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Make Way For Tomorrow (Criterion Collection) (ej svensk text) (Blu-ray)
Make Way For Tomorrow (Criterion Collection) (ej svensk text) (Blu-ray)
Make Way For Tomorrow (Criterion Collection) (ej svensk text) (Blu-ray) - 2
Make Way For Tomorrow (Criterion Collection) (ej svensk text) (Blu-ray)

Make Way For Tomorrow (Criterion Collection) (ej svensk text) (Blu-ray)

399 SEK199 SEK
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Drama från 1937 av Leo McCarey med Victor Moore och Beulah Bondi.

Ingår i kampanjen: Criterion Collection
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  • Svensk titelMake Way For Tomorrow
  • OriginaltitelMake Way For Tomorrow
  • Alternativ titelMasters of Cinema #15
  • SkådespelareVictor Moore, Beulah Bondi, Fay Bainter, Thomas Mitchell, Porter Hall, Barbara Read, Maurice Moscovitch, Elisabeth Risdon, Minna Gombell, Ray Mayer, Ralph Remley, Louise Beavers
  • RegissörLeo McCarey
  • Inspelningsår1937
  • Bildformat1080p High Definition 1.33:1
  • LjudLPCM Mono
  • SpråkEngelska
  • TextningEngelska för hörselskadade
  • Speltid1 tim 32 min
  • GenreDrama
  • Extramaterial- High-definition digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack - Tomorrow, Yesterday, and Today, a 2009 interview with filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich about the career of director Leo McCarey and Make Way for Tomorrow - Interview from 2009 with critic Gary Giddins about McCarey’s artistry and the political and social context of the film - English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing - PLUS: Essays by critic Tag Gallagher and filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier, as well as an excerpt from film scholar Robin Wood’s 1998 piece “Leo McCarey and ‘Family Values’”
  • Releasedatum2022-04-25
  • ÅldersgränsBarntillåten
  • Antal skivor1
  • Färg/svartvitSvartvit
  • BolagCriterion Collection UK
  • OmslagsspråkEngelska
  • EAN5050629466133
  • Artikelnr30855

Beskrivning

Art.nr: 30855

Make Way for Tomorrow, by Leo McCarey, is one of the great unsung Hollywood masterpieces, an enormously moving Depression-era depiction of the frustrations of family, aging, and the generation gap. Beulah Bondi and Victor Moore headline a cast of incomparable character actors, starring as an elderly couple who must move in with their grown children after the bank takes their home, yet end up separated and subject to their offspring’s selfish whims. An inspiration for Yasujiro Ozu’s Tokyo Story, this is among American cinema’s purest tearjerkers, all the way to its unflinching ending, which McCarey refused to change despite studio pressure.
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