Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reaching for the Moon is Great Fun!, September 30, 2000
This 1931 romantic comedy is top notch entertainment! It's only 62 minutes, but it is so well paced and totally envolving, you'll think the movie was 2+ hours and you will still hate to see it end!It has some of the best, CLASSIC 1920's dance scenes and CLASSIC 20's costumes. 1920's era film buffs should study this flick! For those of you out there thinking about a play to put on at the High School: this could be a real crowd pleaser and money maker! Here's a brief synopsis: It takes place right before the stock market crash. Doug is a tycoon, Larry Day. He has never been succesful in affairs of the heart. He's been a real dud. A beautiful girl comes into his office to talk to him about a problem. Doug can't solve the problem, but falls head-over-heels in love with this girl. He hears she's going to Europe by boat and chases after her. She's headed to Europe to get married. He boards the ship also and chases after her on board. Meanwhile the market crashes and he is wiped out.During a big scene, she embarrasses him while her friends hide in a life boat while he confesses his love to her. Later, after they marry, she helps him regain his wealth and status. ALSO: a young Edward Everet Horton plays a butler in this flick on board the ship. And you'll be surprised when Bing Crosby appears!! Now if this film were ever redone: could you imagine Jim Carey as Larry Day? Who would you elect to play the leads in this film? Enjoy!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Lousy DVD, March 18, 2006
While the previous entries acturately discuss the film itself, none mention the abysmal quality of the source material and/or the mastering of the DVD itself. Not only is the film tough to watch, Passport has added the words "Reaching for the Moon" in the right-hand conner of the frame which appears throughout the running time of the film. The viewer knows the title of the film. It's an annoyance for 72 minutes. Lastly, there are no chapter stops on the DVD. So if you stop the DVD prior to the movie's conclusion and your DVD player doesn't remember the location as mine doesn't, you must watch the whole film again or scan through the movie to the section you last watched. Also annoying. The only good thing going for this DVD is the price, the chance to see some incredible art deco sets, and Fairbanks in his first talkie, if you can manage to wade through the fuzzy, low contrast image.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Dime Store Restoration for Million Dollar Film, December 28, 2007
Shame on PASSPORT VIDEO for this unenlightened packaging of a film that deserves better. Many of us waited patiently for the DVD release of REACHING FOR THE MOON. This glamorous film boasted some of the biggest film stars of the era (Bebe Daniels, Fairbanks, SR., Edward Everett Horton), and was co-written by America's greatest song writer, Irving Berlin. This film also represents the historic studio founded by Hollywood royalty (Pickford, Fairbanks, Sr., Chaplin and D.W. Griffith). The unique, modernistic set design was by the illustrious William Cameron Menzies. So considering all those important factors, it is a crime that PASSPORT VIDEO released this in such compromised condition. The audio and the video are both second rate. To further insult the educated film fans, the DVD claims to include the "original theatrical trailer." When this film was released, Bing Crosby originally had LAST BILLING on the credits. The trailer was obviously made several years later, when the Studio used Crosby's accumulated fame as an excuse to reissue the film!
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