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The Great Escape
List Price: $14.98 Our Price: $7.49
DVD - 31 March, 1998 MGM (Video & DVD)
Unrated Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Director: John Sturges
Number of Media: 1
Features: - Closed-captioned
- Color
- Dolby
- DVD-Video
- Letterboxed
- Widescreen
- NTSC
Related Areas: Action, Action / Adventure, Adventure, Adventure Drama, Behind Enemy Lines, Color, English, Ensemble Film, Escape Film, Escape From Prison, Feature, Feature Film Action Adventure, Feature Film-action/Adventure, Forceful, Gritty, High Artistic Quality, High Production Values, Movie, POW Drama, POW Escapes |
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| DVD Description The Great Escape image of Steve McQueen (as "The Cooler King") astride his motorcycle has entered silver-screen iconography, alongside Brando on his bike from The Wild One. Based on a true story about a group of POWs who mount a daring breakout from a supposedly inescapable Nazi prison camp, this rousing and suspenseful WWII epic features an all-star cast, including James Garner, Richard Attenborough, Charles Bronson, Donald Pleasence, James Coburn, and David McCallum. The DVD also includes a 24-minute documentary about the making of the film. --Jim Emerson |
| Customer Reviews
My personal favorite I keep buying this movie because I lend it away and never get it back....My all time favorite. All Star Cast, beautiful locations, and Steve McQueen....can it get any better?
Quite possibly the most perfect audience picture ever made The Great Escape may be nearly three hours long, but it moves like clockwork and holds its audience completely. There is always something happening, often with much wit and sometimes touching sentiment that avoids mawkishness. There is one remarkably bad piece of construction, following a genuinely moving death scene with McQueen's motorbike jump, but otherwise the film is perfectly constructed. Elmer Bernstein's score is one of his best, and with considerably more range and variety than you remember adds much to the proceedings.
If it seems a bit dubious making an entertainment out of one of the grimmest episodes of WW2 - 50 of the recaptured prisoners of the genuine mass escape from a German prisoner of war camp were murdered - the darker elements are not ignored, but despite being very effectively handled do tend to get swamped by the sheer exuberance of the film. It now seems particularly curious to that the impossible motorbike jump, while still a great moment, seems so much more underplayed and credible than the increasingly spectacular and cartoonish CGi action sequences of modern action films.
The cast are all outstanding. In Steve McQueen's `Cooler King' we can see the origins of Indiana Jones, the hero as eternal loser. Garner's wonderfully resourceful scrounger and his touching friendship with Donald Pleasance's near-blind forger make perhaps an even bigger impression. Bronson too is very appealing, with all the dry humour and warmth that two decades of working with Michael Winner managed to knock out of him still intact. However, it must be said that Coburn's Aussie arc-scent is enough to make you grateful he hardly said anything in The Magnificent Seven.
The film is just brimming with familiar faces, from the stars to British war movie stalwart Gordon Jackson and the equally omnipresent Karl Otto Alberty ("Your German is very good. I hear also your French. Your hands - UP!"). Don't remember him? He fought in the 'Battle of the Bulge,' planned the 'Battle of Britain' and had a memorable showdown with Clint Eastwood as a tank commander in Kelly's Heroes. Only Sam Kydd is missing. With so much to enjoy and remember, The Great Escape is quite possibly the most perfect audience movie ever made.
Yeah! Guy. Movie. Must. Have.
Sensitive kids might freak when a character goes berzerk and commits suicide by attempting to climb a barbed wire fence while under the obvious eyes of prison guards...and mass execution is imaginatively protrayed. But both instances are directed without the gratuitous blood-porn of modern film (thankfully). Other than those caveats, it's a solid family movie, raising questions on character, friendship, duty...
An easy movie to own. |
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