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List Price: $26.98Amazon.com's Price: $23.99 You Save: $2.99 (11%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAIN.
EAN: 0025193115522
Format: Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
Label: Paramount Pictures
Manufacturer: Paramount Pictures
Number Of Items: 3
Publisher: Paramount Pictures
Region Code: 1
Release Date: November 14, 2006
Running Time: 385 minutes
Sales Rank: 9366
Studio: Paramount Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: October 09, 1936
Editorial Review:
Product Description: One of Hollywood's MostPopular and Admired Leading Men! This Collection Illustratesthe Talented Witty and Debonair Actor at His Best!System Requirements:Running Time: 78 MinutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION/CLASSIC Rating: NR UPC: 025193115522 Manufacturer No: 61031155
Amazon.com: Cary Grant was on the cusp of stardom when he made the five Paramount films included in this nicely priced Screen Legend Collection. You won't find any classics here, but this entertaining collection makes it clear that Grant's beloved screen persona was developing quickly. Paramount executive B.P. Schulberg had signed 28-year-old Grant to a five-year contract in 1932, and the British-born actor had already appeared in 15 films by the time he appeared in 1934's Thirty Day Princess, the first and arguably best feature in this three-disc set. Cowritten by Preston Sturges and bearing familiar trademarks of Sturges's later screwball classics, the plot finds newspaper publisher Grant falling for a visiting princess (Sylvia Sidney), only to discover that his affections are wrapped up in a breezy case of mistaken identity. Sidney plays two roles with seamless elegance (including impressive split-screen scenes in which she appears with herself), and Grant's suave demeanor is employed to good effect. The little-known gem Kiss and Make-Up was released barely two months later in 1934, with Grant in Paris as a Max Factor-like cosmetics mogul who marries a glamorous former client (Genevieve Tobin) but finds true love with his faithful secretary (Helen Mack) when he comes to his senses. The great character actor Edward Everett Horton costars as Mack's would-be suitor, giving this overlooked comedy an additional boost of amusement.
1935's Wings in the Dark will interest film historians because it was cowritten by pioneering female writer-director Nell Shipman, whose Howard Hawks-ian sense of adventure is on full display in an otherwise creaky melodrama in which inventor and aviator Grant is blinded by a gas explosion, and emerges from self-pity to stage a daring air rescue of his aviatrix wife (Myrna Loy). After being loaned out to RKO for his breakthrough role in 1935's Sylvia Scarlett opposite Katharine Hepburn, Grant returned to Paramount for Big Brown Eyes (released in April 1936), playing a crime-beat reporter paired with Joan Bennett in a lightweight mystery that benefits greatly from director Raoul Walsh's facility with streetwise plots and gritty handling of a baby-killer subplot involving jewel thieves Walter Pigeon and Lloyd Nolan. Wedding Present followed six months later (October '36), reuniting Grant and Bennett as competitive reporters whose relationship is strained when Grant is promoted to editor. Like all five films in this Screen Legend Collection, it's a light and thoroughly enjoyable vehicle for Paramount players including William Demarest, who went on to character-role stardom in the comedies of Preston Sturges. Cary Grant is in fine form here, and his music-hall experience is put to good use in several lightweight musical numbers. All in all, you can't go wrong with a five-film set for this price, especially since Grant was already showing a canny awareness of his own soon-to-be-iconic image. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Good quality and excellent service
The item came looking like it had never been opened and there was not a mark or dent to be found. I was very impressed.
Rating: - Mixed bag of mainly pleasant Paramount programmers
This cheap DVD collection contains 5 Paramount films from the mid thirties before Cary Grant hit the really big time. Only hindsight tells us that he was more than the conventional good looking leading man but each film has some point of interest even if all are fairly routine Paramount programmers of the period.
- "30 Day Princess" is a Ruritanian romance with the charming Sylvia Sidney in a dual role as an out of work actress who is employed to imitate a princess. Grant plays a cynical ... Read More
Rating: - "Love Divided by Two"
DVD set, Universal Studios, and though the prints aren't perfect, they are completely watchable - good audio. And after all - five rarely seen Cary Grant films from 1934-1936 - life is good! My personal favorites are "Big Brown Eyes" and "Kiss and Make Up". In the latter, Cary Grant sings! Several times - same song, but it's good, and it's sweet, and the movie is an over-the-top farce that may have you shaking your head and nodding knowingly. They're all good and I'm pleased to have added them to ... Read More
Rating: - Carey Grant
These movies are just okay. Worth it if you are a collector, but may not be ones you watch over and over.
Rating: - Bringing Up Baby, Bachelor and Bobby Socks, Monkey Business, Cary Grant Screen Legend Collection
I ordered above DVD's on 24 September, my visa was deducted and know I am told that Amazon don't accept my visa but won't return my money. After numerous emails I still await a reply. At the moment I would not recommend this company to anyone
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