Buy new:
$29.99$29.99
FREE delivery:
Wednesday, Jan 4
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: ACHILLES' REEL
Save with Used - Like New
$8.95$8.95
FREE delivery: Wednesday, Jan 4 on orders over $25.00 shipped by Amazon.
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Need For Read
Other Sellers on Amazon
+ $3.99 shipping
95% positive over last 12 months
100% positive over last 12 months
Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
The Razor's Edge
- Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
- Learn more about free returns.
- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
- Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
- Learn more about free returns.
- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
| Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
|
DVD
January 13, 2015 "Please retry" | No enhanced packaging | 1 | $59.99 | $21.98 |
Watch Instantly with
| Rent | Buy |
Enhance your purchase
| Genre | Drama |
| Format | DVD, Closed-captioned, Black & White, Full Screen, NTSC, Subtitled, Dubbed |
| Contributor | Gene Tierney, Lucile Watson, John Wengraf, Darryl F. Zanuck, Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter, Edmund Goulding, W. Somerset Maugham, John Payne, Cecil Humphreys, Frank Latimore, Fritz Kortner, Lamar Trotti, Elsa Lanchester, Clifton Webb, Herbert Marshall See more |
| Language | English, French |
| Runtime | 2 hours and 25 minutes |
Frequently bought together

- +
- +
Customers also search
Product Description
Product Description
Narrated by on-screen observer Maugham (Herbert Marshall); this intriguing tale centers on a soul-searching World War I veteran (Tyrone Power) who finds he can not settle back into the world of the upper class. Shunning his planned marriage and career; he travels abroad to seek the meaning of life and career; he travels abroad to seek the meaning of life and causes his distraght fiancee (GeneTierney) to seek solace with another man (John Payne).
Amazon.com
The Somerset Maugham novel should be read by everybody at a certain age (say, early twenties), and this 1946 movie adaptation of The Razor's Edge stays faithful to the book's questing spirit. Despite its apparently uncommercial storyline, it was a pet project of Fox honcho Darryl F. Zanuck, who saw the spiritual journey of Larry Darrell (Tyrone Power) as an "adventure" movie. Power, who was newly returned to Hollywood after his military service in World War I, does his most soul-searching work as the WWI vet who needs to find something in life deeper than money and conformity. The search takes him away from fiancee Gene Tierney and her skeptical uncle Clifton Webb and into Parisian streets and Himalayan mountain ranges. Herbert Marshall deftly plays the role of "Somerset Maugham," the observing author, and Anne Baxter picked up the supporting actress Oscar for her brassy turn as a floozy. The picture has the careful, glossy look of the studio system's peak years (you can sense Zanuck "classing it up" and squeezing the life out of it), and Edmund Goulding's tasteful approach is hardly the way to dig deep into the soul of man. If it seems a little staid today, its square sincerity nevertheless holds up well--and it just looks so fabulous. The really amazing thing about the movie is that it was made at all. A 1984 remake, with Bill Murray, is an extremely weird variation on the material. --Robert Horton
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 1.6 Ounces
- Item model number : 2227238
- Director : Edmund Goulding
- Media Format : DVD, Closed-captioned, Black & White, Full Screen, NTSC, Subtitled, Dubbed
- Run time : 2 hours and 25 minutes
- Release date : May 24, 2005
- Actors : Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, John Payne, Anne Baxter, Clifton Webb
- Dubbed: : Spanish, English
- Subtitles: : English, Spanish
- Language : Unqualified, English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
- Studio : 20th Century Fox
- ASIN : B0007PALVQ
- Writers : Darryl F. Zanuck, Lamar Trotti, W. Somerset Maugham
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #61,331 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #2,360 in Romance (Movies & TV)
- #11,017 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
This 1946 film starred Tyrone Power as Larry Darrell, Gene Tierney as Isabel Bradley, and Clifton Webb as Elliott Templeton and was shot in black and white.
The film had ridden the same wave of the wildly-successful 1944 book by the same name. With the Tyrone Power ‘triad of actors’ in the lead, its storyline and the dialog interactions amongst these 3 characters (and stars!) were tightly crafted, stunning, and gut wrenching. This is one of the classic films about life, what it is, and what is important.
Another actress in a subplot, Anne Baxter as Sophie MacDonald, dutifully kept up with the main ‘triad’ of stars. Baxter’s portrayal of Sophie, who had a successive series of downfalls in her life, was so poignantly played by Baxter that she won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Each of Sophie’s downslides tugged at my heart and Baxter’s acting skills almost made me feel that she was real.
After I had started watching the DVD, especially to see the beginning, I learned that Larry had had a combat jolt in WWI. He had survived an attack, while his friends hadn’t. This was the main driver of the film: Why did Larry survive? What could he do after having experienced this? Seeing the beginning of the film better helped me understand the remainder of the film that I had watched on TV.
Tyrone Powers’ Larry had honesty and gravitas, a great foil to Gene Tierney’s Isabel: flighty, gratingly snobbish, selfish, and materialistic. All of their scenes together were tightly-scripted to show their contrary behaviors beamed back and forth at each other in repartee. Larry’s great seriousness and grit to learn about what life truly should be was played off of Isabel’s opposite behavior. It was mesmerizing to see them both on screen engaging in this type of dialog.
Clifton Webb’s Uncle Elliot was pitched as a higher octave of Isabel’s – another artistic foil to Larry’s persona.
In trying to learn about why he had been spared from death during WWI combat, Larry found himself back in Europe. He then travelled eastward, all the while contemplating how to reach and then later learn life’s secrets from Himalayan masters. After some time there, the masters agreed that he would be allowed to find out these secrets by ascending the mountains. When the journey became arduous, he found a shack near the summit to contemplate, read holy books, and think about the direction that his life should take. When the pre-dawn light started to slip over the horizon, he left the shack, reached the summit and was ‘illuminated’, as was the valley below him.
After having experienced this blinding illumination by ‘spiritual light’, this process changed the perspective of what Larry’s life had to be for him. This means that he had to let some people, activities, and things go, so that he could best carry out the mission for which he had been searching: he learned that the path to enlightenment is as sharp as the razor’s edge.
I had experienced many strong emotions watching this film because there was a lot of tension in the dialog and in the character personalities, some of which were contrary to each other. After I had seen this film, I needed time to digest it and decompress.
Watching this film compelled me to then read the 1944 W. Somerset Maugham book of the same name. The book was even more gut-wrenching, with many more details to make this film clearer. (Please read my Amazon review of this book: The Razor's Edge
Timing is everything. If I could experience these 2 artistic forms again, I would still start by watching this 1946 film first and then working my way backward to reading the 1944 book by W. Somerset Maugham because the original book is almost always better than the film. If I had read the book first, I would have had interference with the film and might not have liked the film as well as I did. I truly loved both the film and the book.
Today, with our current HD video format and so many vivid and creative ways of filming scenes, I would like to see a re-make of this film, by producing it in multiple sections to create separate films in a series (like the Hobbit/ Lord of the Rings books and films), so that more of the book’s original details could be included.
I thoroughly recommend this film and give it a 5-star rating because of an outstanding script and acting, taut tension throughout many parts of the film, and many superlative scenes. (For even more perspective, please read my 1984 film review of the Razor's Edge: The Razor's Edge )
As the story begins, the main characters, unaware of their fate, live precariously close to the edge of ruin. For Isabel and Gray Maturin (Gene Tierney, John Payne) it is financial; Sophie Macdonald (Anne Baxter) has no bulwark against the whips of `outrageous fortune' in her family life; and Maugham's good "chum," Elliot Templeton (Clifton Webb), the persnickety, unmarried uncle, draws nearer to the end of his time on earth.
Maugham fixes the source of human tragedy deeply within the heavens, not any flaw in individual character. Circumstance and the times we live in govern destiny, as mortals skirt the brink of disaster, helpless to prevent being sucked into a maelstrom of adversity. At one point, shocked and stunned by the news of Sophie's life of despair, Larry Darrel remarks, "She was as normal as any person I know."
Only Darrell (Tyrone Power) embraces hardship consciously after undergoing a spiritual transformation brought about by the death of a friend who died saving his life during "the war to end all wars." He willing sacrifices love and career to `the death by a thousand cuts' by going on a life's journey, choosing the path of a wandering ascetic, working hard, parlous jobs; and seeks enlightenment from an Indian holy man residing on a remote mountain top to discover himself, and meaning in life. This element of the plot provides a few awkward moments for an otherwise entertaining film, but nevertheless, concerns a passage undertaken by like-minded mendicants since ancient times. Larry, above all, abides by the proverb "Physician heal thyself," and acquires a measure of spiritual power to rejuvenate spent souls. But, he is no match for the cunning, `unenlightened' Isabel.
The Maturins, living like the fable halcyon perched near the jagged edge of a precipice, have made their nest too close to a raging sea. After the great crash, they discover there is nothing sure to build on; as did Sophie Macdonald, cruelly woken up from her dream of domestic bliss. Maugham's world is one great paradox, as observed by Duke Vincentio in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure: "...merely, thou art death's fool; For him thou labour'st by thy flight to shun, And yet runn'st toward him still." Maugham's keen sense of irony is at its sharpest; for Larry Darrel, the enlightened warrior for peace, avoids the worst by holding the blade securely to his bosom; not letting it slip.
Tyrone Power as the saintly, naïve Larry Darrel appears to lack depth, but child-like innocence is characteristic of 'the pure in heart;' and is highly effective in his fair share of shock and revelation shots. Gene Tierney, Maugham's choice for the part, is at her best (it is hard to take your eyes off of her) and displays a variety of acting skills; likewise for Anne Baxter's moving performance as a fallen angel. Good-tempered, as in real-life, W. Somerset Maugham, flawless played by Herbert Marshall, is observer, and acts as advisor, mentor and councilor.
The Razor's Edge is a very good piece of filmmaking; and, in spite of few weaknesses, never fails to entertain. This film combines a dramatized version of Maugham's insights into the human condition with some exceptional cinematography, making it a marvelous movie to watch.
Top reviews from other countries
This film has been described by a few critics as "pretentious". I view it as full of depth and meaning----as well as simply wonderful entertainment.
Highly recommended as one of the 30 or 40 Best Films in cinema history.
A Convvoluted Plot.
Soul Searching Story Line, Sad And Happy, Puzzling.
Ultimately Thoughy Provoking
He is very pleased with it.
Perfect condition .
Recommend product.








![Edges of the Lord [DVD]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51tJZfPfzLL._AC_UL140_SR140,140_.jpg)


