商品の詳細
A Farewell to Arms [DVD] [Import]

A Farewell to Arms [DVD] [Import]
監督: Frank Borzage

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2 新品/中古商品価格 ¥ 2,326


商品の詳細

  • 発売日: 2003-08-11
  • アスペクト比: 1.33:1
  • ディスク枚数: 1
  • 形式: Import
  • オリジナル言語: 英語
  • 実行時間: 80 分

エディターレビュー

Amazon.com Video Essentials206205
The 1932 version of A Farewell to Arms owes as much to the shimmering house style of Paramount Pictures as it does the novel by Ernest Hemingway. If Hemingway purists can get past the romanticizing of the book, however, this film offers its own glossy appeal. On the Italian front in World War I, an American ambulance driver (Gary Cooper) falls in love with a nurse (Helen Hayes, before she became the official First Lady of the American The-a-tah). Cooper was a Hemingway friend in real life, and later played the hero of Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls; his boyish simplicity is just right for director Frank Borzage's heartfelt approach. Image Entertainment's DVD release is a stunningly gorgeous improvement on the muddy prints of this film that had been circulating for years, a fitting tribute to the Oscar-winning cinematography of ace cameraman Charles Lang (this is the kind of lush black and white that can capture the glow from a cigarette as it plays across Cooper's darkened face--a breathtaking touch). The jaded battle scenes show the influence of the hit film version of All Quiet on the Western Front, especially in a gripping montage depicting Cooper's progress alone through the war zone. Hemingway would have none of it, of course; he once disdainfully wrote that "in the first picture version Lt. Henry deserted because he didn't get any mail and then the whole Italian Army went along, it seems, to keep him company." This is first and foremost a love story, however, and as such it succeeds beautifully, right through to the remarkably intense ending. --Robert Horton

Video Description
This adaptation of Hemingway�s novel features Cooper as an American soldier and his ill-fated love affair with a British nurse. The two lovers will stop at nothing to be together but Cooper�s internal struggles ultimately threaten the relationship. Hemingway�s theme of questioning the nature of war and fighting is fully recognized under Frank Borzage�s direction.