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Ford At Fox - The Collection
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December 4, 2007 "Please retry" | — | 1 | — | $44.99 |
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Genre | Documentary |
Format | Box set, NTSC, Color, Closed-captioned |
Contributor | Ben Lucien Burman, James Cagney, Gene Tierney, Brian Oswald Donn-Byrne, Anne Shirley, Linda Darnell, Olive Borden, Basil Woon, Bess Meredyth, Henry Fonda, Andrew Bennison, Jane Darwell, Larry Kent, Charles Darnton, Charley Grapewin, Barry Conners, George O'Brien, John Ford, Will Rogers, June Collyer See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 39 hours and 59 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
John Ford is considered by many to be one of the greatest filmmakers of all time. His sphere of influence touched contemporaries such as Ingmar Bergman and Orson Welles; as well as George Lucas, Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg. For much of his early career, Ford's home was Twentieth Century Fox where he made more than 50 films for the studio from 1920 through 1952, including such classics as The Grapes of Wrath, My Darling Clementine, Drums Along the Mohawk and How Green Was My Valley. It was one of the most productive director/studio relationships in the history of American film. Celebrating the legacy of the collected works of John Ford and their part in the Studio's heritage and pedigree, Ford at Fox: The Collection features 24 films as well as the new documentary "Becoming John Ford" by Academy Award nominated documentary maker and Ford historian Nick Redman. The beautifully packaged collection also includes an exclusive hard-cover book which features rare, unpublished photographs from Ford's career, lobby card reproductions, production stills and an in-depth look at this maverick's work.
Disc 1: WHAT PRICE GLORY Disc 2: MY DARLING CLEMENTINE Disc 3: HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY Disc 4: TOBACCO ROAD Disc 5: GRAPES OF WRATH Disc 6: DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK Disc 7: WEE WILLIE WINKIE Disc 8: YOUNG MR. LINCOLN Disc 9: PRISONER ON SHARK ISLAND Disc 10: STEAMBOAT AROUND THE BEND Disc 11: WORLD MOVES ON Disc 12: PILGRIMAGE/BORN RECKLESS Disc 13: DOCTOR BULL/JUDGE PRIEST Disc 14: FOUR MEN AND A PRAYER/SEAS BENEATH Disc 15: WHEN WILLIE COMES HOME/UP THE RIVER Disc 16: FOUR SONS Disc 17: THREE BAD MEN/HANGMAN'S HOUSE Disc 18: JUST PALS Disc 19: BECOMING JOHN FORD DOCUMENTARY Disc 20: THE IRON HORSE SPECIAL EDITION UK VERSION DISC 1 Disc 21: THE IRON HORSE US VERSION: DISC 2
Amazon.com
For anyone with a passion for vintage American cinema, it's difficult to imagine a more spectacular or more deeply gratifying occasion than the DVD release of Ford at Fox: The Collection. This mega-box is like a film archive unto itself ... or maybe permanent browsing rights over a wing of the Library of Congress. To be sure, there have been plenty directorial boxed sets, including several devoted to John Ford; and Ford made quite a bit of film history--and many of his best movies--away from Fox Films and its post-1935 avatar, 20th CenturyFox. But this treasure trove of 21 discs, encompassing just about half of the 50 titles Ford directed for Fox between 1920 and 1952, is unparalleled.
It isn't just the career highlights, though those have been treated royally. The Iron Horse, the epic 1924 Western that became a breakout success for its 30-year-old director, is presented in two editions, a British release version and the American version. Three Bad Men (1926), Ford's even better, last silent Western, is here, as well as the two pictures that brought him back-to-back best director Oscars in 1940-41, The Grapes of Wrath and How Green Was My Valley. The Grapes of Wrath has been newly restored, and you'll find three other towering collaborations with Henry Fonda: Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), and My Darling Clementine (1946)--both the director's preview cut and the release version.
Yet the real richness of Ford at Fox isn't limited to the known masterpieces. Some of it has to do with the dozen-and-a-half titles that are far from household words--the movies that put us in touch with the self-described "picture man" who did a "job of work" for the studio where he was under contract for much of the three decades beginning with Just Pals in 1920. Some of these are great films awaiting proper recognition. But even the least among them give off the ozone snap of discovery, affording simultaneous insights into the evolution of an artist, a medium, and a distinctive studio.
In this regard, the new feature-length documentary Becoming John Ford is an invaluable element of the set. Premier Ford biographer Joseph McBride, screenwriter Lem Dobbs, Peter Fonda, and others astutely testify about not only the life, artistry, and cantankerous personality of the director but also Fox studios and the mogul who served as a key Ford collaborator, Darryl F. Zanuck. Ford famously despised producers, but he respected Zanuck's movie sense and was content to leave the cutting of their films to him. (To the nighttime scene in The Grapes of Wrath when Tom Joad wanders outside the fruit-pickers' barracks and finds the strikers' encampment, Zanuck added the sound of crickets--a touch that made the superbly composed and lighted moment more "Fordian" than ever.)
Fox was the studio most identified with Americana, even before Zanuck--the favorite son of Wahoo, Nebraska--took charge. And so the legacy of Ford at Fox includes the three pictures he made with the beloved actor, comedian, and national political scold Will Rogers. Doctor Bull (1933) is a scrappy adaptation of a James Gould Cozzens novel, notable chiefly for its wintry New England atmosphere (Ford was a native Down Easter), but Judge Priest (1934) and Steamboat Round the Bend (1935) are luminous fables from the rural South. Judge Priest is especially remarkable for its subversive playing-off of Rogers' wily-rascal persona against the sly Stepin Fetchit in profoundly egalitarian comic scenes; the movie has been neglected because of Fetchit's infamous political incorrectness, but it has, and deserves, a place of honor here.
Also very fine is the 1936 The Prisoner of Shark Island, about the martyrdom of Dr. Samuel Mudd (Warner Baxter), who unwittingly set the leg John Wilkes Booth broke following his assassination of Abraham Lincoln. The moment of Lincoln's death, the president virtually passing into history before our eyes, is a mystical triumph by Ford and cinematographer Bert Glennon. Critic Joe McBride claims Pilgrimage (1933) as one of Ford's early masterpieces and likens the dark-hearted Hannah Jessop, played by stage actress Henrietta Crosman, to the similarly driven Ethan Edwards in The Searchers (not a Fox picture and not included in this set). The setting is again the rural South, and to break up her son's romance with a local girl, Hannah forces him to march off to war in France--where he is killed. The rest of the film becomes, spiritually and then literally, a redemptive journey for Hannah. This stark character study lacks marquee names but has Ford's heart and some of his most powerfully visualized sequences.
Pilgrimage, like the late silents Four Sons and Hangman's House (both 1928), displays evidence of how influenced Ford was in that period by German director F.W. Murnau, who had come to Fox in 1927 to make Sunrise; Four Sons, a mostly German-set story, was even shot on sets left over from the Murnau picture. The essential Ford style was based on dynamism defined within a fixed frame, but watching the director experiment here with elaborate camera movement is fascinating. Similarly, the gangster movies Up the River and Born Reckless (both 1930) and the WWI naval adventure Seas Beneath (1931) take their interest not from their slapdash scenarios but from Ford's crash course in accommodating the presence of sound. Seas Beneath is especially striking among early talkies for being filmed almost entirely in the open air, on the water and on picturesque Catalina Island, with astonishing long-take, real-time coverage of submarines surfacing and submerging, boats sinking, and a naval artillery duel nerve-wracking in its relentless slowness.
For much of his tenure at Fox, Ford had little to say about what films he'd be assigned, or who'd be cast in them. His response was to fill the backgrounds of his movies with his personal stock company of memorably ugly mugs (supremely, Jack Pennick), and to improvise passages of visual poetry or comedy (a baseball game amid the WWI section of Born Reckless!) to keep from getting bored. Apart from some anthology-worthy battlefield sequences, the 1934 The World Moves On is so diffuse and devoid of interest in its rambling family saga, we suspect it might have been the film that inspired one of the great Ford legends: how, advised by the front office that his current production was falling behind, he tore a handful of pages out of the script and said, "Now we're back on schedule."
Mostly, though, the picture man triumphed in spite of himself. Saddling John Ford with a Shirley Temple movie would seem to border on insult, but the director turned the Kipling-based Wee Willie Winkie (1937) into something enchanting instead of cloying. Also partly set on the Indian frontier, Four Men and a Prayer (1938)--a preposterous Boy's Own Adventure tale that hops from India to England to Latin America to Egypt as the titular quartet of British brothers try to clear their late father's name--was just about Ford's last obligatory assignment before embarking on the amazing 193941 streak of The Grapes of Wrath et al.; he disliked the story (and the British), but he turned an Indian saloon scene into a classic "Oirish" brawl, and invested a night of civil war in a Latin American town with a memorably surreal air of shock and terror.
How might Ford at Fox have evolved if WWII hadn't intervened? The director spent the war years shooting documentaries (several are included on the Becoming John Ford disc). Upon mustering out, his ambitions focused on developing personal productions for Argosy Pictures, the company he had formed with Merian C. (King Kong) Cooper before the war. Apart from My Darling Clementine, Ford directed only two more pictures for Fox, When Willie Comes Marching Home (1950) and an inferior remake of the silent Raoul Walsh classic What Price Glory (1952)--both semi-musicals featuring Fox's new star Dan Dailey. So, anticlimactically, Ford at Fox: The Collection ends there. But let's not dwell on that; this big box is very full. "There is no fence round time," the narrator says in How Green Was My Valley, "you can go back and have of it what you will." The films of John Ford are forever. --Richard T. Jameson
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 17 x 16.5 x 7.5 inches; 14.1 Pounds
- Director : Andrew Bennison, John Ford
- Media Format : Box set, NTSC, Color, Closed-captioned
- Run time : 39 hours and 59 minutes
- Actors : Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Will Rogers, Anne Shirley, Charley Grapewin
- Studio : 20th Century Fox
- ASIN : B000WMA6HI
- Writers : Barry Conners, Basil Woon, Ben Lucien Burman, Bess Meredyth, Brian Oswald Donn-Byrne
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #132,107 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #4,125 in Documentary (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2016IT IS A BARGAIN. THE QUALITY IS WONDERFUL. JOHN FORD IS STUPENDOUS. IT IS AN EDUCATION FROM THE WORLDS GREATEST
MOVIE DIRECTOR, ZANUCK SAID HE WAS. THE IRON HORSE TEACHES ME WHAT A SILENT WESTERN CAN REALLY BE.
IT DOES NOT HAVE A MOVIE I DID NOT LIKE. I ENJOYED THE ENTIRE FORD COMPANY. I LIKED YOUND MR LINCOLN WITH HENRY
FONDA. IT WAS NICE TO SEE THE PERSONA ON SCREEN OF THE LEGENDARY WRITER WILL ROGERS ALIVE AND BREATHING.
I ENJOYED SEEING WARD BOND CRAWL UNDER A CAR AND TURN IT OVER WITH HIS BACK LIKE A REDNECK. I GOT TO SEE
JOHN WAYNE ACT LIKE GENERAL SHERMAN. THERE IS NOT A BUM STEER IN THE LOT. YOU CANT GO WRONG. JUST REMEBER-
TAKE THE DISCS OFF THE BOOK SPINDLES WITH YOUR THUMB AND INDEX FINGER TO REMOVE/REPLACE - NO PROBLEMS!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2017The fact that THE IRON HORSE is from 1924 should have told me it's a silent movie but I wasn't thinking. I'm not a fan of silent movies but my husband got the collection for Christmas and he wanted other films. to start at the beginning. The other movies are 'talkies.'
I can't believe how much I loved the silent movie. This was the beginning of John Ford's career, so much so that he is not credited onscreen. Even though he isn't credited, it is so clearly a John Ford film. The action, drama and humor intertwine so clearly into his style. Fans of westerns will enjoy this film and I am looking forward to watching the progression of his talent over time.
I know the other movies. This collection is well worth the cost.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2016In a very few words, I found the Fox At Ford collection to be an astonishing and gratifying achievement on the part of all who contributed to creation of this tribute to an important cinematic icon. That this set also represents, at this time, an incredible value, should allay any hesitation on the part of potential buyers. A relatively minor note - the care expended by whoever was responsible for packing and shipping, was the very worst I have seen in all the years I've ordered from Amazon. The sturdy casing that houses the collection did not sustain any damage, but, I can't help but note my disappointment. Otherwise, all those interested- go for it!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2009Even a Chinese audience like me would have known JOHN FORD as one of the greatest directors of all-time. Four-time-winning of Academy Awards for Best Director, he's created a large bundle of masterpieces in B&W film history. This Boxset contains the full works during Ford's age when working at 20th Century Fox. The reason I brought down a star is that the package style of the boxset-it can't be more protective to the disc as I expected. Besides, YOUNG MR. LINCOLN in it is only the film, without any special fatures in the former CRITERION edition, maybe due to the limit of copyrights? Who knows?
However, the service of AMAZON.com was truly acceptable. The whole boxset was brand new when I received it, which is hard to believe for a parcel that had crssed the Pacific...Hmm, but it's cost my whole month's salary. Dinner's been cancelled.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2008A superb andmonumental collection of the great Irish American director's work with a single studio from silent days with the William Fox Studios to sound days with 20th Century Fox, a fruitful collaboration with Producer Darryl F. Zanuck that yielded such masterworks as THE IRON HORSE, FOUR SONS, PILGRIMAGE, STEAMBOAT AROUND THE BEND, YOUNG MR LINCOLN, GRAPES OF WRATH and MY DARLING CLEMENTINE etc... The delight is in these films and also in the lesser known works, including his WWII documentaries BATTLE OF MIDWAY, DECEMBER 7TH etc., which add to the richness of the package... Henry Fonda is the star of choice in the 1940's, and John Wayne is not to be found in any on the 24 films... Highly recommended!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2018While I cannot say that the packaging is the best, the collection is great. An interesting facet of John Ford lovers is there willingness to admit he made bad movies occasionally. Some of the film's in the collection obviously fit under the heading of clearing out the vault, but then again, one must put in perspective that it would difficult to find any director who made as many films, as quickly and in so short a time. He is still the master.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2018Was it absolutely necessary to have this collection of 20 dvds come in a sort of case-like container that is much heavier than an old New York City telephone book? My God! Its a disaster...you almost need a fork lift to retrieve from a shelf. Of course the 'case' may be used in time of nuclear war; just hide under it. Or if you live in 'tornado alley' just tie yourself to it and you you will never become ariborne...
- Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2018What can I say about a collection of John Ford films? Great, wonderful, marvelous.
As good as the collection is, the packaging- a huge box that I have to keep on the floor, is a pain in the bottom. Way too big for any shelf I have the box is sitting on the floor in a corner where I forget about it. Don't get me wrong I love the set but the box is so big as to be more annoyance. Frankly I wondered why such a great set is available as a remainder and having the set on y floorI know why
Top reviews from other countries
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EstragonReviewed in Germany on July 25, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars John Ford satt
Mit »Ford at Fox« hat die 20th Century Fox im Jahre 2007 eine prachtvolle und edel ausgestattete Box vorgelegt. Die sehr stabile Box mit dem Maßen 34,5 x 34,5 x 8 cm enthält einen schönen 168-seitigen Hardcover-Band mit Filmstills und Produktionsfotos. Das 20-seitige Vorwort stammt von Joseph MacBride, ein 10-seitiger Text zu Fords Stummfilmen von Richard Ashton.
Ein ebenfalls sehr stabiles Album enthält 20 DVDs, jeweils vier auf einer Seite. Dazu kommen zwei farbige Faksimile-Reproduktionen der Programmhefte zu »The Iron Horse« und »Four Sons«. Und schließlich enthält die Box noch eine Extra-DVD mit der Dokumentation »Becoming John Ford« (2007) von Nick Redman (auf dieser DVD befinden sich außerdem Fords Weltkrieg-II-Dokumentationen als Extras).
Die Box enthält 24 Spielfilme, die Ford für die Fox bzw. für 20th Century Fox gedreht hat. »The Iron Horse« liegt in zwei Versionen vor, der US-Fassung und der internationalen Version. Acht der DVDs sind doppelseitig und enthalten entweder zwei verschiedene Filme oder Hauptfilme jeweils mit Extras. Die hier vorgestellte Box ist ein US-Import, die DVD liegen dementsprechend im Regionalcode 1 vor. Themenbezogene Zusammenstellungen sind auch als Teilboxen veröffentlicht worden (man suche mithilfe des Stichworts ›Ford at Fox‹).
Die Filme liegen in sehr guten Fassungen oder doch zumindest in den besten verfügbaren Versionen vor. Zu den Stummfilmen sind gute musikalische Untermalungen ausgewählt oder neu komponiert. Für die meisten Filme sind englische, spanische und französische Untertitel wählbar.
Es ist hier nicht möglich, alle Filme im Detail vorzustellen, geschweige denn zu bewerten. Deshalb begnüge ich mich mit eine Aufzählung der Titel:
• »Just Pals« (1920)
• »The Iron Horse / Das eiserne Pferd« (1924)
• »Three Bad Men / Drei raue Gesellen« (1926)
• »Four Sons« (1928)
• »Hangman’s House« (1928)
• »Born Reckless« (1930)
• »Up the River« (1930)
• »Seas Beneath / Unter der See« (1931)
• »Pilgrimage« (1933)
• »Doctor Bull / Dr. Bull« (1933)
• »The World Moves On / Die Welt geht weiter« (1934)
• »Judge Priest« (1934)
• »Steamboat `Round the Bend / Volldampf voraus« (1935)
• »The Prisoner of Shark Island / Der Gefangene der Haifischinsel« (1936)
• »Wee Willie Winkie / Rekrut Willie Winkie« (1937)
• »Four Man and a Prayer / Vier Mann – ein Schwur« (1938)
• »Young Mr. Lincoln / Der junge Mr. Lincoln« (1939)
• »Drums Along the Mohawk / Trommeln am Mohawk« (1939)
• »The Grapes of Wrath / Früchte des Zorns« (1940)
• »Tobacco Road / Die Tabakstraße« (1941)
• »How Green Was My Valley / So grün war mein Tal« (1941)
• »My Darling Clementine / Faustrecht der Prärie« (1946)
• »When Willie Comes Marching Home / So ein Pechvogel« (1950)
• »What Price Glory« (1952)
Von »The Iron Horse« bis »My Darling Clementine« enthält die Box etliche John-Ford-Klassiker. Noch interessanter dürften allerdings die eher unbekannten und nur schwer greifbaren Titel aus der späten Stummfilmära sowie aus der ersten Hälfte der 1930er Jahre sein. Da findet sich Überraschendes und auch Abseitiges. Da aber bei Ford – wie wohl bei keinem anderen Filmemacher des klassischen Hollywoodkinos – das Verständnis jedes einzelnen Films stark von seiner Stellung im Gesamtwerk abhängt, sind auch die (vermeintlich) zweitrangigen Arbeiten von großem Interesse.
Ansonsten gilt natürlich, was Orson Welles einst auf die Frage nach seinen prägenden Einflüssen geantwortet hat: »Ich habe mich an die alten Meister gehalten, und mit den alten Meistern meine ich John Ford, John Ford und John Ford.«
- TimReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 24, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting look at early films.
A good start to seeing some of J.Ford's earlier less well known films, he made a lot of silent films, so this only scratches the surface.
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santiagoReviewed in Spain on July 25, 2014
3.0 out of 5 stars aceptable pelicula
una pelicula interesante no se encuentra entre lo mejor de ford , aun asi aceptable , de lo menos malo de ford en los 30s