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Key Largo [VHS]
 
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Key Largo [VHS]

Humphrey Bogart , Edward G. Robinson , John Huston    Parental Guidance   VHS Tape
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Actors: Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson, Lauren Bacall, Lionel Barrymore, Claire Trevor
  • Directors: John Huston
  • Writers: John Huston, Maxwell Anderson, Richard Brooks
  • Producers: Jerry Wald
  • Language English
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Warner Home Video
  • VHS Release Date: 6 Mar 2000
  • Run Time: 100 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004CJCH
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 9,639 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

John Huston (The Maltese Falcon) directed this smart thriller about a gangster (Edward G Robinson) who holds a number of people hostage in a hotel on the Florida keys during a tropical storm. Humphrey Bogart is the returning war veteran who takes on the villains, and Lauren Bacall is on hand as one of the people on the wrong end of Robinson's gun. Somewhat similar in tone to Howard Hawks's To Have and Have Not (which also featured Bogart and Bacall), Key Largo is a moody movie captures a certain despair offset by the bond between individuals united by common purpose. Claire Trevor won an Academy Award for her part as Robinson's alcoholic girlfriend. --Tom Keogh

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
By Dennis Littrell TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
Key Largo is just one of John Huston's many memorable films that somehow always seem to transcend the intention--the Hollywood intention being to make a few bucks--and to this day still plays very well and indeed appears as something close to a work of art. It features what I think is one of Edward G. Robinson's finest performances as Johnny Rocco, a sociopathic gangster holding the off-season personnel of a seaside hotel hostage as he concludes a counterfeit money deal.

The story begins as Major Frank McCloud (Humphrey Bogart) pays a visit to the family of one of his G.I. buddies who was killed in Italy during WWII. He finds the welcome from the hotel's only "guests" chilly except for Gaye Dawn (a funny and perhaps prescient Hollywood stage name) played by Claire Trevor who is drunk and befriends him. After a bit McCloud discovers that the hotel's owner Nora Temple (Lauren Bacall) and her invalid father-in-law James Temple (Lionel Barrymore) have been tricked into allowing Rocco's gang to stay and now, as a tropical storm begins to blow, are being held at gunpoint. McCloud's delicate task is to keep the megalomaniac and murderous personality of Rocco under some control so that he doesn't murder everyone.

Note that this is a splendid cast, and they all do a good job. Note too that Huston adapted this from a play by the versatile American playwright Maxwell Anderson. So the ingredients for a good film are clearly in place; and aside from some self-conscious mishmash with the Seminoles of Florida, this is a success. Anderson's desire to explore the psychopathic personality (some years later he adapted William March's novel The Bad Seed into a stage play) finds realization in Huston's direction and especially in Robinson's indelible performance. The utter disregard for the lives of others and the obsessive love of self that characterize the sociopath reek from the snares and callous laughter of the very sick Johnny Rocco. I especially liked the crazed and thrilled grin on his face when he emerges from the hold of the boat in the climactic scene, gun in hand, imagining that he has once again fooled his adversaries and is about to delightfully shoot Humphrey Bogart to death. What I loved about this scene was that Huston did not think it necessary to contrive a fight in which the good guy (Bogart) beats the bad guy by fighting fair. What happens is exactly what should happen, and without regard for the fine points of Marquis of Queensberry-type rules. Also good is Rocco beginning to sweat in fear of his life as the storm moves in while Bogey gives us his famous laugh and grin as he assesses the essential cowardice of the petty gangster.

Lauren Bacall, in one of her more modest roles, does a lot without saying much, and Lionel Barrymore is very good as the cantankerous old guy in a wheelchair. Claire Trevor actually won an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress for her work, and she was good as the alcoholic moll with a heart of gold. Robinson won nothing, but he really dominated the picture and demonstrated why he was one of Hollywood's greatest stars.

Bottom line: watch this to see the gangster yarn meld into film noir with overtones of the psychoanalytical drama that characterized many of the black and white Hollywood films of the forties and early fifties.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
John Huston crafted this very fine film with the underlying theme of isolation from a play by Maxwell Anderson. The backdrop of a gangster taking over a hotel in the Florida Keys is filled with inner emotional depth rather than a lot of action, making this the most mature and realistic of romances Bogart and Bacall would have on screen.

Major Frank McCloud (Bogart) shows up at the Largo hotel in the Keys to see his war buddy's father and widow to give them some news about how George died a hero. McCloud himself is disillusioned from trying to save the world and has been drifting since the war in both a personal and literal sense.

Nora (Bacall) had been drifting before she met George and begins to feel this same connection to Frank as they talk about their lives since the war. There is a maturity here as Huston shows a deeper aspect to caring about someone instead of the fireworks of physical attraction. The themes of loneliness and isolation run through every aspect of this film.

Frank once again must decide whether to save the world when the Largo is taken over by fallen gangster Johnny Rocco (Robinson). Rocco was once big and despite his deportation back to Cuba by the United States government as an undesirable, plans to be big again. Frank had gone to war as an idealist, hoping to rid the world of gangsters like Rocco but now views it as a lost cause.

But as Nora keeps telling Frank, your head may say one thing but your whole life says another. As the tension of being held hostage as a hurricane approaches the sweltering Keys builds, Frank slowly begins to go with his whole life rather than his head, breaking his own personal isolation from the fight he gave up. The turning point comes when Rocco humiliates his former girlfriend Gay Dawn by making her sing for a drink and then refuses to give her one when she comes across.

Claire Trevor gives a great performance as a girl much like Nora who got hooked up with the wrong guy and became a lush. She will have her own turning point when she slips Frank a gun before he takes Rocco and his pals back to Cuba. Lionel Barrymore gives a good performance also as George's disabled father, holding on to his son's memory and his beliefs.

A great score by Max Steiner complements the lonely mood of this film perfectly. Bacall is terrific as she waits for Frank to return against the odds, so she can open up the shutters of her loneliness and let the light in once more. This is a somber and mature film that deserves to be viewed more than once. Bogart and Bacall fans will love this film but find more here than just Bogie and Bacall. A minor masterpiece and one you need to own.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Bogart and Bacall trapped in a hotel with gangsters while a hurricane rages overhead- this can only mean trouble! Cue the discussion of morality, dabblings in reverse psychology and mounting tension that we've come to expect from this type of film. Bogart is bascially playing himself (again) and isn't really any more convincing here than in any of his other films, but that's what makes him Bogart. Bacall brings class to the proceedings. The ending will have you questioning Bogart's morality. Is he really any better than the other characters? The quality of the print is excellent but there's not a lot of extras here- just the obligatory trailer, but this is a film which isn't to be missed.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Classic Romantic Drama Revolves Around a Pair of Great Stars
"Key Largo," (1948), a classic post war romantic drama fictionally set in the tropics, was the last of the four films made together by Humphrey Bogart(Casablanca [1942] [DVD]) and... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Stephanie DePue
Absolute classic
I don't watch this film that often any more, I think I wore out my old VHS of it overplaying it whilst I was a student. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Chris Clarkson
Key Largo - A key film for any movie lover's collection
Of all the collaborations between Bogart and John Huston, this really is my favourite. It is a film that works on two levels. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Victor
Definitely not holidaying in Florida Keys
Frank (Humphrey Bogart) pays a visit to Mr Temple's (Lionel Barrymore) hotel and finds that it has been exclusively hired out for a week. Read more
Published on 4 April 2009 by Alex da Silva
"When your head says one thing and your whole life says another, your...
Aaaahhh ... Bogey. AFI's No. 1 film star of the 20th century. Hollywood's original noir anti-hero, epitome of the handsome, cynical and oh-so lonesome wolf; looking unbeatably cool... Read more
Published on 2 Nov 2008 by Themis-Athena
"When your head says one thing and your whole life says another, your...
Aaaahhh ... Bogey. AFI's No. 1 film star of the 20th century. Hollywood's original noir anti-hero, epitome of the handsome, cynical and oh-so lonesome wolf; looking unbeatably cool... Read more
Published on 2 Nov 2008 by Themis-Athena
Not what it used to be
I first saw Key Largo when it came out in the late Forties. Having seen it again recently, I have to say that it doesn't hold up: script writing has gotten much better, and so has... Read more
Published on 13 Dec 2007 by jfpessoa
A first-rate film, with great performances
If you're a fan of Humphrey Bogart, you'll probably want this in your collection. If you're a fan of Edward G. Robinson, you'll need it. Read more
Published on 12 Aug 2007 by C. O. DeRiemer
a little disappointing
I was expecting great things of this movie. Bogart and Edward G together!

But, it's very obviously based on a play with all the action taking place in the same small area (a... Read more

Published on 25 Mar 2006 by Wiggy Stardust
The Lonely Florida Keys
John Huston crafted this very fine film with the underlying theme of isolation from a play by Maxwell Anderson. Read more
Published on 1 May 2005 by "starlighthotel"
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