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Star! | 
enlarge | Director: Robert Wise Actors: Julie Andrews, Richard Crenna, Michael Craig, Daniel Massey, Robert Reed Studio: 20th Century Fox Category: DVD
List Price: $9.98 Buy New: $4.06 You Save: $5.92 (59%)
New (44) Used (20) from $3.23
Rating: 71 reviews Sales Rank: 25819
Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: G (General Audience) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 173 Aspect Ratio: 2.20:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: FOXD2221358D UPC: 024543113584 EAN: 0024543113584 ASIN: B0001FR54I
Theatrical Release Date: October 22, 1968 Release Date: April 20, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
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Amazon.com For Julie Andrews fans, Star! will be something more than just a legendary albatross around Old Hollywood's neck--after all, Julie is onscreen virtually every minute of this film, singing and dancing and flouncing around in an endless parade of over-the-top costumes. Seeing her tackle a variety of Noel Coward tunes and a nicely understated "Someone to Watch Over Me" is pleasant, but it's easy to see why this three-hour musical failed to click with 1968 audiences. A biopic of the celebrated stage star Gertrude Lawrence (puckish Daniel Massey plays Coward, Lawrence's childhood chum), the movie staggers around between the big production numbers. Its social message--independent Lawrence just needed a man to boss her around--was just as grating in the age of The Graduate as it is now. "Isn't this kind of thing a little out of date?" someone asks the aging Lawrence; Star! provides its own answer. --Robert Horton
Product Description Gertrude lawrence rose from vaudeville of london to become the toast of the west end and broadway. Film traces her career and shows how her social brilliance as intl star led to lifelong friendship wwith noel coward and successful marriage to banker. Studio: Tcfhe Release Date: 02/06/2007 Starring: Julie Andrews Run time: 172 minutes Rating: G
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| Customer Reviews: Read 66 more reviews...
Anatomy of a Flop September 15, 2008 I have waited to write my review of Star! but I now have the wherewithal to do so. This movie was a flop-twice. Then why is it so interesting? I know 'bad' movies such as "Wild Women of Wongo" but that wasn't a big studio production. This is different. This was the time of the death knell for movie musicals. I love movie musicals, but the times were changing in the late 60's. When The Sound of Music was made, this erosion was just starting. Also, when Blake Edwards became involved with Julie, he wanted her to play less "innocent" roles. This certainly could pose as one. Andrews plays Gerturde Lawrence, a "star" who was much more well-known in England as she was in the U.S. I'm a little up in arms as to why this movie was called "Star". So this movie gives one an interesting look at the British Music Hall as well as the Algonquin theater in New York. I really like the cockney lingo here, although I wonder if it is accurate because of the criticism given the screenplay. The best part of the film are the musical numbers, which my favorite is "Limehouse Blues" which is almost done in pantomime, as the music of Limehouse Blues gets adapted in many different guises until it is tragic at the end. This sequence should be in movie history. The next best part is the relationship between Gertie and Noel Coward (maybe it should be called that, but Noel Coward was still alive). Having collected a sizable amount of Noel Coward recordings on CD it is interesting to see parts of his stage plays recreated. After all of the relationships with men that she has in the film, the most memorable is with Noel Coward, and that is on a friendship and professional level. Dramatics are provided more from Gertie herself, who tends to want to steal scenes from her stars so her own career can increase. She also has a propensity to not deal with her monetary affairs very well. She finally has a roadblock in the guise of Kurt Weill, whose play "Lady in the Dark" she stars in. Her almost husband brings her to a club where it seems that the act that is being presented gives her the inspiration. But we don't see the act! What is it? Soon afterwards, we see the infamous "Jenny" sequence which makes one wonder if they have overstuffed their coffers. Still, a very intersting sequence considering that you hardly see "Lady In The Dark" in the theater. Everything is big, big, big! Perhaps its this excessiveness that hurts the film. Still, for me this film has many magical moments that makes one love the remote control, so we can make our own version. The DVD is stuffed with extras-on side two we have some documentaries and also a written history of the film. The commentary is very thorough-with comments by Wise, Daniel Massey, and other colloborators. I wish this could be done with other 'flops' too. Time has a way to bring movies into a different light, and I think that "Star" is worth more than it was back then. Too bad that the monetary losses cannot be recouped with DVD sales. So help out and buy the DVD already!
Ignore the Critics. July 2, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It is very easy to focus on the fact that upon release, this film was a huge bomb. Indeed, many compare this film to Andrew's previous films, such as "The Sound of Music" and "Mary Poppins" which were wildly successful.
But this film is a different animal completely. The usual family friendly Julie Andrews goes against the grain and portrays Gertrude Lawrence as the selfish, difficult, magnetic woman she came to be.
The meat of this film is the endless parade of magical musical numbers. Well-financed, well-choreographed, and beautifully executed, it is undeniable that this is Andrews at her best.
If you take this film as a showcase for Julie Andrews' talents, it is impossible not to fall in love with "Star!" I say, ignore the critics and watch this movie!
This DVD is a Travesty! April 24, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I am giving this DVD the full star rating because of it's content. The filmmakers had a hard time dealing with the fact that in reality it was not a friendship of two--Gertrude Lawrence and Noel Coward--but a friendship of three--Gertie, Noel, and Beatrice Lillie! Bea Lillie would only give permission to show her likeness if she could play herself. She was at least forty years too old at the time! Besides that, this film is by far one of the three best films Julie Andrews has EVER made--along with "S.O.B." and "Victor/Victoria"! The problem with the DVD is the way it is presented. The film was shot in Todd-AO, a 70mm process that projects a 2:20-1 aspect ratio. This was the ratio the so-called "roadshow" version. The "general release" version was exhibited in a "panavision" or "cinemascope" aspect ratio of 2:35-1. Neither aspect ratio successfully fits in the other, and some cropping is involved. If an a-b comparison is done between the DVD and the Laserdisc versions (which is presented in the true TODD-AO version), it is plain to anyone that the DVD is the panavision version, which has been blown up and cropped to fit the 2:20-1 aspect ratio presentation. In the original version during the overture the theater presenium and orchestra pit are clearly seen. On the DVD they are not. But for those unaware of this who are fans of Julie Andrews, this DVD is a must! It truly makes "The Sound of Music" seem like amateur night!!!!
Thank God ,They Still made Movies Like This ! Great! April 14, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This special film is finally getting the attention it deserves! A showing in NYC recently sold out, and a new print in 70mm was recently screened in England! Great musical numbers and of course lovable JULIE! Has anyone seen the cut version, Those Were The Happy Times" much shorter but just as good! Love it! My favorite film! The poster also looks great framed!
ONE OF THE LAST SUPERBLY CRAFTED MUSICALS OF THE LATE SIXTIES! January 23, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
STAR! is a magnificent film. Every bit of the $14 million spent on the production is seen on screen. Robert Wise didn't just make a great movie: He made one of the greatest film musical of the late '60s. So why did STAR! fail at the box office, despite the high quality of the finished film? After MY FAIR LADY and THE SOUND OF MUSIC earned endless amounts of money and awards, Hollywood believed that the general public wanted musicals, musicals and more musicals. The bigger, the better. Everywhere you looked, one musical was either in pre-production or general release. Most of them were expensive films for their time and ended up nearly breaking the studios that turned them out. STAR! would be one of three musicals that brought 20th Century Fox into dire straits. (The others being DR. DOOLITTLE and the magnificent - if over budgeted - HELLO DOLLY!) But you can't fault 20th Century-Fox for the box office failure of STAR!. They believed in the film and tried desperately to salvage it. They trimmed the running time to 155 minutes, but this failed to bring in audiences. Undeterred, Fox brought in William Reynolds, an editor renowned for damage control. (He would take hold of HEAVEN'S GATE after Michael Cimino turned in a five-and-a-half-hour cut.) This shorter 119-minute cut was titled THOSE WERE THE HAPPY TIMES at which point Robert Wise asked that the credit "A Robert Wise film" be removed. Issued in late 1969, it still failed to bring in audiences. From this point on, aside from a few network showings of various lengths, STAR! remained unseen and unloved.
Some have accused William Fairchild's screenplay of being "abysmal," but that is mostly unfair. Given the daunting task of telling a biographical story punctuated by 17 elaborate song and dance numbers, the narrative and the dialogue feels mostly real and true. The characterizations are three-dimensional, despite some last-minute name changes to avoid litigation and Fairchild showed great skill in segueing from narrative to song in a flawless manner.
The direction by Robert Wise, as with his earlier musicals, finds a perfect balance between story and song and the technical aspects of STAR! are also superb. If there's one thing Wise knew how to do, it was how to properly use a sizable budget to get maximum production value on screen. Wise also realized that even the best-made musical will fall apart if the basic ingredients do not work and he managed to guide everyone to career-best work.
With the exception of a new title song by Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, the music is of the period and from Gertrude Lawrence's ouevre. Wise wanted to recreate the feel of a stage performance, and he succeeds beautifully. Instead of using a series of close-ups, he uses the Todd-AO 70mm widescreen frame to give us the the expansiveness of the stage, allowing Michael Kidd's excellent choreography to shine. The result is something extrodinary, especially in this day and age of MTV machine gun-style editing: Actors who not only can sing, but can dance. (And we can actually SEE it!!)
The acting is uniformly superb, unusual for a major musical built around a single star. Julie Andrews is in top form in the demanding tile role. We all know her solid musical credentials very well. With STAR!, Andrews at last got the chance to break away from the wide-eyed innocence that characterized her previous roles in MARY POPPINS and THE SOUND OF MUSIC. A daunting undertaking - she's in virtually every scene in the film, Andrews is more than up to the challenge, showing a wide range of human emotion. She resists straightforward imitation and offers us an interpretation of Lawrence, not unlike Streisand's Fanny Brice in Funny Girl. The film's humor is provided by Daniel Massey. Cast as his own godfather, Noel Coward, he manages to infuse vitality into any scene he is in and works exceptionally well with Andrews. Richard Crenna, in the role of fourth husband Richard Aldrich, provides strength and stability. (According to history, Aldrich was the stabilizing force in Lawrence's hectic life, and Crenna fully materializes that aspect here.) Robert Reed (TV's Mike Brady) is likable and well mannered as Charles Fraser; and finally, Michael Craig is appropriately unflappable and dashing as Spencer.
STAR! languished in movie oblivion for many years, unavailable in any format until 1993 when Fox Video issued the original roadshow cut on VHS and in a splendid widescreen Laser Disc edition. There was a brief, limited theatrical reissue as well.
For this DVD, Fox unfortunetly dropped the intermission and the entr'acte. The result is now one long, seamless film. The 2.20 anamorphic widescreen transfer has some light grain, a few scratches and specks, but the image for the most part is good. The Dolby Digital soundtrack has a dimension that television broadcasts never could match and the music sounds magnificent with all dialogue easily comprehensible. So should you take a chance on STAR? Of course you should. Andrews fans will not be able to resist it, and musical fans are in for a rare treat. While initially the movie lost millions, it deserved a better fate for its enormous score, top-flight production, excellent choreography, and fine acting. Sadly, they just don't know how to make them like this anymore.
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