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I Want To Live [1958] [DVD] [1943]
 
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I Want To Live [1958] [DVD] [1943]

Susan Hayward , Simon Oakland , Robert Wise    Suitable for 15 years and over   DVD
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
Price: £2.79 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Actors: Susan Hayward, Simon Oakland, Virginia Vincent, Theodore Bikel, Wesley Lay
  • Directors: Robert Wise
  • Producers: Walter Wanger
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: French, Dutch, Greek, English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Twentieth Century Fox
  • DVD Release Date: 3 May 2004
  • Run Time: 120 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0001P1BPM
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 6,977 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 39 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Susan Hayward gives an absolutely knockout performance as Barabara Graham in I Want To Live! Made in 1958, a few years after Graham was executed for murder, the film went on to earn Haywood a well deserved Best Actress Oscar.

Graham died in the gas chamber convicted of murdering an elderly widow named Mabel Monahan, but she may have been framed for the murder by two acquaintances who were trying to save their own skins. There has been much discussion about Graham's trial and execution, and her guilt is still in doubt.

The movie treads the issues carefully and although it maintains that Graham was perhaps wholly innocent of the crime for which she was executed, it also portrays the woman as a definite "loose canon." She was a naughty girl, and had a smart mouth; she was distrespectful of the law and got off on committing other crimes such as prostitution, perjury, and writing bad checks.

But did she deserve to be put to death for a crime, where the evidence was circumstantial at best? Perhaps it was her shady past that ultimately worked against her. Already prejudged by the media and also by the court of public opinion, Graham found herself with very few sympathic to her cause. Bad legal representation also contributed to her fate.

Directed by Robert Wise, I Want to Live! is powerful and provocative, and remarkably effective, not just for Haywards wild, and gutsy performance,but also because it manages to combine in equal elements the styles of hard-boiled noir, gashouse melodrama, and courtroom potboiler. It's intense, manic, and for two whole hours the drama and the hystrionics just don't let up.

Wise is content to let Hayward take the film in her teeth from the moment she appears and not let it go until she collapses defeated in the gas chamber two hours later. Obviously he's told Hayward to run with it and she did, turning in one of the best dramatic performances in the history of cinema.

The early scenes fluctuate with a jazzy energy that puts across the wild life that Barbara Graham led. Up-tempo music permeates throughout, providing ample opportunities for Hayward to work herself into a drunken and wild frenzy as she parties with her friends in Tijuana.

Hayward's star entrance is particularly breathtaking: The shot opens on a dingy hotel room, Hayward sits up into the frame, smoking in bed. She looks around and then passes the cigarette to a man's hand that has just appeared on the right edge of the frame. It's a small moment, but it says so much about her character and about the tone of what is to come.

Most disturbing are the film's final scenes where Wise offsets the ups and downs of Graham's death row stay with extended scenes of the preparation of the gas chamber for Graham's execution. It's grisly and unsettling and whatever your views of the death penalty are, these scenes will stay with you long after the movie has finished.

But I Want to Live! is so much more than just a biopic of a misunderstood and wayward woman. The film also becomes a condemnation of the American judicial system that forces the audience to watch as the possibly innocent Graham is railroaded, by the demands of the plot and by justice, into a death sentence. The police successfully entrap her whilst she is in prison, and in desperation, she gives a false confession. Torn apart by the press, her fellow inmates, and those she considered her friends, Graham finds little comfort in others.

The film also cleverly avoids falling into sappy melodrama, even when Graham's child is brought to visit and she bursts into unadulterated tears. Hayward manages to maintain a steely and resolute vigor and since she was so headstrong at the film's start, the traumatizing effect of the death sentence becomes evident in her utter defeat.

The damning condemnation of the media, who latch onto her case with sensationalizing vigor, and immediately judge her as guilty, still feels just as relevant today as it did in the 1950's. That Wise can make this material, like its heroine; fall so far so fast and so hard, makes I Want to Live! a totally sensational and profoundly important movie; and it's a film that is wholly unlike anything else being made at the time. Mike Leonard October 05.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Susan Hayward was up against Liz Taylor,Shirley Maclaine, Rosalind Russell & Deborah Kerr for the 1958 best actress oscar but noone was going to beat her performance as real life convicted murderess & prostitute Barbara Graham-one of the best female acting performances I have seen-you literally walk to that gas chamber with her & what a great jazz score! Makes you want to see every Susan Hayward movie ever made.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
This is a great film. It is based on the true story of Barbara Graham who was sentenced to death in the US in the 1950's and executed in a gas chamber. Susan Hayward won an Oscar in 1958 for her performance as the fiery, free spirited and abused good time girl whose life ends in tragedy when she is charged with murder along with two evil manipulative hustlers.
I really liked this film it has all the passion of a 1950's melodrama or a Douglas Sirk film.Susan Hayward is marvellous as Barbara Graham and she portrays Graham's last moments as she awaits her sad fate with such conviction and intensity. It's a shame that Hollywood lost the talents of Susan Hayward in 1975 when her own life was tragically cut short when she died of brain cancer.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
wonderful old movie
this is a must see for fans of gutsy drama with suburb acting from susan hayward have watched it several times , a must see
Published 1 month ago by johnk
great
Like Diasna Dors this film proved that Susan she was not just a pretty face. have watched it many times since buying it am well pleased
Published 15 months ago by sheila brazell
drama queen
the queen of drama in a real tour de force and all based on a real story about a "good time" girl going to the electric chair. Read more
Published 22 months ago by R. Poole
Well Worth Watching
I hadn't actually heard of I Want To Live but was pleased that I purchased it. A compelling true story of a lady that has a hard life, with lots of twists and sadness. Read more
Published on 9 May 2010 by S. C. Johnson
I want to Live starring Susan ahyward
I purchased this Dvd of a rather old film, purely beacuse it was a Birthday presnt for a friend who's raved about it for years,, Apparently althought I have personally not watch... Read more
Published on 19 Nov 2009 by P. M. Hancock
Depressing but good
Despite a lot of very bad music (modern jazz), Haywood's performance and the rest of the cast and the realism make this a good film. Read more
Published on 10 Jun 2009 by MrViewer
i want to live
A good film and a real weepie .susan hayward is on great form and a great story , a must see , brian
Published on 1 Jun 2009 by B. Hatton
Worst classic movie I own, great female actress performance
The diresction of this movie is amazingly weak, same as the action. It doesn't seem to have any action. The scenes are forceably prolonged without any reason. Read more
Published on 5 May 2009 by Burciu Mihai
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