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US Mall 1 - Shadows

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List Price: $19.98
Our Price: $9.45
Your Save: $ 10.53 ( 53% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Fox Lorber Starring: Jack Ackerman, Tom Allen, Cliff Carnell, Ben Carruthers, Jay Crecco
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786304192337 Format: Black & White ISBN: 6304192339 Label: Fox Lorber Manufacturer: Fox Lorber Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Fox Lorber Release Date: 1997-11-11 Running Time: 87 Studio: Fox Lorber Theatrical Release Date: 1959-11-11
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A breakthrough in American cinema... Comment: The remarkable, sometimes infuriating, often brilliant films of John Cassavetes occupy a unique position in American cinema... Low-budget, partly improvised, inspired by cinéma verité documentary, and related to underground film, they have nevertheless frequently managed to reach a wide and profoundly appreciative audience...
After drama studies, the young Cassavetes quickly made his name as an unusually unrefined, intense actor, often appearing in films about disaffected, rebellious youth such as "Crime in the Streets" and "Edge of the City."
Setting up an actors' workshop, he worked to transform an improvisational experiment into his feature debut... The result, "Shadows," taking three years to complete and partly financed by his performances in TV's Johnny Staccato, was a breakthrough in American cinema... About the effect of racism on an already fraught relationship between two black men and their sister, two of whom pass for white, the film is impressive for its irregular, seemingly formless style and naturalistic performances... Plot was minimal, mood and emotional apparent truth were everything...
Customer Rating:      Summary: Behind-the-scenes for Cass buffs Comment: For a fascinating behind-the-scenes info about Shadows and a list of books about Cassavetes' work, go to Ray Carney's website dedicated to John Cassavetes (found through any search engine).
Customer Rating:      Summary: Out from the Shadows Comment: Cassavetes was just warming up when he made this in the late '50s, but what a debut! He'd have better actors and more focused scenes in future movies, but the willingness to tackle intense subjects in unexpected ways is already here in full force. Race isn't so much the issue in "Shadows" as it is an occasion for exploring a whole range of folks uncomfortable in their own skins, from the 'racist' lover who wants Lelia back to the goofy hoods in Ben's gang. Cassavetes is especially sensitive to the way that people who are forced to conform to any of society's ideas--about the artist, the intellectual or the racial outsider--can be violent in turn towards others. A great taste of the films to come!
Customer Rating:      Summary: AWEsome Film Comment: This is a great movie. Like it was made yeserday. Punk, beat in sensibility. About young people struggling on the fringes.Also the review that follows mine is right. A guy named Ray Carney just wrote an amazing book about the movie that has incredible behind the scenes details that no one ever knew before. Cassavetes revealed them to Carney before he died in a Rosebud conversation. Check out the book titled Shadows and another titled Cassavetes on Cassavetes along with the film. It's available here if you type in Cassavetes' name under books. Also Carney has a web site that you should check out with lots of other Cassavetes material. I love this movie! And the books about it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: FILM GOGGLES Comment: This intense, hysterical, loud, sweet and sour film was NOT an IMPROVISATION despite the end title! Neither were Cassavetes other films, in the classic sense of IMPROV. Improv was sparringly used in the writing of the scripts, but Cassavetes was a WRITER who knew what he was doing more than people give him credit for. This is a major crime against one of the greatest artists of the last 100 years (wha? no, seriously). To get the real scoop, and an exhaustive, loving take on this important first film by an American original, check out the BFI Film Series edition on SHADOWS, which just came out. It breaks it down and builds it back up, in a way you won't believe.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A breakthrough in American cinema... Comment: The remarkable, sometimes infuriating, often brilliant films of John Cassavetes occupy a unique position in American cinema... Low-budget, partly improvised, inspired by cinéma verité documentary, and related to underground film, they have nevertheless frequently managed to reach a wide and profoundly appreciative audience...
After drama studies, the young Cassavetes quickly made his name as an unusually unrefined, intense actor, often appearing in films about disaffected, rebellious youth such as "Crime in the Streets" and "Edge of the City."
Setting up an actors' workshop, he worked to transform an improvisational experiment into his feature debut... The result, "Shadows," taking three years to complete and partly financed by his performances in TV's Johnny Staccato, was a breakthrough in American cinema... About the effect of racism on an already fraught relationship between two black men and their sister, two of whom pass for white, the film is impressive for its irregular, seemingly formless style and naturalistic performances... Plot was minimal, mood and emotional apparent truth were everything...
Customer Rating:      Summary: Behind-the-scenes for Cass buffs Comment: For a fascinating behind-the-scenes info about Shadows and a list of books about Cassavetes' work, go to Ray Carney's website dedicated to John Cassavetes (found through any search engine).
Customer Rating:      Summary: Out from the Shadows Comment: Cassavetes was just warming up when he made this in the late '50s, but what a debut! He'd have better actors and more focused scenes in future movies, but the willingness to tackle intense subjects in unexpected ways is already here in full force. Race isn't so much the issue in "Shadows" as it is an occasion for exploring a whole range of folks uncomfortable in their own skins, from the 'racist' lover who wants Lelia back to the goofy hoods in Ben's gang. Cassavetes is especially sensitive to the way that people who are forced to conform to any of society's ideas--about the artist, the intellectual or the racial outsider--can be violent in turn towards others. A great taste of the films to come!
Customer Rating:      Summary: AWEsome Film Comment: This is a great movie. Like it was made yeserday. Punk, beat in sensibility. About young people struggling on the fringes.Also the review that follows mine is right. A guy named Ray Carney just wrote an amazing book about the movie that has incredible behind the scenes details that no one ever knew before. Cassavetes revealed them to Carney before he died in a Rosebud conversation. Check out the book titled Shadows and another titled Cassavetes on Cassavetes along with the film. It's available here if you type in Cassavetes' name under books. Also Carney has a web site that you should check out with lots of other Cassavetes material. I love this movie! And the books about it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: FILM GOGGLES Comment: This intense, hysterical, loud, sweet and sour film was NOT an IMPROVISATION despite the end title! Neither were Cassavetes other films, in the classic sense of IMPROV. Improv was sparringly used in the writing of the scripts, but Cassavetes was a WRITER who knew what he was doing more than people give him credit for. This is a major crime against one of the greatest artists of the last 100 years (wha? no, seriously). To get the real scoop, and an exhaustive, loving take on this important first film by an American original, check out the BFI Film Series edition on SHADOWS, which just came out. It breaks it down and builds it back up, in a way you won't believe.
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