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The magnificent Ambersons

Call Number

  • BLU-RAY DRAMA (CEN)

Edition

Blu-ray special edition.

Languages

English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing.

Performers

Joseph Cotten, Dolores Costello, Anne Baxter, Tim Holt, Agnes Moorehead, Ray Collins, Erskine Sanford, Richard Bennett ; narrator, Orson Welles.

Publication Information

[Irvington, NY] : Criterion Collection, [2018]

Physical Description

1 videodisc (88 minutes) : sound, black and white ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 booklet (57 pages ; 17 cm)

Audience

Not rated.

Summary

"Orson Welles's beautiful, nostalgia-suffused second feature--the subject of one of cinema's greatest missing-footage tragedies--harks back to turn-of-the-twentieth-century Indianapolis, chronicling the inexorable decline in the fortunes of an affluent family. Adapted from an acclaimed Booth Tarkington novel and featuring restlessly inventive camera work and powerful performances from a cast including Joseph Cotten, Tim Holt, and Agnes Moorehead, the film traces the rifts deepening within the Amberson clan--at the same time as the forces of progress begin to transform the city they once ruled. Though RKO excised over forty minutes of footage, now lost to history, and added an incongruously upbeat ending, The Magnificent Ambersons is an emotionally rich family saga and a masterful elegy for a bygone chapter of American life"--Container

Notes

From the novel by Booth Tarkington.

Originally released as a motion picture in 1942.

Special features: New 4K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack ; two audio commentaries, featuring scholars Robert L. Carringer and James Naremore and critic Jonathan Rosenbaum ; new interviews with film historians Simon Callow and Joseph McBride ; new video essay by scholars François Thomas and Christopher Husted ; director Orson Welles on The Dick Cavett show in 1970 ; segment from a 1925 silent adaptation of The Magnificent Ambersons ; audio from a 1978 AFI symposium on Welles, and audio interviews with Welles conducted by filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich ; two Mercury Theatre radio plays: Seventeen (1938), an adaptation of another Booth Tarkington novel by Welles, and The magnificent Ambersons (1939) ; trailer.

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