Shirley Temple - Americas Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 6 (1937)
Facts
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Shirley Temple - Americas Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 6 (Stowaway / Young People / Wee Willie Winkie)
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Jul 26 12:22 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Allan Dwan, John Ford and William A. Seiter |
| Cast | Shirley Temple, Jack Oakie, Charlotte Greenwood, Arleen Whelan, George Montgomery, Irving Bacon, Charles Halton, Kathleen Howard, Mae Marsh, Frank Sully, Harry Tyler and Minor Watson |
| Theatrical Release | July 30, 1937 |
| DVD Release | April 22, 2008 |
| Running Time | 266 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | G (General Audience) |
| UPC Code | 024543514367 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 26 12:22 EDT (details) 3 DVD, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Black & White, Dubbed, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Dubbed) Or 32 new from $18.78, 11 used from $21.84 |
About Shirley Temple - Americas Sweetheart Collection, Vol. 6
Hollywood's biggest little star Shirley Temple returns with wave 6 of her Fox movies. Wee Willie Winkie The Stowaway and Young People all new to DVD. Available as a collection or as singles these Shirley Temple movies are sure to put a smile on your face. Wee Willie Winkie directed by John Ford features both the black & white version and the tinted color version other two are black and white.System Requirements:Running Time: 265 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA/CLASSICS UPC: 024543514367 Manufacturer No: 2251436 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Shirley Temple Sweetheart Collection:Volume 6 |
| Happy, but a little bit disappointed |
Keep the color versions FOX!!!! May 7, 2008
| No Color - No Buy |
| bad!!!!!not like others |
| Vol. 6: few extras, enjoyable films |
"Stowaway" (1936) Story: Ching-Ching (Temple), a child whose guardians are killed in Shanghai, seeks refuge from the streets in a car's open trunk, only to wake up and find the car on a ship bound for the U.S. The car's owner, a wealthy playboy (Robert Young), is charmed by Ching-Ching, and offers to marry another passenger (Alice Faye) in order to keep the child. When the two adults meet in divorce court, it's up to Ching-Ching to keep them together. Quite a few memorable songs (Faye & Temple on "Goodnight My Love" & Temple imitating Ginger Rogers & Al Jolson in "You've Gotta' S.M.I.L.E.") Features the original black and white film in its original theatrical aspect ratio with English Stereo and English and Spanish Mono and includes English, French and Spanish subtitles. 85 minutes.
"Wee Willie Winkie" (1937) Loosely based on Rudyard Kipling's popular story. Taken by her mother (June Lang) to live in India, a young girl (Temple) gradually wins the heart of her feisty grandfather (C. Aubrey Smith), a colonel at a British army outpost. Before long, she captures the hearts of his entire regiment as well as his chief enemy (Cesar Romero), using her charms to prevent a full-scale war. Directed by John Ford; definitely one of Temple's best films. Presented as a flipper disc featuring a tinted version of the film (in a very pleasing sepia tone) that was based on original notes and research to make the film look as it was first released as well as the black and white original, both in their original full-screen theatrical aspect ratio. With English Stereo plus English and Spanish Mono, the feature also includes English, French and Spanish subtitles. 100 minutes. Bonus feature: Restoration Comparison.
"Young People" (1940) Story: Wendy (Temple, in her final film at Fox) is adopted as an infant by the husband and wife vaudeville team of Joe and Kit Ballantine (Jack Oakie and Charlotte Greenwood), she grows into childhood as a vital part of their act. As she approaches school age, the couple feels that life on the road is not the best thing for Wendy and decide to settle down on a farm in Vermont. However, the locals openly express their doubts about the morality of show business people. A few pleasing tunes ("On Fifth Avenue" and "Tra La La La") and some solid performances, but it comes off as an enjoyable B-Movie version of the Judy Garland & Mickey Rooney backyard musicals...WITHOUT a Mickey. Shirley shows the awkwardness of a teen; her acting and dance routines do not look natural; they seem very mannered and over-rehearsed. With a higher quality director and better script, Shirley could have had a more successful transition into the teen years (as witnessed by her later films during the Selznick years). Greenwood is great in this film, but Oakie comes off as an oaf. His dancing in the finale ("Tra La La") is plain horrible; instead of dancing, he looks like he is fighting off a bad case of gas. Original black and white film in its original theatrical aspect ratio with English Stereo and English and Spanish Mono and includes English, French and Spanish subtitles and a theatrical trailer that really would have benefitted from a little digital stabilization. 78 minutes.
Just saw this on the web: "Fox Home Entertainment, the video division of movie studio 20th Century Fox, is marking [Shirley Temple] Black's [80th] birthday on Wednesday by releasing the sixth and last volume of a retrospective series of her films." It appears that "Poor Little Rich Girl" & " Our Little Girl" are getting the shaft this time around.
Overall, 2 solid films in this collection, with "Young People" being the somewhat weak (albeit still enjoyable) link. April 1, 2008
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