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My Fair Lady (Widescreen)

My Fair Lady (Widescreen)
Director: George Cukor
Actors: Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison, Stanley Holloway, Wilfrid Hyde-white, Gladys Cooper
Studio: Warner Home Video
Category: DVD

List Price: CDN$ 18.70
Buy New: CDN$ 8.30
You Save: CDN$ 10.40 (56%)



New (12) Used (3) from CDN$ 8.30

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 123 reviews
Sales Rank: 104

Format: Color, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled)
Rating: G (General Audience)
Aspect Ratio: 2.20:1
DVD Layers: 2
DVD Sides: 1
Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.6 x 0.5

MPN: 085391666820
ISBN: 630522577X
UPC: 085391666820
EAN: 9786305225775
ASIN: 630522577X

Theatrical Release Date: December 25, 1964
Release Date: December 1, 1998
Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New Factory Sealed

Similar Items:

   The Sound of Music (40th Anniversary Widescreen Edition)
   Singin' in the Rain
   The Audrey Hepburn DVD Collection
   Charade: 1953/1963
   Roman Holiday (Special Collector's Edition)

Editorial Reviews:

From Amazon.co.uk
Hollywood's legendary "woman's director," George Cukor (The Women, The Philadelphia Story), transformed Audrey Hepburn into street-urchin-turned-proper-lady Eliza Doolittle in this film version of the Lerner and Loewe musical. Based on George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion, My Fair Lady stars Rex Harrison as linguist Henry Higgins (Harrison also played the role, opposite Julie Andrews, on stage), who draws Eliza into a social experiment that works almost too well. The letterbox edition of this film on video certainly pays tribute to the pageantry of Cukor's set, but it also underscores a certain visual stiffness that can slow viewer enthusiasm just a tad. But it's really star wattage that keeps this film exciting, that and such great songs as "On the Street Where You Live" and "I Could Have Danced All Night." Actor Jeremy Brett, who gained a huge following later in life portraying Sherlock Holmes, is quite electric as Eliza's determined suitor. --Tom Keogh


Customer Reviews:   Read 118 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars a cautionary tale   November 17, 2006
 0 out of 7 found this review helpful

I have always hated this movie. From the moment I saw it as a child I could never understand why a lively,independent,joyous creature would choose to enter a world of repressed Victorian womanhood. The beautiful sets,lavish costumes and show tunes masked a sad future for a winsome innocent who is last seen bringing slippers to a tyrannical over bearing ogre old enough to be her grandfather. I am amazed people regard this as a romantic movie. I wish they had focused totally on Eliza and her life in the streets. There are worse things in life than selling flowers and this movie proves it beyond a shadow of a doubt.


5 out of 5 stars Flawless   August 24, 2006
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This has to be the all-time best movie musical ever made. Now, I don't generally like or watch this stuff, but the cast, the print, the recording, everything is superb. It seems like it was made only last week. I put this up against Merchant Ivory films and period pieces (The Importance of Being Earnest, Enchanted April, etc) and it holds up as well if not better. Of course Rex Harrison is remarkable, but my only complaint was that they didn't let Hepburn sing herself. I recently saw a documentary on this film, and they compared her singing voice with the one that was dubbed. Her's was more real and I really saw no need for that. But aside from that, Cukor's direction is without a flaw and the entire movie seems like ten minutes instead of its actual running time.

If you have to buy one musical, and even if you don't like them, this is the one to get. There's not a thing more I can say but "Buy it!"



5 out of 5 stars On the street where you live   July 30, 2006
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Professor Henry Higgins (Rex Harrison) who specializes in the English language makes a bet with Colonel Hugh Pickering (Wilfrid Hyde-White) that he can take someone who speaks with a lower-class language and by correcting the speech can pass off as upper-class or royalty. Overhearing this bet is a flower girl Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn); she wants to work a flower stand. But they will not take her unless she can speak more "genteel". Professor Higgins takes up the challenge.
Will he succeed?
What does her father (Stanley Holloway) thing finding that she moved in whit the two professors and did not want any clothes?

This is a musical version of the movie Pygmalion (1938), based on a play by George Bernard Shaw.

As people find that music and movies bring memories of the time in which they heard or viewed it. His movie has a meaning to me as I too was in love and found my self singing "On the street where you live." One of the strengths of the movie is that many of the songs instead of being classical and just stuffed into at odd times actually are songs that you would initiate in your life and they did so in the lives of the characters in the movie.





4 out of 5 stars How do you do? And which DVD version to buy ...   July 13, 2004
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

MFL is a marvellous film about a professor who turns a common flower girl into a lady. It is full of sing-a-long songs and funny moments. It is basically a classic for all the right reasons! Plenty of re-watch factor makes it a film to own.

In 1994, the film was restored and thank the lord they did! The film's negative was almost lost forever. In fact, the film hade had become yellow-tinged and full of scratches, blotches and all the rest! It would have been a very sad day for the movie industry if a flim like this had been lost.

The original DVD that featured this new restoration was released in the late 90's. This DVD included a 9 minute featurette, actor profiles, audio commentary, and Audrey Hepburn singing in 2 scenes.

This original 1-disc DVD has since been updated to a special 2-Disc Edition. Which one to get? I have both so I feel qualified to answer this. The new DVD includes all the features found on the original DVD, except the actor profiles. The new DVD once again includes the restored print but is apparently a new transfer from the restored print. However, according to a report that I have read, the new transfer is not perfect and has aliasing problems throughout. However, the average watcher won't pick up on this detail. If this is an issue to you, purchase the original edition DVD where the transfer has been given two thumbs up! One has to wonder why they bothered transferring a second time.

The advantage of the special 2-Disc Edition DVD is that it includes a 58 minute 1994 documentary hosted by Jeremy Brett (Audrey's love interest in the film). Jeremy is no longer with us, so it's nice to have this as a piece of nostalgia. ON top of this, there are many more features on this disc that aren't included on the original DVD such as footage from the film's premiere, production dinner, as well as discussions with Rex and Audrey.

The choice is easy. If you're a fan of the film and don't care for all the extras, buy the original DVD. You at least get the best transfer. If you do care about having all the extras, buy both!


5 out of 5 stars It's Loverly   June 9, 2004
The music from "My Fair Lady" makes it easily one of my favorite musicals with "I could have danced all night", "Wouldn't it be Loverly?", "The Street Where you Live", and Stanley Holloway's rousing showstoppers "With a Little Bit of Bloomin' Luck" and "Get me to the Church on Time".

It's well chronicled how much gnashing of teeth surrounded the Hollywood decision to leave out the then-unknown Julie Andrews, who was the new toast of the stage as Eliza Doolittle, and instead cast the more bankable Audrey Hepburn. Hollywood rewarded Ms. Andrews with "Mary Poppins" and an Oscar, and although I'd love to have seen Julie Andrews in this role, 4 decades later I can't complain about Audrey Hepburn.

Rex Harrison's reprises Henry Higgins from the stage, and I frankly can't think of another actor who would bring the same English Arrogance and tongue-in-cheekiness to the role. The interactions between Harrison, Hepburn and Wilfred Hyde-White as Colonel Pickering, especially in the early part of the film, are witty, entertaining, and move the narrative right along without pausing for exposition. The Higgins character is a cad, very full of himself, and he makes the mistake of treating those he feels are socially inferior poorly. The Colonel Pickering character acts as a surrogate for the audience, observing the educated but pompous Professor Higgins and allowing us to feel not TOO badly that poor Eliza has come under the influences of Higgins.

Stanley Holloway recreates Alfred P. Doolittle, Eliza's father, from the stage, and although his character has as many moral deficiencies as Professor Higgins (at one point he shows up at Higgins doorstep hoping to extort money from Professor Higgins for "shacking up" with Eliza) and is much less educated and with a much lower social standing, he is nonetheless a "good ol' bloke" and his moments in the film are among the most memorable, especially the previously mentioned show-stopping musical numbers.

The final act feels a little soap-opera-ish between Jeremy Brett as Freddy fawning over Eliza and Professor Higgins beginning to appreciate her fine qualities at the same time. This portion produces two of the finer musical moments as Freddy sings "On The Street Where You Live" and Higgins croons "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face".

Since George Bernard Shaw died in 1950 it's purely speculative to wonder what he'd have thought about the production of his Pygmalion story. I'm guessing he'd have liked it. If you like musicals, I'm guessing you will too. Enjoy.

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