Sullivan's Travels - Criterion Collection |  | Actors: Eric Blore, William Demarest, Byron Foulger, Robert Greig, Porter Hall Studio: Criterion Category: DVD
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $23.51 as of 11/25/2009 00:30 CST details You Save: $16.44 (41%)
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Seller: deep_discount_dvd_cd Rating: 71 reviews
Format: Black & White, DVD, Special Edition, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 90 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5 x 0.7
MPN: PMIDCC1572D ISBN: 1559409193 UPC: 715515012126 EAN: 9781559409193
Theatrical Release Date: December 1941 Release Date: August 21, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com essential video Writer-director Preston Sturges's third feature, 1941's Sullivan's Travels, remains the antic auteur's most ambitious screen effort. Having added the producer's stripe to his duties, Sturges combines breezy romantic comedy, arch Hollywood satire, and social essay into a single, screwball story line. The titular pilgrim is John L. Sullivan (Joel McCrea), an Ivy League grad who's enjoyed a meteoric rise as the director behind escapist movies like Ants in Your Pants of 1938, but is now determined to raise his sights toward more exalted, serious-minded cinematic art. His proposed breakthrough, portentously titled O Brother, Where Art Thou?, elicits a studio response closer to "Oh, brother," given the director's utter lack of first-hand experience on the wrong side of the tracks. Instead of capitulating, Sullivan sets off disguised as a tramp, ready to meet life's crueler lessons face-to-face--albeit followed at a discreet distance by a motor home filled with studio handlers and reporters. His ludicrous odyssey may give the boy director no real insight, but it gives Sturges the chance to inject some reliably fine gags and a romantic subplot featuring the luminous Veronica Lake. It's at this juncture that Sturges the writer's darker objective throws a jolting shift in tone. Suffice it to say that just when a comic, upbeat denouement seems imminent, Sullivan travels instead from the sunlit California of the comedy's early reels toward a darker, relentlessly downbeat world influenced more by the social realism of the movies the hero desperately wants to make. By the final reel, Sturges has flirted with real tragedy, turning his conclusion into a meditation on his own seemingly carefree, dizzily comic art. --Sam Sutherland
Product Description A comedy director disgusted with hollywoods trivalities disguises himself as a bum & sets off to discover waht america needs. Studio: Image Entertainment Release Date: 08/21/2001 Starring: Joel Mccrea Robert Warwick Run time: 90 minutes
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 71
Romantic situation comedy? August 9, 2009 bernie (Arlington, Texas) John L. Lloyd 'Sully' Sullivan (Joel McCrea) a successful comedy movie producer gets it in his mind that comedy is shallow and want s to produce a ""O Brother, Where Art Thou?" to soothe his social conscience and make a few bucks on the side.
On his first foray into the world of the forgotten man he barely escapes captivity and encounters The Girl (Veronica Lake). In his attempt to repay her kindness Sully's sojourn is foiled.
Will he complete his plan and/or will he find what he is really looking for?
Aside from the fun of watching the interaction between the different characters we may come away with an insight that can apply to today.
I Married a Witch ~ Veronica Lake
3.5 stars out of 4 April 4, 2009 One-Line Film Reviews (Easton, MD) The Bottom Line:
A delightful comedy and wicked send-up of Hollywood that doesn't seem dated despite being 75+ years old, Sullivan's Travels is witty, clever, enjoyable, and memorable.
Sound didn't work March 11, 2009 G. Whiteside 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
I love this old movie, it's funny, but the sound only works on the computer, not in a dvd player, and I tried 2 dvd players
Intriguing Parable February 15, 2009 David Baldwin (Philadelphia,PA USA) "Sullivan's Travels" is a prime example of a writer-director, Preston Sturges, being on the top of his game. The film is a quirky odyssey of a misguided movie director who wants to experience poverty so he can make the great American movie. At first, Sullivan controlls his experiences as a hobo and comes away dissatisfied with the results. It's only when poverty is foisted on him with disastrous results that Sullivan sees the downfall of method directing. "Sullivan's Travels" is a hard film to categorize because it's comedic elements are tempered by it's dramatic ones. One thing that can't be denied is Sturges delivers some hard truths. Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake are adequate here and just as well. Sturges probably didn't want his actors overshadowing his message.
Great Film by Great Film Director! October 5, 2008 Lynn Ellingwood (Webster, NY United States) This is a wonderful film which was the basis for O'Brother, Where Art Thou? by the Coen Brothers years later. A wealthy film director decides that his comedies are trivial and he must make an "important" film about the lowest classes in the United States. He poses as a hobo and travels California to get to know the lowest classes, at one point meeting Veronica Lake. His lark takes a turn towards reality when he loses his money and ID and ends up truly living the life of a hobo including time on a chain gang.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 71
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