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Pete Kelly's Blues | 
| Director: Webb, Jack Actors: Jud De Naut, John Dennis, Andy Devine, Herbert Ellis, Nick Fatool Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $19.97 Buy Used: $11.50 You Save: $8.47 (42%)
New (33) Used (10) from $11.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 21 reviews Sales Rank: 11520
Format: Color, Dolby, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 95 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 1000035849 UPC: 883929003280 EAN: 0883929003280 ASIN: B00005JL2Y
Theatrical Release Date: July 31, 1955 Release Date: July 22, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A Kansas City singer and his jazz band bow down to pressure from a local gangster and take on the thug's alcoholic girlfriend as a singer.Running Time: 92 min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA/CLASSICS UPC: 883929003280 Manufacturer No: 1000035849
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| Customer Reviews: Read 16 more reviews...
A 50s favorite! August 23, 2008 Saw it new as a child, loved it for some strange reason - music, acting, Peggy Lee, Ella, Andy Devine, Lee Marvin, Jack Webb's crewcut? I dunno, but I've seen it a dozen times in my life and still treasure it as one of my all-time 50s favorites!
Webb's Pete based on another Pete? August 18, 2008 Apparently, when Jack Webb was creating PETE KELLY he would regularly watch Hollywood-based cornetist PETE DAILY and his band to assimilate the mannerisms and attitudes of a similar musician. Recordings by Matty Matlock's band were so popular that the group made concert appearances billed as PETE KELLY'S BIG SEVEN supported, ironically, by PETE DAILY'S DIXIELANDERS!Great to have PETE KELLY'S BLUES on DVD after all these years, in any format. Now what about re-releasing the PETE KELLY BIG SEVEN recordings? Not to mention those infectious PETE DAILY & HIS CHICAGOANS tracks.
la carendi le me cantos! July 31, 2008 of course jack webb is master of monotone one liners, yes janet leigh carries him,yes he's not much of an actor, but story and nostagia make this par excellance. with webb's impeccable timing and imagination for those one liners makes the movie move on. o yea, give ella bout a dozen kisses!
Great Dixieland Jazz July 30, 2008 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
PETE KELLY'S BLUES has finally made it to DVD and a fairly enjoyable issue it is too mostly because of the music - which I'm sorry to say - there isn't an over abundance of. From a lean enough screenplay by Richard L. Breen it was, nevertheless, well directed by the star of the picture Jack Webb. The light plot has cornetist Pete Kelly (Webb) - leader of a Dixieland jazz band in 20's Kansas - going up against racketeer Fran McCarg (Edmond O'Brien) who wants a "piece" of the band. Trouble ensues when Kelly's drummer Joey Firestone (Martin Milner) objects and pays for his objection with his life. In classic old Warner gangster movie style he is mowed down in a back alley in the teeming rain by Tommy Gun from a passing limousine. A stoic Webb tells Rudy, the night club owner, "get someone to bring Joey in - it's raining on him". The picture ends with Webb taking on the gangsters in a well executed shootout in a deserted ballroom.
In between all the drama and gunfire there are some fine jazz numbers "played" by the on-screen band ghosted on the soundtrack by popular jazz band of the day Matty Matlock's Dixieland Jazz Band. Matlock himself ghosted for Lee Marvin on clarinet while Dick Cathcart doubled for Webb on cornet. It is reputed that Webb - an avid jazz fan - based the band in the movie on his favourite group Eddie Condon's Dixielanders. But the jazz aspect of the picture is somewhat disappointing in that there isn't enough numbers played in the film. We could have tolerated and endured quite a few more of them from Matlock's great band. However to compensate in some way there are also some terrific songs in the film. The great Peggy Lee gives us her wonderful and unique renditions of such standards as "Sugar" and "Somebody Loves me". Then there's a marvellous cameo by the First Lady Of Jazz herself the inimitable Ella Fitzgerald belting out "Hard Hearted Hannah" and the title tune "Pete Kelly's Blues". Interestingly Peggy Lee won an Acadamy Award nomination for her fine portrayal of McCarg's drunken Moll.
Not too bad a movie really saved mostly - as I've said - by the music. But it is stylishly photographed in Cinemascope and colour by Hal Rossen and has some clever rapid-fire dialogue. Thanks to Webb's expert direction he embues the film with an exceptional jazz-era atmosphere and his knowledge of Dixieland jazz helps it along. Dixieland jazz was the pop music of yesteryear, hearing it here and in the light of what we have to contend with today - it's a great pity it still isn't. Hmm!
Now a word about the DVD! Although it is in a well defined 2.35 widescreen format I must say I am hugely disappointed in Warner's presentation of PETE KELLY'S BLUES! There are no extras to speak of! Just a silly short about the early days of motoring and a Looney Tunes cartoon. Surely they could have scraped up from their archives some short about jazz or at least something jazz related. No?? Also why was there no attempt to have a commentary? And to add salt to an already blistering wound - guess what- there isn't even a trailer. For shame Warners!
However, classic line from PETE KELLY'S BLUES......The deadpan Webb in a confrontation with gangster O'Brien "I've heard about you McCarg - down South they say you've got rubber pockets so you can steal soup".
Just viewed this and it is indeed widescreen July 27, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I had never heard of this film before, but I knew I wanted a DVD copy of "Blues in the Night", so I went ahead and ordered this one too. I had been hearing the rumors that it was fullscreen, but when I saw it advertised on TCM they showed a widescreen clip, so I took a chance.
Rest assured, it is indeed widescreen. It sounds great, and it looks great with a couple of numbers by Ella Fitzgerald. However, this is not anything close to a musical. Rather it is a 20's gangster tale that involves Pete Kelly (Jack Webb) and his band. For those of you who remember Dragnet, Webb's narration might have you thinking of Dragnet just a little too much. Webb also directed this film, and he did a great job of giving it a real 20's feel. You don't feel like you're looking at a bunch of people from the 50's dressed up for a 20's costume party.
The only thing bad I can say about it is I had a hard time figuring out Pete Kelly's motivation. A person close to him is killed, and he is ready to give in to the gangster responsible and forget the whole thing ever happened. He finds out another person he barely knows has been killed by the same gangster and he's ready for war. He tosses an eager and beautiful Janet Leigh out of his room in one scene, and in the next scene he's overjoyed to see her to the point of wanting to marry her. The clinical acting style that worked so well for Webb in Dragnet just left me a little confused here. Still, overall, I would recommend it.
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