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Tcm Greatest Classic Films: Holiday [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]
 
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Tcm Greatest Classic Films: Holiday [DVD] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]

Margaret Sullavan , James Stewart , Edwin L. Marin , Ernst Lubitsch    DVD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Margaret Sullavan, James Stewart, Barbara Stanwyck, Dennis Morgan, Reginald Owen
  • Directors: Edwin L. Marin, Ernst Lubitsch, Peter Godfrey, Roy Del Ruth
  • Writers: Adele Comandini, Aileen Hamilton, Ben Hecht, Ben Markson
  • Format: Colour, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: English, French
  • Region: Region 1 (US and Canada DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 4:3 - 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Classification: Unrated (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Studio: Turner Classic Movie
  • DVD Release Date: 3 Nov 2009
  • Run Time: 367 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B002GSXKQU
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 36,266 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
B&W classics! 7 Jan 2010
Format:DVD
I can't recommend this highly enough! Four great films on two double-sided discs. While the Christmas content varies from film-to-film, this set is just right for curling up on a comfy chair on a Sunday afternoon in December.

A Christmas Carol - This was the first big American production of the classic Christmas story. I was really impressed with this. Many agree that the Alistair Sim version is the definitive one but this isn't far behind.

Christmas in Connecticut - The story is that a housewife and mother writes a magazine column about her life in the country. In truth she's a single journalist living in the city. With the owner of the magazine coming over to stay at Christmas, she has to invent a whole new life for herself!

The Shop Around The Corner - This stars James Stewart as shopworker who doesn't realise that his pen-pal actually works in the same shop. This is James Stewart's film - you're rooting for him just as much as his most famous part, George Bailey in It's A Wonderful Life. This is the film that 'You've Got Mail' was based on.

It Happened On 5th Avenue - This is about a various people with no home who squat in the summer home of a millionaire property developer. Unbeknown to them, the owners daughter is also living with them. This is perhaps the weakest of the four films but it's still enjoyable to watch.

There a few DVD extras - Jackie Gleason in 'The Christmas Party' at which a number of Hollywood stars attend. Also included are the shorts 'Star In The Night' and 'Peace On Earth'. These are such good extras and not just fillers. Star In The Night is basically a 20th C Nativity and very good it is. Peace On Earth is a cartoon from 1939 about two squirrels whose grandfather tells them about WW1 voiced by Mel Blanc.

This collection has been well put together. If you know someone who loves It's A Wonderful Life, buy them this. They'll love you for it! BTW, although the front cover is in colour, all the films are in black and white.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Shop around the Corner is one of the all time classics. One of (according to the box) four films that Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart made together (I was well aware of at least one other about two Germans escaping as the country became more and more fanatically Nazi), and a Lubitsch classic. I was looking for a DVD of it, and this set was cheaper than the offerings on Amazon of just the one film.

So as far as I was concerned I was paying just over a tenner for one really great film. If the others were worth watching, that was a bonus.

On the positive side, the quality of the picture was excellent in all four cases. A further bonus was that Christmas in Connecticut starred Sydney Greenstreet who did not make all that many films. But don't get over-excited. Other Greenstreet films, Casablanca, The Maltese Falcon, The Mask of Dimitrios (when, oh when, will they release a DVD of this outstanding film?) are world beaters; this one is far from being one. Another positive is that some of the extras are definitely interesting, e.g. Judy Garland singing a verse of a Christmas carol.

On the negative side, the synchronisation between voice and mouth movements is not always good.

But the biggest negative is that the other three films are all just moderate to poor. I cannot see what the other reviewer sees in them. Christmas in connecticut and It Happened on 5th Avenue are based on really silly premises, and in both cases the writers struggle to bring them to a conclusion, in both cases failing badly. A Christmas Carol is Dickens without any depth, and frankly far less believable than other versions. OK, I am biased, I do not much like Dickens and I adore Alastair Sim, so I am bound to see an order of magnitude more in his version than in the one in this set.

So my advice is to buy the set if you like and want Shop Around the Corner, and not to be influenced by the presence of the other three films. But Shop Around the Corner is such a great film that its presence is reason enough to buy.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  80 reviews
101 of 103 people found the following review helpful
Yuletime quadruple feature from TCM 21 Sep 2009
By Annie Van Auken - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
Warner's TCM GREATEST CLASSIC FILMS COLLECTION is a series of over two dozen twin packs. The four titles in each set are dubbed one per side on two flip discs. Only some movies include bonus features. Transfer quality of these well-preserved ever-popular films is top-notch. All titles in TCM's "Holiday" set are rated in the 7s and 8s at imdb.

Trivia on movies---

Each version of Dickens' famous yule story has its fans, and the '38 A CHRISTMAS CAROL is no exception. This 69 minute Loew's release features an interesting company behind Reginald Owen as Ebenezer Scrooge. Gene and Kathleen Lockhart are Bob and Mrs. Cratchit and their daughter June plays a Cratchit child. Leo G. Carroll is Marley's ghost and Ann Rutherford portrays "Christmas Past." Silent-era clown Billy Bevan, who also lent his raspy basso voice to early Looney Tunes shorts, appears as "Leader of Street Watch."

In the romantic comedy CHRISTMAS IN CONNECTICUT (1945), Sydney Greenstreet is third billed behind Barbara Stanwyck and Dennis Morgan. Miss Stanwyck's character was based on Gladys Taber, a ladies magazine columnist who lived on a Connecticut farm. John Dehner cameos as a state trooper. Dehner began as a Disney animator, then appeared often on radio-- he was Paladin on HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL. Other cast members: Reginald Gardiner, Una O'Conner and Frank Jenks. Also here is "ditzy blonde" specialist Joyce Compton. (To see Miss Compton at her nuttiest, check out Eddie Cline's 1940 turn-of-the-century farce, THE VILLAIN STILL PURSUED HER, with Alan Mowbray as the baddie and Buster Keaton playing his opposite.)

IT HAPPENED ON FIFTH AVENUE (1947) was the very first ALLIED ARTISTS release. This company was formed when MONOGRAM Pictures and two smaller outfits merged. Frank Capra was slated to direct until producer-director Roy Del Ruth purchased screen rights to this story of a homeless man and his friends who take advantage of a manson left empty while the owners are away for the holidays. The fine cast includes Don DeFore, Ann Harding, Charles Ruggles, Victor Moore, Gale Storm, Grant Mitchell, Edward Brophy and Alan Hale Jr.

Ernst Lubitsch's holiday romance THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER (1940) was a first screen adaptation of Hungarian playwright Miklós László's "Perfumerie" (aka "Illatszertár"). This storyline was later used for the 1949 musical, IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME and in 1998 for YOU'VE GOT MAIL. Director Lubitsch, who also worked in a Budapest shop as a boy, called this his favorite movie. Unlike most productions, all scenes were filmed sequentially. Cast includes Margaret Sullavan, Jimmy Stewart, Frank Morgan, Joseph Schildkraut and in a walk-on, Sarah Edwards.
45 of 46 people found the following review helpful
Great holiday favorites! 27 Oct 2009
By J. Olsen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
Christmas in Connecticut is a great holiday romantic comedy about a young woman who writes for a magazine geared to homemakers. She claims to be married, have a child and live on a farm in Connecticut, but is actually a single, childless, apartment dweller. The problems start when her publisher wants her to give a recent war hero a home for the holidays on her Connecticut farm. She consents to marry a long-time boyfriend who actually has a farm in Connecticut to save her editor from losing his job. They arrange to be married on the farm, but the judge doesn't get the job done before the war hero arrives. That creates some awkward moments. The housekeeper tends babies for women who are working during the war, and they are supposed to be "the child" but with a different baby showing up each day confusion ensues. Stanwyck's character, of course, begins to fall for the hero, who is also falling for her but thinks she is a married woman and is trying to respect that. It is all good, clean fun and "What a Christmas!"

The Shop Around the Corner is a very clever comedy whose theme has been repeated in other movies, as mentioned in Annie's review. Clara is falling for the man with whom she corresponds on purely intellectual subjects. She has never met him. At the same time she gets a job in a leather goods shop and cannot get along with her boss (Jimmy Stewart). You can figure it out from there. Delightful fun. Either one of these two movies is worth the price of this package.

It Happened on 5th Avenue is a pleasant film. The owner of a 5th Avenue mansion is wintering elsewhere and a hobo helps himself to the house. He invites in others who need a place to stay in the housing crunch following WWII. Without their knowledge, one of their fellow tenants is actually the owner, who hides his identity to see what is going on in his home.

Everyone knows the story of A Christmas Carol, so I won't elaborate on this one. This is a wonderful set of holiday movies at a price that can't be beat. If you don't like black and white movies this may not satisfy you, but the stories are great and my family really enjoys them. The only complaint I have is that they are double-sided disks and I prefer single sided.
55 of 62 people found the following review helpful
3 1/2 stars-Pleasant holiday diversions for a great price 13 Nov 2009
By Robert Badgley - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
These four films would cost you you about 4 times the price if you were to hunt for them individually.The only fly in the ointment is that the movies are on two double sided discs.This can send some screaming into the night,but if it doesn't bother you then you're laughing.
A Christmas Carol(1938)is a Christmas Carol light;for those who want their taste but not all the "calories"!.Clicking in at a speedy 69 min.it is no wonder this film was a TV staple for years until they began pushing the Alistair Sims version back in the 70s.The film is non stop and is over far too soon.By now we all know the plot of a miserly businessman who abhores Christmas and who gets his wake up call courtesy of three spirits;becoming a new man.The film doesn't linger on little plot nuances(that would have improved it immensely)like the door knob coming to life,or his old love,or his reunion with his nephew,etc.When Owen(Scrooge)argues with Fred watch the spittle literally coming out of his mouth and don't mind the wires when he "floats" out the window with the ghost of Christmas present.Also Scrooges'young sister talks very much like Stan Laurel while Feziwig,not to be outdone,does his best Stan Laurel smiling;it's uncanny! 2 1/2 stars.
It Happened on Fifth Avenue(1947)stars Gale Storm(well known later for her own show on TV),Don Defore(to become well known on TV as Ozzie and Harriets'next door neighbour and later Hazel's boss),veteran character actors Victor Moore and Charles Ruggles.Moore is the central character,a street bum,who inhabits a mansion that gets deserted so many months a year by its millionaire owner played by Ruggles.The games begin when the house becomes inhabited by more and more people and who are eventually caught by the owners' daughter.But she plays along as a fellow down-and-outer and falls in love with an ex-GI(Defore),even getting her father and mother in on the act.The film has its' charm but is not engaging enough to maintain interest on a consistent basis.Moore's den-motherish tongue waggings can get a little old quite fast and he seems a little out of place in such a lead role.Funny enough the gags in this film are the best things about it.Good and funny lines are given just throw away status and have little of the punch they otherwise would have had in a better film.Further,later in the film there is a beautiful sequence with Defoe and Storm sitting at a wobbly legged table and a waiter who tries to fix it.He comes to one side,goes under and reappears at the other side,and is repeated much to the couples amazement.It is so good it is out of place.Overall there just isn't enough spark in this film to give it any more than a 3 star rating.
Christmas in Connecticut(1945)stars Barbara Stanwyck(of TVs Big Valley fame;and yes she was a substantial star way back when!)who is a columnist who writes about her daily life and her cooking in a beautiful home in the country,with her hubby and child.Trouble is it is all made up;even her boss(Sydney Greenstreet)doesn't know it.But the jig is up when the boss invites himself to her "place" for Christmas.Stanwyck enlists the help of her Uncle Felix(SZ Sakall)for cooking and general back-up chores and a hubby-wanna be played by Reginald Gardiner.Throw in a hero GI(Dennis Morgan)who falls in love with this "married" writer and bedlam reigns supreme.This is a film that tries hard to be better than it is.Stanwyck and Sakall really do dominate this picture but their efforts aren't enough to save it from its' 3 star status.
The Little Shop Around the Corner(1940)stars Jimmy Stewart as a head clerk who toils in a general store in Budapest,run by Frank Morgan(stage and screen vet and the wizard in the Wizard of Oz).At first all is seemingly ok but Morgan has private troubles with his wife and he thinks Stewart is behind it.As tensions build a new clerk starts at the store played by Sullivan and Sullivan and Stewart start rubbing each other the wrong way.Morgan fires Stewart because of his suspicions and is suicidal.He ends up in the hospital,apologizes to Stewart when the truth comes out and makes him acting manager.All along both Sullivan and Stewart have had pen pals and Stewart is amazed to learn his pal is none other than Sullivan,but she remains oblivious to the end.This is a very smart and engaging film.Lubitsch reigns the actors in and all really under-play their parts to get a more immediate and "real" effect for their characters and it works wonderfully.In typical Lubitsch style it is a film that wants to tell its' story in its own way and if you keep with it you will be rewarded hansomely.Many films would have had Sullivan and Stewart in the dark for much of the film(with a double late-film revelation)but here he lets one of the two in on the "secret" and we watch how Stewart tries to deal with it,adding an extra dynamic to the plot which otherwise wouldn't have been there.This film deserves its' 4 1/2 stars;the best film in this collection.
All films have been transferred pretty well and all have the same features present on the discs than if you were to buy them seperately.An FYI,It Happened on Fifth Avenue has no features or even scene selections on it at all(!),just a play option.
Overall,for the price,this is a nice collection of mostly average Christmas films with Christmas Carol the poorest,The Little Shop Around the Corner the best and the other two falling into the middle.If you can stand the two double sided discs then this is certainly worth getting.
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