Lost Horizon buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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List Price: $27.95 Our Price:
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Features
• Black & White
• DVD-Video
• NTSC
In Theaters : 01 September, 1937
DVD Release : 31 August, 1999 |
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Lost Horizon description
James Hilton's novel Lost Horizon proposes a perfect hidden community within the uncharted Himalayas, a land where peace reigns and the inhabitants live for hundreds of years. So indelible is this mythical land that its name has entered the culture: Shangri-La. Director Frank Capra, riding high during his mid-'30s hot streak, spared no expense in creating Hilton's paradise onscreen, taxing the coffers of Columbia Pictures and the patience of mogul Harry Cohn. The results, however, are magical: shimmering, seductive, and maybe a bit foolish, truly the creation of an idealist (understandably, the spectacular art direction won an Oscar). And Capra's hero is an idealist, too. Ronald Colman, at his most marvelously elocutionary, plays a wise diplomat whose plane crashes in the snows of Tibet. He and the other survivors are guided to Shangri-La, where they wrestle with the invitation to stay. The young Jane Wyatt plays Colman's love interest, but leaving a more lasting impression are H.B. Warner, as the benevolent Chang, and Sam Jaffe, in great old-age makeup, as the wizened High Lama. This version has been restored as closely as possible to Capra's original cut; the film had circulated for many years in a trimmed form. Lost Horizon was remade, notoriously and hilariously, as a big-budget musical in 1973; it was a complete flop. --Robert Horton |
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Lost Horizon Customer Reviews
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Hark back to Shangri-La
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Do yourself and your family a favor and rent this brilliantly restored 1937 classic, based on James Hilton's 1933 novel, featuring the gallantry of Ronald Colman and the innocence of Jane Wyatt. This masterful suspense story of an airplane kidnapping and its eventual landing in the fictional city of Shangri-la in the Himalayas offers up timeless questions such as What is the meaning of life and How do we want to spend our time here on earth.
Eastern mystical philosophy is contrasted with the materialism of the west while characterizations of the more mellow Asians are juxtaposed with the often self-absorbed Britishers. Amongst the spectacular and surprising architecture of the spiritual city, we find ourselves asking: Mightn't I incorporate more seeking of Shangri-la in my own life?
Instead of purchasing this film which includes the fascinating behind-the-scenes story of its creation (selection of Sam Jaffe for the role of head monk, plus tension between director Frank Capra and producer Harry Cohen) donate the money to a charity of your choice! |
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