chevalier as a poor Paris tailor and Jeannette MacDonald as a wealthy aristocrat. Rouben Mamoulian's direction is a landmark of early-sound ingenuity, and the Rodgers and Hart score includes such goodies as "Isn't It Romantic?" (given an epic treatment here), "Lover," and "Mimi." The Good Fairy, from 1935, showcases the wonderful Margaret Sullavan, the throaty-voiced actress whose quicksilver reactions look as fresh and delightful today as they were 70 years ago. Sullavan begins the comedy as an orphan, becomes a theater usherette, and eventually becomes involved with meatpacking magnate Frank Morgan and bewhiskered lawyer Herbert Marshall. The matching of director William Wyler and screenwriter Preston Sturges is not a natural one, to be sure, and Wyler's direction tends to weigh the film down (he was, however, enchanted by Sullavan, whom he married--briefly). The great Sturges patter shines through, and you'll adore Sullavan.
1947's Lured puts pre-TV Lucille Ball in London, where a murderer is killing women he meets through the personal ads. The whodunit isn't difficult to guess, but director Douglas Sirk brings his elegant German precision to the proceedings, and George Sanders and Boris Karloff head a nifty cast of supporting folk. Finally, Pandora and the Flying Dutchman (1951) matches Ava Gardner and James Mason in a daft blend of mythology and Hemingwayesque Lost Generation stuff. Ava is surrounded by dashing suitors, but Mason's mystery man lures her into the realm of myth. The movie's got giggle-worthy plot twists and great Technicolor, to say nothing of glamour. --Robert Horton Amazon.com
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for Glamour Girls: The Leading Ladies posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Great KINO SET |
| Beware! No German Blue Angel |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





