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Preston Sturges Collection [DVD]

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 16 ratings

£29.87
Additional DVD options Edition Discs
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DVD
22 Aug. 2005
7
£29.87
£49.99 £29.87
Format PAL
Contributor Charles Coburn, John Seitz, Arthur Hoyt, Dick Powell, Rod Cameron, Frances Raymond, Eddie Bracken, Freddie Steele, Ernest Truex, Porter Hall, Brian Donlevy, Ellen Drew, Veronica Lake, Harry Rosenthal, Libby Taylor, Byron Foulger, Akim Tamiroff, Rudy Vallee, Mary Astor, Elizabeth Patterson, Georgia Caine, Torben Meyer, Robert Greig, Eric Blore, Monckton Hoffe, Franklin Pangborn, Eugene Pallette, Robert Warwick, Claudette Colbert, Janet Beecher, Raymond Walburn, Jack Richardson, Sig Arno, Thurston Hall, Barbara Stanwyck, Harry Hayden, Muriel Angelus, Joel McCrea, Alan Bridge, Alexander Carr, Ella Raines, Preston Sturges, Henry Fonda, Allyn Joslyn, Louis Jean Heydt, Paul Jones, William Demarest, Bill Edwards, Arthur Stuart Hull, Jimmy Conlin See more
Language English
Runtime 9 hours and 20 minutes
Colour Black & White

Product description

Box set collection of six classic off-beat comedies by Preston Sturges, a director who is widely thought to have been one of 1940s Hollywood's most talented filmmakers. In 'Sullivan's Travels' (1941), filmmaker John L. Sullivan (Joel McCrea) is looking to make a serious social statement in his next film, and decides to take to the streets disguised as a tramp. Following his return to the studios he plans to hand out thousands of dollars to the needy, But Sullivan becomes a victim of crime when a tramp steals his clothes and his identity. With the world believing that the great filmmaker is dead, following a car accident involving the tramp, Sullivan has to prove who he really is. 'The Lady Eve' (1941) is a romantic comedy starring Henry Fonda as Charles Pike, the heir to the Pike Ale empire. Following a year spent looking for rare snakes, Charles is heading for New York aboard the S.S. Southern Queen. But with everyone on board the ship aware of his inheritance, he is hounded by a group of single women looking for a suitable, eligible bachelor. Also after his inheritance are Colonel Harry Harrington (Charles Coburn) and his partner, a pair of conmen and card sharks with a secret weapon - the Colonel's daughter, Jean. In 'Hail the Conquering Hero' (1944), patriot Woodrow Truesmith (Eddie Bracken) joins up to fight in the war, only to be discharged within days because of his chronic asthma. Encouraged by a group of marines who sympathise with his problem, Truesmith decides to lie about his service record and returns to his home town as a war hero. With only his ex-girlfriend unimpressed, Truesmith finds himself being championed as a future mayor after receiving a hero's welcome. In 'The Great McGinty' (1940), Brian Donlevy stars as Dan McGinty, a down-and-out who is hired by some unscrupulous mobsters to become a 'hired voter', casting ballots under assumed names. Teaming up with The Boss (Akim Tamiroff), the two men become political partners, but when McGinty begins to reform, they find themselves on the run to a seedy bar in South America. 'Christmas in July' (1940) follows the fortunes of a lowly office clerk (Dick Powell) who enters endless competitions in the hope that he can win enough money to marry his sweetheart. When his colleagues trick him by faking a $25,000 cheque as his prize for the Maxwell House Coffee Slogan competition, he ends up buying his family presents before realising that the money never existed. Finally, in 'The Palm Beach Story' (1942), Joel McCrea plays a distracted inventor who needs the money to help finance his new creations. When his wife (Claudette Colbert) decides that the best way to help him is to get divorced and marry a millionaire, the mismatched couple find themselves getting swept up in the deranged lifestyles of the idle rich.

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 4:3 - 1.33:1
  • Is discontinued by manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Rated ‏ : ‎ Parental Guidance
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 18.6 x 14.4 x 5.2 cm; 539.78 g
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Preston Sturges
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ PAL
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 9 hours and 20 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ 22 Aug. 2005
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Henry Fonda, Eddie Bracken, Joel McCrea, Barbara Stanwyck, Ella Raines
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ Universal Pictures UK
  • Producers ‏ : ‎ Preston Sturges, Paul Jones
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0009UV4HY
  • Writers ‏ : ‎ Preston Sturges, John Seitz, Monckton Hoffe
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 7
  • Customer reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 16 ratings

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
16 global ratings

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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 December 2007
    Wonderful boxset from Hollywood's Golden Age from a man whose films from 1940- 1944 remain timeless entertainments and a working manual for how comedies should be made.
    In Alphabetical Order

    Christmas In July(1940)
    Wonderfully winning comedy(and Sturges' most underrated)stars song and dance man Dick Powell as a office clerk who is tricked into believing he has won$25,000 in a slogan writing competition and proceeds to blow the lot on gifts for the neighbours in his street.Beautifully played and the final scene with William Demarest is an absolute gem.

    The Great McGinty(1940) Sturges won the Oscar for best original screenplay in this,his directorial debut.Brian Donlevy,not just a screen heavy,plays a politican who rises through the corrupt system to become Governor only to succumb to honesty when he gets there.Sharpness and warmth in equal measure in this incisive comedy.

    The Great Moment(1944)A flop on release and the most atypical of the bunch mixing slapstick and melodrama Great Moment tells the story of WTG Morton the doctor who discovered the anaesthetic.Joel McCrea is fine as the doctor whose life is told in flashback courtesy of his wife(a rather lame Betty Field)However William Demarest(yet again )scores as a family friend and there are several powerful moments and tart dialogue.Awkward at times in tone,this film nevertheless deserves to be better known.

    Hail The Conquering Hero(1944)Hilarious wartime comedy has Eddie Bracken,through a misunderstanding ,coming home to a hero's welcome from his home town even though he never properly enlisted.Agroup of serving marines convince him to carry on the charade for "your dear old ma".
    Whole cast sparkles especially Raymond Walburn as the stuffed shirt of a mayor in this beautifully finessed comedy.

    The Lady Eve(1941)Delightful comedy gives Henry Fonda(as a wealthy young turk with a thing for snakes)and Barbara Stanwyck as a professional con artist two of their best ever roles.Witty without being laugh out loud funny this is screwball comedy at it's most endearing.

    The Palm Beach Story(1942)Middling screwball comedy has Claudette Colbert as wife who leaves penniless husband to marry into fortune but who finds that her husband(Joel McCrea)does not give up so easily.Stars are well matched but this comedy flags when it should be fizzing.

    Sullivans Travels(1941)Sturges'best known film is a tour de force of satirical brilliance marred only by an abrupt shift in tone towards drama in the final act.Joel McCrea plays a Hollywood Director fed up of making"entertainments"who wants to go out in disguise and experience the real America much to his studio bosses horror.When he meets up with waif and stray Veronica Lake who, when she finds out who he is,points out to him just how much realism can a pampered Hollywood type expect to understand the stage is set for some sparkling dialogue and comic situations,The slapstick motorbike chase is hilarious.Lake was never more appealing and although a limited actress it is hard to believe that 20 years later she was an unrecognised waitress in a New York Diner.

    Beautiful set for anyone who loves movies.
    26 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 April 2008
    This is a great collection of films by a comedy genius.

    Sadly the transfer done by Universal is muddy, without contrast and grainy. In fact, it was so bad, (and far worse than any of the other 40's films in my collection), that I had to ask myself if this was a pirated print!

    By comparing this collection to original videotapes of the same films as well as off-air tapings from the Studio Universal channel, one can see that this collection simply did not receive the quality transfer treatment that was truly merited. I seem to remember a customer on some dvd forum who was sorry to have given away their VHS copies of these same films before first checking the poor quality on this dvd set! I'm glad I saved mine.

    What a shame. Preston Sturges deserved better.
    27 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 July 2020
    If you like ditzy plots and witty dialogue, this collection of films is for you.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 April 2010
    I have little to add to the superlatives of the other reviewers. They are quite right of course. These movies are wonderful. However, I would like to point out that these transfers are fine. The remarks of the one star reviewer are inexplicable.

    Go on do yourself a favour....
    9 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 January 2019
    Speedy delivery. Excellent collection of dvds. Thank you!
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 March 2011
    Brilliant 6 films + a oddities only lacking 'Morgan's Creek'. Is there a modern sensibility in any art form like Sturges?
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 December 2014
    Preston Sturges was one of those who made Hollywood great, and this boxed set offers us most of the best of his comedic output, almost all are timeless classics in their own way. While much of the satire and comedy would stand up today, occasionally some of it is dated and decidedly American. Bear this in mind when watching, and share the enjoyment of some of the best actors of the time in an excellent sequence of films, a golden snapshot of the period. All the films are reasonable quality Black & White transfers in 4:3 aspect ratio and with Mono sound.

    Also included in my set is a booklet with short biographies also listing the major films for the stars in each of the seven films in this collection.

    The set includes:
    Christmas In July(1940)
    The Great McGinty(1940)
    The Lady Eve(1941)
    Sullivans Travels(1941)
    The Palm Beach Story(1942)
    The Great Moment(1944)
    Hail The Conquering Hero(1944)
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 November 2011
    This is a lavish, beautifully laid out set that unfolds like a puzzle, revealing gems of yesteryear. They glint and sparkle on our TVs like the jewels that they are. Anyone who says otherwise, either haven't actually sat and watched them or are humourless, or braindead.....(Even the last two still have some chance!)

    I replayed The Palm Beach Story (I bought this set at least two years ago on Amazon) and the comedy was brilliantly zany, but controlled and hints so much on our 'society' now, that it doesn't seem possible. It's a set that one can dip into, for a little light but sophisticated relief, whose films are high on production values, script AND comedic entertainment.

    I can only think of the (possibly) even greater Billy Wilder who even comes close on all these and as such, this an unmissable collection for any movie watcher who dares to call themselves just that.

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  • Pedro Jiménez López
    5.0 out of 5 stars Deliciosas barbaridades
    Reviewed in Spain on 5 May 2017
    Excelente colección de comedias por uno de los grandes, y semiolvidados, maestros del género. Merece la pena adquirirla sólo por el masaje capilar que le propina Barbara Stanwyck a Henry Fonda (The lady Eve).

    P.S. No me resisto a comentar un hallazgo tras visionar la joya de la colección, The lady Eve, con subtítulos en inglés. Todos sabemos de los disparates que conlleva la subtitulación, y en España tenemos abundantes ejemplos de gazapos, la mayoría ortográficos: escusa , hechó, bastas (praderas)... Pero lo que he visto en este caso creo que merece un Oscar, aunque sea honorífico. Verán. Eugene Pallette, un rico cervecero y padre en la película del protagonista, Henry Fonda, se dispone alegremente a desayunar cuando le interrumpe una llamada telefónica. Una voz que no oímos le pregunta a qué hora es la fiesta. ¿Quién da la fiesta?, replica el sorprendido Mr. Pike, a quien su mujer no suele informar de sus empresas sociales. Who's giving the party? Pausa. We are! , admite resignadamente. Eso es lo que hasta un absoluto principiante cree percibir. Pero quiá. El futuro músico, sin duda realizando un insólito bolo, subtitula: Juilliard.