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Dark Passage (Keepcase)

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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: BOGART,HUMPHREY
Fabric Type: 0012569676824
Gem Type: Bogey's on the lam and Bacall's at his side in Dark Passage, Delmer Daves' stylish film-noir thriller that's the third of four films Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall made together. Bogart is Vincent Parry, a prison escapee framed for murder who emerges from plastic surgery with a new face. Bacall is Irene Jansen, Vincent's lone ally. In a supporting role, Agnes Moorehead portrays Madge, a venomou
Graphics Memory Size: Full Screen, Closed-captioned, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC
Manufacturer Labor Warranty Description: 20
Maximum Color Depth: Warner Home Video
Maximum Focal Length: EnglishOriginal LanguageEnglishSubtitledFrenchSubtitledSpanishSubtitled
Metal Type: Warner Home Video
Pearl Type: 67682
Publisher: 1
Total Firewire Ports: Warner Home Video
Total Metal Weight: 1
Total Parallel Ports: July 25, 2006
Total S Video Out Ports: 106 minutes
Warner Home Video
September 27, 1947

Features:
  • Bogey's on the lam and Bacall's at his side in Dark Passage, Delmer Daves' stylish film-noir thriller that's the third of four films Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall made together. Bogart is Vincent Parry, a prison escapee framed for murder who emerges from plastic surgery with a new face. Bacall is Irene Jansen, Vincent's lone ally. In a supporting role, Agnes Moorehead portrays Madge, a venomou






Editorial Review:

Product Description:
A man wrongfully accused of his wife's murder escapes from prison to find the real killer.
Genre: Feature Film-Drama
Rating: NR
Release Date: 25-JUL-2006
Media Type: DVD

Amazon.com essential video:
This gimmicky film noir stars Humphrey Bogart as an escaped criminal who undergoes plastic surgery and holes up at the home of Lauren Bacall's character while healing and preparing to prove his innocence. If you can last through the first half-hour of this thing--which is shot entirely from the subjective view of Bogart's bandaged face, which we don't see until later--you might find ample reason in the stars' performances to stick around for the conclusion. But director Delmer Daves (A Summer Place) tests a viewer's endurance with such an obvious, attention-getting ploy. The least of the Bogart-Bacall vehicles (The Big Sleep,To Have and Have Not, Key Largo). --Tom Keogh



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - just average
An average movie.
Great acting by Bogart and Bacall,
but their weakest film together.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - This FIlm Does Justice to Noir
Dark Passage features a lot of breaking of the fourth wall (person speaking directly into the camera), and for the first twenty minutes or so of the film, the anti-hero (Bogart) is not seen; only his voice is heard. Other than "Caged," this is one of Agnes Moorehead's meatier roles. This Howard Hawke film (adapted from a David Goodis novel) does justice to the noir era. (NOTE: Thanks to "L. Spancer" for pointing out errors in my previous review.)



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - One of the most bizarre movies of the 1940s.
I had always thought that "In a Lonely Place" was the strangest movie in Humphrey Bogart's filmography. After seeing Delmer Daves' "Dark Passage," however, I would have to say it's not only the most bizarre film in both Bogie's and Bacall's careers, but perhaps the weirdest film released by any major studio during the entire decade of the forties.

The film--based on a novel by David Goodis, whose work also inspired Truffaut's "Shoot the Piano Player"--concerns a man (Bogart), framed ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Do not go easy into that dark night.
One of their best movies, if you disregard the difficult subjective viewpoint of the camera in the first part of the movie.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Different pace of film
Read the reviews that rate it 4 or 5 stars, you'll get more detail than I will provide. This was a first-time viewing for me, so I was partially intrigued, but not disappointed. I rated it 4 stars, not that it couldn't be 5, there just lacked a touch of logical progression for me. The Bogie/Bacall combo is there, more subdued than their other notable performances - To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep, Key Largo. In watching the special features, and learning some behind the scenes info, helped ... Read More





 

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