Products
Information




Sidney Poitier - In The Frame Collection (To Sir With Love/Guess Who's Coming To Dinner/A Raisin in the Sun/Buck and the Preacher/Little Nikita/The Bedford Incident)

Sidney Poitier - In The Frame Collection (To Sir With Love/Guess Who's Coming To Dinner/A Raisin in the Sun/Buck and the Preacher/Little Nikita/The Bedford Incident)
See Larger Image
List Price: £24.99
Our Price: £17.97
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Starring: Sidney Poitier, Judy Geeson, Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Claudia McNeil
Directed By: Sidney Poitier, James Clavell, Stanley Kramer, Daniel Petrie, Richard Benjamin
Average Customer Rating: [ not yet rated ]

Buy it now at Amazon.com!


Audience Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5035822700918
Format: Box set
Label: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Number Of Items: 6
Publisher: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Region Code: 2
Release Date: 2007-10-29
Running Time: 618
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

To Sir, with Love

Novelist James Clavell wrote, produced, and directed this 1967 British film (based on a novel by E.R. Braithwaite) about a rookie teacher who throws out stock lesson plans and really takes command of his unruly, adolescent students in a London school. Poitier is very good as a man struggling with the extent of his commitment to the job, and even more as a teacher whose commitment is to proffering life lessons instead of academics. The spirit of this movie can be found in such recent films as Dangerous Minds and Mr. Holland's Opus, but none is as moving as this one. Besides, the others don't have a title song performed by pop star Lulu. --Tom Keogh


A Raisin in the Sun

Lorraine Hansberry's play is given sensitive treatment by filmmaker Daniel Petrie (The Bay Boy). Sidney Poitier heads a fine cast in the story of an African American family in Chicago who are struggling with mixed aspirations, not enough money, conflicts over religion, and institutional racism. The film is pretty much set-bound (as plays adapted for the screen sometimes are), but the drama is intense and moving. --Tom Keogh


Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

Spencer Tracy's last performance was in this well-meaning, handsome film by Stanley Kramer about a pair of white parents (Tracy and Katharine Hepburn) trying to make sense of their daughter's impending marriage to an African American doctor (Sidney Poitier). The film has been knocked over the years for padding conflict and stoking easy liberalism by making Poitier's character a good catch in every socio-economic sense: But what if Kramer had made this stranger a factory worker? Would the audience still find it as easy to accept a mixed-race relationship? But there's no denying the drawing power of this movie, which gets most of its integrity from the stirring performances of Tracy and Hepburn. When the former (who had been so ill that the production could not get completion insurance) gives a speech toward the end about race, love, and much else, it's impossible not to be affected by the last great moment in a great actor's life and career. --Tom Keogh




Buy it now at Amazon.com!


Cheap Cds Copyright 2000-2005 All rights reserved.