Stream Funny Girl/Funny Lady Online

March 14th, 2010 by maurice6408605
Stream Funny Girl/Funny Lady Online. Stream Funny Girl/Funny Lady Online.

Movie Title: Funny Girl/Funny Lady
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Funny Girl/Funny Lady is available for streaming or downloading.

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I wanted to replace all my VHS’s with DVD’s and this is a perfect solution. You get these wonderful DVD’s in one set and they are beautful to the eyes. The cover is very attractive and the movies themselves are crystal clear and the sound is superb. Not as many bonus features as I would like but I’m happy with this box set.

Far more than sharing the extended life story of Ziegfeld Follies star Fanny Brice, these two movies really show how Barbra Streisand transformed from a screen novice to a reigning goddess over the course of seven years. When she hit the big screen in 1968’s “Funny Girl”, she became an instant movie legend as master filmmaker William Wyler tailored a launching pad so accommodating to her personality and drive that it becomes apparent only later that the film itself is not terribly exceptional. The first half of the film, by far the best part, is about Brice’s fast climb to stardom and her blind infatuation of gambler Nick Arnstein, played with a bit too much continental charm by an overshadowed Omar Sharif. The comparatively dramatic second half is really about the inevitable fate of their relationship. The energy that drives the first half seems to sputter in the second half, and Streisand is left to carry the whole thing to the finish line.

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The fact that the story has anything to do with Brice seems purely circumstantial in deference to Streisand’s phenomenal talent especially as a first-rank comedienne and the pre-eminent song stylist of her generation. For the latter aspect alone, “Funny Girl” is essential viewing, especially for three solo numbers penned by the legendary team of Jule Styne and Bob Merrill (who co-wrote “Gypsy”). First, as a young wannabe trying to convince Mr. Keeney at the local burlesque house to hire her, Streisand sings “I’m the Greatest Star” with an appropriately persistent brassiness that suddenly turns into a dramatic clarion call picking up the percussive momentum of “Don’t Rain on My Parade” until the song title truly becomes fact and not a boast.

The second song is her anthem, “People”, sung to an unsurprisingly awestruck Sharif on the darkened Hollywood-phony backlit set of Henry Street, first as an expression of her unrequited love for Arnstein and then more effectively as a solo plea bordering on desperation as she leans against a lamppost. The third number is made breathtaking by the ingenious way that Wyler films her performance of “Don’t Rain on My Parade” as a montage of fast cuts that leads an Arnstein-chasing Brice to the amazing tugboat finish. The fact that they all occur in the first half makes the second half all the more desultory saved at the end by Streisand’s memorably triumphant take on Brice’s “My Man”. These are all indisputably classic movie musical moments.

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The remaining numbers are good and mostly a vehicle to show off Streisand’s considerable comedy skills – maneuvering roller skates on “I’d Rather Be Blue (Over You)”, flouncing her dress in front of a nonplussed Ziegfeld on “Second Hand Rose”, waddling around as a “pregnant” bride in the Ziegfeld extravaganza “His Love Makes Me Beautiful”, accommodating Arnstein’s aggressive parlor advances in “You Are Woman”, and chronicling her happily married state in “Sadie, Sadie”. That’s not to say she is not a fine dramatic actress, just a sometimes rather theatrical one at least in her first film here, as she expresses her heartbreak in a variety of overdone hairstyles and clothes until her seeming vindication at the end. No other actress can express as dexterously the concurrent insecurity, egotism and humor that Streisand in her prime could.

The talent is still very much in evidence, but the spirit has hardened somewhat in “Funny Lady”, the 1975 sequel which picks up Brice’s story during the Depression when the established star struggles financially to preserve her career. Unlike its predecessor, this movie does not provide a character arc which allows us to discover anything new about her character. Instead, director Herbert Ross and screenwriter Jay Presson Allen focus on the turbulent, sometimes comic relationship between the established Brice and her eventual husband, rising impresario Billy Rose. The staccato dialogue between the two, a far cry from the moony worship Brice held for first husband Arnstein in the first movie, is what makes “Funny Lady” good light entertainment even though the old-fashioned narrative often feels disjointed and truncated.

Fortunately, in full diva mode as the success-insulated heroine, Streisand is at the top of her game here, and James Caan brings youthful energy to his portrayal of the brash, egotistical Rose. The rest of the actors barely register, including Roddy McDowall as Brice’s unctuous assistant and confidante, Ben Vereen who doesn’t have a single line of dialogue as entertainer Bert Robbins, and an embalmed-looking Sharif reprising his role as Arnstein this time as a preening, materialistic fortune hunter. What a shame that the swooning love story of the first film reaches such a cynical denouement in this story.

There are songs written for the film by the estimable team of John Kander and Fred Ebb, and they meld nicely with the old, Rose-penned standards presented here. However, some of the production numbers are badly staged, for example, the faux-gospel take on “(It’s Gonna Be a) Great Day” with a sequin-infested Streisand surrounded by an ensemble of uncoordinated dancers, or the clarion call of “Let’s Hear It for Me” complete with a roadster and a biplane to replicate the driving rhythm of its obvious inspiration, “Don’t Rain on My Parade”. In fact, there are many ill-used references to “Funny Girl” from the opening montage to the overorchestrated refrains of “People” when Arnstein kisses Brice.

Moreover, the movie has a constant veneer of excess, especially the overdone Bob Mackie gowns, as if nothing seems rooted in reality. Through all this, Streisand does manage to create some breathtaking musical magic – her sonorous version of “More Than You Know” in the recording studio; her torchy, show-stopping lament, “How Lucky Can You Get” (although her revealing gown is rather distracting); and best of all, her pristine rendition of the old chestnut, “If I Love Again”, set against a glass grand piano. These are the pleasures that make the movie worthwhile in spite of its various shortcomings.
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Watch The Rare Breed Online

March 13th, 2010 by maurice6408605
Watch The Rare Breed Online. Watch The Rare Breed Online.

Movie Title: The Rare Breed
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The Rare Breed is available for streaming or downloading.

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Under the direction of Andrew V. McLaglen, who understood the John Ford mystique, “The Rare Breed” is a Western of consummate integrity which misses fire by not coming down firmly as either drama or comedy; it does however pass the time amiably enough…

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Stewart again plays a cynical, hard-bitten man who has become disillusioned with human nature… But his insight and understanding are well transmitted…

The title refers to a certain breed of cattle, and not to men, rare, courageous, or other-wise…

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O’Hara is an Englishwoman who comes to America with her daughter, Juliet Mills, bringing a prize Hereford bull named Vindicator… Her husband has died on the way, and she is delivering the bull to a cattle baron (Brian Keith) in Dodge City… Her late husband has always declared that the Hereford could be successfully interbred with the indigenous American Longhorns…

Originally Stewart had planned to kidnap the bull and hand it over to a rival dealer, but he falls under the spell of O’Hara’s womanly integrity, and becomes her ally… Soon a triangle is set up between Stewart, O’Hara and Keith, with predictable results…

The dramatic elements are not totally neglected in the film… The rivalry between the ranchers, the poignant situation of the young lovers, O’Hara’s attempts to set right to the surroundings that she, a new widow, finds extraneous, are all set forth skillfully by McLaglen’s directorial hand…

THE RARE BREED is a film about the delivery of a white-faced Hereford bull from England to the Texas range for breeding purposes. The man responsible for the task is James Stewart. The women who own the bull are Maureen O’Hara and her daughter played by Juliet Mills. THE RARE BREED is a fairly good Western with strong performances by Stewart and O’Hara. A fine supporting cast includes Brian Keith, Don Galloway and David Brian.

Andrew V. McLaglen directed many other good movies such as MCLINTOCK and SHENANDOAH.
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The Last Woman on Earth Streaming

March 11th, 2010 by maurice6408605
The Last Woman on Earth Streaming. The Last Woman on Earth Streaming.

Movie Title: The Last Woman on Earth
Average customer review:

The Last Woman on Earth is available for streaming or downloading.

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This is a small budget sci-fi film from the early 60’s. Rarely seen, it’s actually not too bad. I would say any sci-fi buff would probably want it since the price is low. Just bare in mind that it’s a minor film, but worth a look.
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March 4th, 2010 by maurice6408605

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