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Mildred Pierce (Keepcase)
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| Total | $20.59 | |
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Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $11.62 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $8.97 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
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| Total | $20.59 | |
| Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
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June 14, 2005 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $9.95 | $2.84 |
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| Genre | Classics, Drama, Drama/Love & Romance, Mystery & Suspense/Crime/Cops, Mystery & Suspense |
| Format | NTSC, Closed-captioned, Subtitled, Multiple Formats |
| Contributor | Bruce Bennett, Eve Arden, James M. Cain, Jerry Wald, Joan Crawford, Zachary Scott, Jack Carson, Ranald MacDougall, Moroni Olsen, Veda Ann Borg, Jo Ann Marlowe, Jack L. Warner, Lee Patrick, Ann Blyth, Michael Curtiz See more |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 49 minutes |
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Product Description
Mildred Pierce (DVD) A mother's love can lead to murder! Joan Crawford delivers an Academy Award-winning performance as a woman clawing her way to success to provide her daughters with everything she lacks, a woman named Mildred Pierce. Dying of gunshot wounds, Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott) croaks the name "Mildred." The police believe he has named his murderer ... and Pierce confesses to the crime. Now, as her story unfolds, the police learn of a woman who divorces her philandering husband, takes a job as a waitress and does anything to achieve success--only to be betrayed by the daughter she adores.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 1.6 ounces
- Item model number : 80984855
- Director : Michael Curtiz
- Media Format : NTSC, Closed-captioned, Subtitled, Multiple Formats
- Run time : 1 hour and 49 minutes
- Release date : August 29, 2006
- Actors : Joan Crawford, Jack Carson, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden, Ann Blyth
- Subtitles: : French, English, Spanish
- Producers : Jack L. Warner, Jerry Wald
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Unqualified
- Studio : WarnerBrothers
- ASIN : B0008ENIAC
- Writers : Ranald MacDougall
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #64,029 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #3,103 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #5,512 in Kids & Family DVDs
- #10,086 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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The heavy buzzing sound of an airplane departing from Chicago with Amsterdam as its designated destination served as the location for my screening. The lights were out and people were sleeping, as I carefully placed the headphones over my ears and turned on my laptop to view this historical film-noir. The opening credits emerging across the sand dunes while washed away by the waves of the ocean brought me the notion of life's cyclical pattern. Maybe it serves the theme of a mother's nurturing care and idea for parental responsibility, or just tries to enhance the mysterious concept that surrounds film noir. Anyway, the opening scene shows two brief night shots of an isolated luxury beach house with a third scene of a man falling over by a gun shot in the chest. Undoubtedly, the opening smacks the audience with suspense from the first minute, as the perpetrator tosses the gun on top of the rapidly dying man.
[Deductive Spoilers Ahead]
In a coastal town not far from the luxurious beach house, a woman, who the audience eventually will identify as Mildred Pierce (Joan Crawford), stands by the railing of pier while teary-eyed staring down in the water. She steps up on the edge, preparing herself for a plunge when a police office slams the railing with his club. Stunned out of her miserable moment she stops, as the police officer asks her, "What's on your mind, lady?" She brushes him off by asking him to leave her alone. Instead, the police officer provides a simplistic answer of responsibility and the consequences of her actions. Yet, it is within this basic idea, which the films gem rests.
When Mildred's first plan did not succeed, she attempts a second, by bringing the old friend and owner of a bar Wally Fay (Jack Carson) to the same beach house with the murdered man from a couple of scenes ago. They have a long friendship that stem from his affectionate care and interest in her, which has soured over some business deals. Due to the circumstances, hastily Mildred acts, as if she changed her mind about Wally and invites him to her beach house. It is not the kind of invitation that was common in the thirty's, as she is married. Yet, in some way, Mildred attempts to pin the murder on Wally. However, things do not run as planned, as the police later picks her up. From this moment on, things are getting even more complicated, which forces her to tell the true story about the murder.
Through Mildred's voice-over, a flash back retells a lengthy tale starting from when she was a housewife. Mildred goes into detail to share how her husband was laid-off, how and why she spoiled her daughters, and her husbands philandering. She also shares how she became a successful businesswoman, and how her success continued to grow. Besides the success, Mildred also tells of her misfortunes such as losing both of her daughters. It is within the story of her daughters where the poignant tragedy emerges, as she shares with the Chief Inspector how she neglected and spoiled them. It is a guilt-ridden tale that sobs out Mildred's mouth; however, the audience cannot help to empathize with her while also seeing how she feels guilty.
How damaging affection can actually be if not properly managed emerges through Mildred's relationship to her oldest daughter Veda (Ann Blyth). Mildred's sense of responsibility seems overwhelming, as she always attempts to provide for Veda. In the process, Veda gets a skewed sense of reality; as she always is sheltered by her mother and never gets to test her own wings. Mildred is naturally to blame for Veda's blemishes. However, the child also needs to learn the responsibility of ones own actions as an adult, which is a lesson that Mildred learns in a most profound manner.
Mildred Pierce, as a film, employs a brilliant adapted narrative that encourages the audience to contemplate the actions of the main character. It also allows the viewer to contemplate on personal improvement while it provides a fascinatingly dark thriller. The camerawork and the mise-en-scene help bring out the oppressive and shadowy elements of film noir, which compels the story to feel even more intriguing. On top of this, the cast performs radiantly with Joan Crawford and Ann Blyth providing dazzling performances. Michael Curtiz's direction pulls it all together into a stunningly captivating story that keeps the audience in suspense and questioning the choices of Mildred Pierce.
/Mildred Pierce movie cast profile. She was named Butterfly McQueen she played the maid in the movie .. She was treated with such prejudices.. Due to the fact that the USA was racially segregated and films that had "Negro performer's" had to edited out in the Deep South. She wasn't permitted to attend the movie premier nor was actress Hattie McDaniel who won an "Oscar award" .. I employ you to learn about the negro actor's from the 1930's-1960's. They had plenty of talent but they were treated awfully by Studio's .. that didn't have the courage . To fight for those gifted performer's due to the racial climate of the times. This movie will always be in my top 20 of film's .. that I can always watch ...
Top reviews from other countries
Curtiz apparently didn’t initially want Joan Crawford for the title part, but she puts in an extraordinary Oscar-winning display as a once-affluent now down-on-her-luck divorcee in south California who succeeds through hard graft to establish a restaurant chain. Those who only know her for her camp larger-than-life roles in films such as Johnny Guitar (1954) and Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) will be surprised by the subtle sensitivity she displays in this film. Playing alongside her is Ann Blyth as her spoiled daughter Veda, the inspirer and the destroyer of Mildred’s hard-earned success. Blyth captures the sweetness and the insolence her role calls for and makes for a superb sparring partner to Crawford in many of the film’s electrifying melodramatic confrontations. The third powerful lady is Eve Arden as Ida, Mildred’s initial boss, but then later business manager. Her role is drastically reduced from the original novel to comic relief, but she gets a number of wickedly acidic put-downers to fire at the unfortunate men in the film. These men are first and foremost the smooth-talking Wally Fay (Jack Carson), the realtor turned nightclub owner who spends the film trying to jump Mildred, but succeeds only in being used by her to climb the social scale. Then there’s her thoroughly decent but unemployed first husband Bert (Bruce Bennett) who walks out because he can’t compete with his daughters for Mildred’s affections, and the suave and sophisticated playboy Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott) who lets Mildred have the property for her first restaurant, but with twisted strings attached. All of these characters are cast to perfection and get to enounce a nigh-perfect script. It might seem pure ‘movie talk’ to audiences now used to realism with a capital ‘R’, but it’s worth noting that a good old-fashioned Hollywood script is shot through with literary precision and is pure joy to listen to especially when played with this level of expertise.
Perhaps the most fascinating thing about this film is its conflation of unlikely genres. Unlike his other two famous novels (Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice) Cain’s Mildred Pierce is no noir and it is anything put ‘hard-boiled’. It is a straight family melodrama which focuses on the mother-daughter relationship. Adapted straight to the screen, the film would have fallen into the ‘woman’s weepie’ category similar to Stella Dallas (1937, King Vidor) or any of Douglas Sirk’s ‘50s melodramas (Imitation of Life being most pertinent to the mother-daughter theme). This would have posed a major problem for the production code of the time which stipulated that immoral actions must be punished on screen. To get around this Warner Bros ingeniously capitalized on Cain’s noir reputation and turned Mildred Pierce into a film noir. They injected a murder into the film’s very beginning and set up the whole film as a series of flashbacks with Mildred narrating the story as she tells it to the cops in the police station. We don’t know who the murderer is until the film’s final scene so turning the film into an amalgam of woman’s weepie melodrama, film noir and murder mystery. It would also be a rags to riches feminist social commentary with its tale of women twisting men around their little fingers if the film finally didn’t ‘cop out’ in damning a woman for ever harboring any ambitions for independence away from men. ‘A woman’s place is at home’ would seem to be the final moral. This becomes altogether less sexist if we remember this is 1945 here. With a war raging around the world women did what they could to survive at home away from their men, but with the arrival of thousands of homecoming soldiers imminent it is no surprise Hollywood studios wanted to transmit the message that soon the men will be back to take care of their families and women wouldn’t have to work again.
The Warner Bros presentation of this DVD is superb in every way, the picture (aspect ratio 1.33 Full Frame) sharp and true and the mono sound ideally clear. There’s also an hour long documentary on Joan Crawford which is useful. The actress’ private life was as full of tragedy as Mildred Pierce’s and when Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar came to paying homage to Mildred Pierce in High Heels (1991) he was referring as much to Crawford’s problems with her own children (she disowned two of them) as he was to the movie she made. Mildred Pierce then is a an essential film well worth seeing for lovers of the classic Hollywood of the 40s, and for lovers of future directors working in the melodrama genre, not just Almodóvar, but Sirk, Fassbinder and many others besides. Those who saw Todd Haynes' 2011 mini series taken from the source will be surprised by how different this film is.
Mildred verschwindet und lässt den Mann sitzen, dieser ahnt, dass etwas nicht stimmt und versucht aus dem verschlossenen Haus herauszukommen. Nur durch den Einschlag eines Fensters kann er ins Freie gelangen, dort wartet aber schon die Polizei auf ihn. Er erzählt den Beamten von der Leiche im Haus, die er eben auch erst entdeckt hat und seine Panik das Haus zu verlassen noch verstärkt hat.
Es handelt sich bei dem Toten um den Lebemann Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott), Ehemann voon Mildred.
Diese ist als die Polizei die Todesnachricht überbringt schon längst zu Hause und beruhigt ihre Tochter Veda (Ann Blyth).
Mildred muss mit aufs Revier, dort ist auch ihr Ex-Ehemann Bert (Bruce Bennett) und Mildreds zweite Hand Ida Corvin (Eve Arden), die ebenfalls Aussagen machen müssen.
Mildred erzählt dem Kommissar (Moroni Olsen) aus ihrem bewegten Leben und die Rückblende beginnt an dem Tag, als Bert durch seinen Kompagnon Wally arbeitslos wird. Weil Mildred für ihren beiden Töchter Veda und Kay (Jo Ann Marlowe) ein Leben im Luxus wünscht, werden diese beiden Mädchen auch dementsprechend (v)erzogen. Sie trennt sich von ihrem Mann und sucht sich heimlich Arbeit als Kellnerin. Heimlich deshalb, weil sich die ältere Veda ansonsten für ihre Mutter schämen müsste.
In diesem Metier steigt sie zuwerst als Restaurantbesitzerin und dann auch zur Chefin einer ganzen Restaurantkette "Mildreds" auf.
In diesem Zusammenhang lernt sie Monty kennen, in den sie sich verliebt. Doch er ist ein Schnorrer, der möglichst auf Kosten anderer lebt und so gibt Mildred ihm den Laufpass. Sie wird ihn aber dennoch fragen, ob er sie heiratet, denn Vedas Wunsch ist ihr immer noch Befehl.
Dabei hat die verwöhnte Tochter im Grunde jedoch in den Jahren der Abhängigkeit einen tiefempfundenen Hass auf ihre materiell denkende Mutter entwickelt. Veda ist ebenso durch und durch materialistisch eingestellt und verachtet die Mutter alsbald für ihre einfache Herkunft.
Diese verantwortungslose Erziehung steuert langsam aber sicher in die große Katastrophe...
"Mildred Pierce" ist in Deutschland bekannt unter "Solange ein Herz schlägt" und leider trifft dieser Titel ganz und gar nicht das erschreckende Grundthema dieses Filmklassikers. Dieser Titel suggeriert nämlich die wahre und bedingungslose Mutterliebe, die aber nur einen Teil der Charakteristika der Protagonistin ausmacht. Mildred ist eine Frau, die ihre Tochter völlig haltlos werden lässt und die sich bis zuletzt in ihrer Opferrolle gefällt. Dabei schreckt sie, um die Tochter zu schützen, auch nicht davor zurück, einen Bekannten zum offensichtlichen Täter zu machen. Im Grunde ist Veda ihr Ebenbild, einziger Unterschied: Die Tochter ist immer in der Täterrolle.
Aus diesem mehr als alarmierenden Liebes- und Abhängigkeitsverhältnis zwischen Mutter und Tochter bezieht der Film von Michael Curtiz seine Qualität als überlebensgroßes Melodram.
Doch Curtiz hat darüberhinaus durch die Hinzunahme von Film Noir Elementen eine fasznierende Mischung beider Genres abgeliefert, die den Film auch heute noch als Meisterwerk ausweisen.
"Solange ein Herz schlägt" erhielt bei der Oscarverleihung 1946 insgesamt sieben Nominierungen. In der Kategorie "Beste Schauspielerin" gewann Joan Crawford auch den Preis. Dazu kamen die Nomninierungen für Eve Arden und Ann Blyth, das Drehbuch von Ranald MacDougall, die Schwarzweiss Kamera von Ernest Haller und eine Nominierung zum Film des Jahres, in dieser Kategorie war allerdings Billy Wilders "Das verlorene Wochenende" siegreich.




