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Miracle Worker (1962) [VHS]
 
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Miracle Worker (1962) [VHS] (1962)

Starring: Anne Bancroft, Patty Duke Director: Arthur Penn Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: VHS Tape
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (107 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Anne Bancroft, Patty Duke, Victor Jory, Inga Swenson, Andrew Prine
  • Directors: Arthur Penn
  • Writers: Helen Keller, William Gibson
  • Producers: Fred Coe
  • Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Original recording reissued, NTSC
  • Language: English
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Number of tapes: 1
  • Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
  • VHS Release Date: August 3, 1999
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (107 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: 0792842146
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #8,313 in Video (See Bestsellers in Video)

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    #97 in  Video > Kids & Family > Adapted from Books > Feature Films

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video

Patty Duke and Anne Bancroft had been playing their respective roles as Helen Keller and her teacher, Annie Sullivan, on Broadway for some time before director Arthur Penn (The Left-Handed Gun) built a mesmerizingly beautiful film around their layers-deep performances. Duke is astonishing as the deaf, blind, mute Keller, who awakens to an awareness of language under Sullivan's determined guidance. Bancroft is fascinating and focused. Penn wisely kept his adaptation unencumbered by cinematic indulgence. The black-and-white film is sparse and charged with the immediacy of the drama. The script is by William Gibson, who also wrote the original play. --Tom Keogh

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107 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (107 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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84 of 84 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Miracle Worker is spectacular, wonderful and wrenching! But also worth owning!, July 29, 2001
By David Kusumoto (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Miracle Worker (DVD)
The most amazing thing about the film version of "The Miracle Worker" is its absolutely timeless quality. It still holds up beautifully for a film that's almost 40 years old.

I've seen "The Miracle Worker" probably a dozen times. And it never gets tiring, boring, or unemotional. In fact, I dare say that after each viewing, I pick up more details and the tears still come neither cheaply yet more freely than they did when I first saw it years ago.

The Oscar-winning performances by Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke are shattering, the grainy flashback and dream sequences involving Bancroft's character, Annie Sullivan are wonderfully spooky -- and the fabulously haunting score by Laurence Rosenthal adds a perfect counterbalance to "The Miracle Worker," bringing emotional resonance to an otherwise purposely unsentimental telling of the Helen Keller story. Yet while I say it's unsentimental, the ending is arguably sentimental, which is why the devastating last 10 minutes are so wonderful. The film covers only the short period leading up to Helen Keller's breakthrough to others as a child of intelligence -- instead of a child who's incorrectly believed to be mentally handicapped.

Director Arthur Penn, who later went onto to lens his classic, "Bonnie and Clyde (1967), did a wonderful thing translating William Gibson's play to the visual language of cinema. There isn't a flaw I can detect with this film, especially his pans, dissolves, double exposures and grainy images with the dream sequences. It's a remarkable portend of things to come for this director, and frankly, I enjoy "The Miracle Worker" a lot more than "Bonnie and Clyde," an acknowledged classic that for me, is more recognized for its counter-establishment storytelling style and the shocking violence depicted at the time. That "Bonnie and Clyde" made the American Film Institute's "greatest 100 films ever made list" and the "Miracle Worker" did not is the greater shock. If you go over the list and see some of the junky films that made it on the basis of "name" instead of quality, you almost retch.

Sharing the New York stage with Patty Duke in 1960, and the producer's insistence that Bancroft be kept as the lead for the film version of "The Miracle Worker" -- over bankable names like Elizabeth Taylor or Audrey Hepburn -- is the stuff Hollywood dreams are made of. Then of course, Bancroft gets her Oscar and five years later, she lands the role that's as big to film history as Scarlett O'Hara....Mrs. Robinson in "The Graduate!"

One scene I must comment on...it's the famously long sequence in the dining room where no more than perhaps five lines of dialogue are uttered by Bancroft. It is relentlessly physical, a dazzling and exhausting battle of wills, so entrancing a show by Bancroft and Duke as they run around the room, spoons thrown, with every object getting trashed. It is violence in a different form, one with an extremely productive purpose that makes it impossible to avert your eyes. It's mesmerizing.

In sum, this film is a treasure that pops up on television from time to time, but it's also a film that is worth owning in all of its widescreen glory and to view the trailer offered on the DVD. The reason many people rent movies instead of buying them -- is because so few of them -- are worth watching more than once.

Well, "The Miracle Worker" DVD is comparable to what it costs to see a film in a theater these days, and there's no doubt in my mind that this is a film worth putting into your library.

Perhaps my only regret, as an Oscar buff, is that the film wasn't nominated for Best Picture. I don't mind that "Lawrence of Arabia" won that year (another classic), but to see it get bumped for a Best Pix nomination by the inferior Brando remake of "Mutiny on the Bounty" kind of makes you scratch your head.

The passage of time, and hindsight, will do that to 'ya... Just ask people who wonder why Judy Garland lost an Oscar in 1954 for "A Star is Born" to the "dressed down" performance Grace Kelly gives in "The Country Girl." There's no rhyme or reason for such things. You simply have to be satisfied knowing that "The Miracle Worker" is one of the greatest American films ever made...
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60 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The deaf speaks..., February 2, 2000
By Daniel (Reading, UK) - See all my reviews
I'm usually very critical of movies. A movie that really blows me away is rare, but I have never been more blown away in my entire life than by this film - I am deaf, I say this because it is relevant to the subject. I grew up in the same school as deaf/blind children. I assure you, the performance of Patty Duke is INCREDIBLE - totally credulous. Anne Bancroft is overwhelming as Annie O'Sullivan, the schoolteacher. There is not a bad performance in this entire movie. It is emotional and gut-wrenching without the smallest drop of schmaltz or saccharine - something that is very rare in a movie with the subject matter of a disabled child. In fact, it is almost painful and brutal to watch at times, but I am grateful to the director for cutting no punches. The cinematography and black-and-white film are perfectly in tune with the performances and subject matter. So often the easy way is taken out when transferring a stage play to screen - just look at "And Then There Were None" aka "Ten Little Indians" for an example - but here, the ending is presented after a gruelling drama - I honestly think that the ending of this film is a true cinematic moment - it is unsentimental and yet... the emotions, the sheer power, the strength and climax of it all - the realisation. My entire nervous system vibrated for half a hour after watching this film, and still does so whenever I think of it - It is BRILLIANT. Disturbing, disquieting, ferocious, frightening, funny (yes, funny), tender, loving, HATING, calmness and storms. I could say so much about this film - write so many essays upon its different aspects - but I have neither time, nor you the patience, so I shall end with these words: Watch it!
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bancroft and Duke deliver!, March 14, 2000
By A Customer
I believe this is one of the most spectacular movies I have ever seen! The movie is about an 7-year old blind,deaf,and mute child named Helen Keller. After numerous attempts to communicate with Hellen, the Kellers hire Annie Sullivan, a twenty year old teacher from Boston. Annie who is virtually blind herself, has an agressive, but meaningful approch to help Helen overcome her disablities. This movie truly does deliver. From the infamous dining room scene, to the heart wrenching finale. The acting is superb. By the way, Bancroft and Duke won Academy Awards. This is one of those movies that you can't just watch once. The more you watch it,the more you'll love it. I must admit, it's hard not to be emotional moved by this masterpiece which is "One of the finest works of art in the history of motion pictures." (Boxoffice)
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A 5-Star Knock-Out Movie
The Miracle Worker is a 5-star movie which will knock you out with drama, humor, tears, and physical grit. (If this film is not a 5-star movie, then no movie is). Read more
Published 9 hours ago by James Koenig

1.0 out of 5 stars Small Image when played on a widescreen TV
The DVD manufacturer did it again. When played on a widescreen TV, there is a big black bar all the way around the picture. Read more
Published 5 days ago by SteveS

3.0 out of 5 stars Feel Good but sticky
The movie is good. I had seen it when I was a teenager and all those feelings I felt then watching the film were duplicated as I watched it this time. Read more
Published 10 days ago by Michael F. Mancusi

5.0 out of 5 stars The Miracle Worker
An absolute CLASSIC! Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke gave THE performance of their lives. I watched this movie as a child and became an instant fan of these two women (I'm now... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Bookpal

5.0 out of 5 stars HELLEN!
VERY well acted. I loved this movie. If this movie doesn't make you feel it's ok to spank your kids...anyway, I even cried at the end. Read more
Published 1 month ago by R. E. Mayer

5.0 out of 5 stars The Miracle Worker
I received the VHS movie of the Miracle Worker in a very short time and it came in ezcellent condition. I had gotten it for a friend of mine who has been looking for it. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jacquelin L. Morris

5.0 out of 5 stars To Be Human One Must Feel Human
THE MIRACLE WORKER touches so many nerves that it stands for accomplishing what all want but only a few know how to get. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Martin Asiner

5.0 out of 5 stars Helen Keller
A true classic! Superior acting, inspirational. Helen Keller was a remarkable woman...and thanks to her devoted teacher, she was spared living untrained and thought to be... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Carrol Greenwood

5.0 out of 5 stars The miracle Worker
I aboslutely love this movie. The black and white makes it all the more dramatic. It is such an amazing story, but Patty Duke was absolutely fantastic in this production.
Published 5 months ago by L. Ross

5.0 out of 5 stars The Movie's title says it all.
This is one of those rare movies that I could watch once a day if I had the time. Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke (as well as the entire rest of the cast) give just flawless... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Asian at Heart

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