Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Musicals & Performing Arts » Rodgers and Hammerstein - The Sound of Movies  
New Releases
Another Cinderella Story
Another Cinderella Story [Blu-ray]
Bestsellers
The Sound of Music (Two-Disc 40th Anniversary Special Edition)
Cinderella (Two-Disc Special Edition)
Another Cinderella Story
Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella
South Pacific (Collector's Edition)
Oklahoma! (50th Anniversary Edition)
The King and I (50th Anniversary Edition)
Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella
The Rodgers & Hammerstein Collection [Remastered] (The Sound of Music / The King and I / Oklahoma! / South Pacific / State Fair / Carousel)
Lights! Camera! Elvis! Collection (Blue Hawaii / Easy Come, Easy Go / Fun in Acapulco / G.I. Blues / Girls! Girls! Girls! / King Creole / Roustabout / Paradise Hawaiian Style)
Rodgers and Hammerstein - The Sound of Movies
Rodgers and Hammerstein - The Sound of Movies

zoom enlarge 
Director: Kevin Burns (iii)
Actors: Shirley Jones, John Raitt, Angela Cartwright, Joshua Logan, Anna Magnani
Studio: Image Entertainment
Category: DVD

Buy New: $62.24



New (2) Used (7) Collectible (2) from $37.84

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 158247

Format: Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 97
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
DVD Layers: 1
DVD Sides: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

ISBN: 6305085331
UPC: 014381451221
EAN: 9786305085331
ASIN: 6305085331

Theatrical Release Date: April 7, 1996
Release Date: July 29, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: new in shrinkwrap; ships from berkeley, CA

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Sure, everyone's seen The Sound of Music, but how about Flower Drum Song? Or State Fair, either the 1945 version (a remake of a 1933 nonmusical) or the 1962 re-remake with Bobby Darin, Ann-Margret, and Pat Boone? Rodgers & Hammerstein: The Sound of Movies is a comprehensive and entertaining 97-minute documentary surveying the film career of the beloved songwriting team and how their screen work was interwoven with their stage work. (State Fair was written directly for the screen before they began adapting their stage shows for film.) Host Shirley Jones (the ingenue in both Oklahoma! and Carousel) provides numerous trivia tidbits on most of the films, while segments on The King and I, Flower Drum Song, and The Sound of Music are presented by those who appeared in them: Rita Moreno (Tuptim), Nancy Kwan (Linda Low), and Charmian Carr (Liesl), respectively. Also of interest will be original casting possibilities (James Dean in Oklahoma!, Marlon Brando in Carousel), rarely seen outtakes, live television performances, and clips from films that inspired Rodgers and Hammerstein's shows (including Rex Harrison as the king of Siam). Because Rodgers and Hammerstein's films were deeply involved in the development of widescreen techniques such as CinemaScope, this documentary is savvy enough to present its clips in letterboxed widescreen format, but that footage is occasionally grainy. Unfortunately, The Sound of Movies was filmed in 1995, four years before the release of sumptuous remasterings of six of these featured films. --David Horiuchi


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars a most entertaining dvd   March 25, 2008
Both my husband and I thoroughly enjoyed hearing once again the music of Rodgers & Hammerstein and
watching clips from movies that we saw many years ago. It all brought back pleasant memories and we've
decided that they just don't write movie musicals like they used to. And what a shame.



1 out of 5 stars Big Mistake   March 21, 2007
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

I was looking for "The Sound Of Music". I guess I'll have to update my spectacles and sharpen my reading skills.


3 out of 5 stars Disappointing   November 30, 2006
 7 out of 11 found this review helpful

I'm sorry, this is not as good as the other reviews suggest.

Firstly, the outide of the package does not really tell you what is inside. Quote: "Here are without doubt, the greatest song-and-dance numbers ever seen on the silver screen..."

What we actually see are a bunch of snippets, outtakes, and auditions, all of which are of a certain interest, admittedly, but we don't get any complete performances, no doubt for copyright reasons. So, in fact, the CD contains only material that is often given away free to fill up the extra space on DVDs of feature films.

The cover also inaccurately describes Charmian Carr as a leading lady.In fact she played a supporting role in The Sound of Music, and that is about the sum of her movie career. I suspect that she was picked for the part to ensure that Julie Andrews was not outshon by a younger sexier actress. Andrews had lost the lead role in the move of My Fair Lady, in which she starred in London and Broadway because she was seen as not sufficiently attractive. Her subsequent success in Mary Poppins had put the lie to this, and here she was as the main love interest to Christopher Plummer.

Or, in the section about South Pacific, just before a segue into the opening of the song Bali Hai we are told that Juanita Hall won a Tony for her role in the stage version, but not told that her singing in the movie was overdubbed (at the insistence of Richard Rogers) by Muriel Smith who had starred onstage in the London version. If you listen to the original cast recording (starring Mary Martin) in which Hall sings, you will realise that the dubbed versions of Bali Hai and Happy Talk in the movies are considerably superior--and these are the versions with which we are all familiar.

These may seem like minor points, I know, but most of the documentary content of the rest of the video is equally soft in content. For example, a beaming Julie Andrews is shown saying that she was surprised to be offered the Sound of Music as she had expected it would go to Mary Martin who had played the role on Broadway. This is complete baloney, and Andrews knew it, as Mary Martin had already been replaced by Mitzi Gaynor for the movie role in South Pacific because she was way too old to play the role on the screen and there was no way she would have been selected for the movie lead role in the Sound of Music at the age of 50.

It was nice to see a nod given to Marni Nixon who voice doubled for Deborah Carr in The King and I. She also voice doubled for Audrey Hepburn in the movie of My Fair Lady, and for Natalie Wood and Rita Moreno in West Side Story, and yet her work was originally completely uncredited and unacknowledged until these movies started to be issued on VHS, even though she was practically the voice of the musical for a generation movie goers.

So if you are hoping to get the best songs from the movies as the title "The Sound of Movies" implies, you will be disappointed, and if you want accurate historical information about the casting and making of these movies, then you won't get that either.

Still, if you love Rogers and Hammerstein musicals and movies, as I do, then you will probably want to see this anyway out of curiosity. I just don't know if I would pay full price for it again if I knew what was in the box.



5 out of 5 stars Sound of Movies a fine treat   August 4, 2006
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

Good variety, good pacing, good music - a fun, relaxing treat


5 out of 5 stars Wonderful for R&H Fans   November 3, 2005
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Aside from the excellent documentary the extras are a great bonus-especially the screen tests. For the remake of STATE FAIR you get to see Ann-Margret's entire original Fox screen test, she sings Bill Bailey, Mack the Knife and in a test for the role of Margy she does a scene and sings It Might As Well Be Spring. Also included are test scenes for the part of Emily-the part she played in the movie. Andy Williams tests for the part of Pat (the reporter) with Barbara Eden as Margy and he sings a bit of All I Owe Ioway (he's from Iowa) and then does a great version of It Might As Well Be Spring. There's also something called Foreign Dubbing Test/The Sound of Music which is Marni Nixon singing most of the songs Julie Andrews sings in the movie. They don't explain exactly what it's for but it's a nice bonus. Mitzi Gaynor performs A Cockeyed Optimist and A Wonderful Guy in her test for South Pacific. There are also a bunch of Sound of Music tests as well. Since these aren't on the DVDs of the movies themselves they are a great addition for R&H movie fans.

Reklama Internete
The last search phrases that lead visitors to our site:

returntosendermovie

dual layered dvd rw

13deaddvdripsevil

hallmark tv movies

copydrivedvdhardmovie

ali movie

english hot movies

hitchikergalaxymovie

mile bi club dvd

lord of the ring movie characters

snipermoviereview

halo movies funny

imoviefiles

avadevinefreemovies

dragonball free movies

plasticdvdracks

another teen movie vibrator

r4dvd

the boogie man the movie

tamilmovies video

insignia 10 dual lcd dvd portable player

moviemountaincom

in movie ohio theater toledo

moviesongswav

movie 10 in rochester ny

winter people dvd

queenylovemovies

k w movies

backbymidnightmovie

multi format movie players

Our Friends
Best Friends
Reklama Internete biuro kedes biuro baldai