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The Cecil B. DeMille Collection (Cleopatra/ The Crusades/ Four Frightened People/ Sign of the Cross/ Union Pacific)
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Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $20.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $13.07 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
| | ||
| Total | $34.06 | |
Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no return shipping charges.
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select your preferred free shipping option
- Drop off and leave!
Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $20.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $13.07 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
| | ||
| Total | $34.06 | |
Purchase options and add-ons
| Genre | Drama, DVD Movie, Blu-ray Movie, Westerns |
| Format | Box set, Color, NTSC, Dolby, Full Screen, Multiple Formats, Subtitled |
| Contributor | Montagu Love, Paul Sotoff, Hobart Bosworth, Lumsden Hare, C. Henry Gordon, Cecil B. DeMille, Joseph Schildkraut, Albert Conti, Alan Hale, Ramsay Hill, Pedro de Cordoba, Claudette Colbert, William Farnum, Henry Wilcoxon, Sven Hugo Borg, Mischa Auer, C. Aubrey Smith, Ian Keith, Loretta Young, Katherine DeMille, George Barbier, Maurice Murphy See more |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 9 hours and 31 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
Legendary filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille earned a place in cinematic history when he helped create Hollywood's first feature-length film, an event that established Hollywood as the motion picture capital of the world. A master of spectacular epics, his films garnered unparalled acclaim for their scope and grandeur. Now, for the first time ever, five of his most popular films are available in one premium DVD collection. Experience the breathtaking dangers and delights of ancient Rome in The Sign of the Cross; trek through a perilous jungle with Four Frightened People; thrill to the passion, suspense and intrigue of Cleopatra; journey back in time with the glorious story of The Crusades; and see how the West was really won in the explosive Union Pacific. With a glamorous roster of screen legends, including Claudette Colbert, Charles Laughton, Barbara Stanwyck, Anthony Quinn and many more, this 5-disc collection is a phenomenal reminder of the innovator who made moviemaking what it is today.
Amazon.com
One of Hollywood's greatest showmen gets a worthy showcase in The Cecil B. De Mille Collection, consisting of five of the legendary producer-director's most characteristic films. As noted by David Thomson in his influential book A Biographical Dictionary of Film, "De Mille's movies are barnstormers, rooted in Victorian theatre, shamelessly stereotyped and sentimental, but eagerly courting 20th-century permissiveness, if only solemnly to condemn it." That's an apt description of the films included in this nicely packaged box set, which offers no extras beyond the films themselves. Thomson is equally accurate in calling De Mille's films "simple, raw, pious, and jingoistic," but as these five well-preserved films make abundantly clear, De Mille was always a consummate entertainer. One of Hollywood's foremost pioneers, De Mille cut an iconic figure, single-handedly defining the archetypal image of the dictatorial director, complete with boots, jodhpurs and an ever-present riding crop to enforce his domineering authority. After failed attempts to work independently and, later, for MGM, De Mille found a permanent home at Paramount in 1932, and it's there that he made these five films (now owned by Universal as part of their pre-1948 Paramount library), which represent the glorious clash of Christian virtues, epic-scale production values, lurid sexuality, and self-important grandiosity that make De Mille's films so curiously (and in many cases hypocritically) enthralling.
The Sign of the Cross (1932) is quintessential De Mille, now famous for its pre-Code (i.e. pre-censorship) scene of peep-show nudity as Claudette Colbert (playing Poppaea, wife of Charles Laughton's Roman emperor Nero) takes a tantalizing bath in goat's milk, daring DVD viewers to freeze-frame "the naughty bits" while Roman prefect Marcus (Frederic March) struggles to reconcile his loyalty to Rome with his forbidden love for the Christian maiden Mercia (Elissa Landi), who's destined for the lion's den. Full of outrageous spectacle (including dwarves in the Roman arena), this blood-and-guts epic is pure De Mille compared to the more conventionally formulaic adventure of Four Frightened People (1934), also starring Colbert as one of the four titular characters shipwrecked on a remote Malay island (filmed at Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa, in Hawaii) and forced to fend for themselves. It's a stodgy but frequently amusing adventure, with Colbert's uptight schoolmarm growing sexier and less inhibited with each passing scene. Colbert returns (De Mille obviously adored her) in the title role of Cleopatra (1934), easily seducing Marc Antony (played by De Mille favorite Henry Wilcoxon) in a film as lavishly appointed as it is melodramatically extreme. Wilcoxon pairs with Loretta Young in The Crusades (1935) with De Mille once again mixing piety with prurience in a religious epic that promises plenty of sex but, in classic De Mille fashion, remains steadfastly chaste. Union Pacific (from Hollywood's golden year of 1939) is a grandly entertaining Western that mangles history (specifically, events surrounding construction of the transcontinental railroad) while casting gunslingers Joel McCrea and Robert Preston in a contest for Barbara Stanwyck's affections.
Choosing a favorite among these five films is purely a matter of personal taste, but for all of his weaknesses as a director (not the least being a condescending and self-righteous arrogance toward his audience), De Mille was never, ever boring. These films helped to make Paramount the most profitable studio of the 1930s, and they hold up remarkably well. Despite the complete absence of bonus features (Universal once again taking the low-cost option with no-frills packaging), each film is presented in pristine or near-pristine condition, ripe for first-time viewing or nostalgic rediscovery by vintage film buffs everywhere.--Jeff Shannon
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 1.25 inches; 14.4 ounces
- Media Format : Box set, Color, NTSC, Dolby, Full Screen, Multiple Formats, Subtitled
- Run time : 9 hours and 31 minutes
- Release date : July 4, 2017
- Actors : Cecil B. DeMille, Loretta Young, Henry Wilcoxon, Ian Keith, C. Aubrey Smith
- Subtitles: : English, French, Spanish
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), Unqualified
- Studio : Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B000E8JO32
- Number of discs : 5
- Best Sellers Rank: #62,317 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,062 in Westerns (Movies & TV)
- #10,051 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2017I must admit that my main reason for buying this collection was to own "Union Pacific". A favorite of mine that I had not seen in many years. The last time I viewed it was on the afternoon movie that played Mon-Fri from 1-3pm. This was on an independent station in the late 70's when your TV was 21" and weighed 50 lbs! However, not only did I thoroughly enjoy "Union Pacific" but the other titles are outstanding on their own. "Sign of the Cross" has two of my favorite golden age actors, Fredric March as Marcus and Charles Laughton as Nero. While not going in depth suffice to say that this is a story of the horrific persecution the earliest Christians suffered for their faith. This movie was obviously done with a lot of love and respect from DeMille for these early martyrs. In this restoration it has been returned to all its glory including some pre-code scenes that are surprising for the time. Such as the milk bath Claudette Colbert takes and the Dance of the Naked Moon scenes. But, at its core, this is a love story between a high ranking Roman man, that just happens to be the "boy toy" of Colbert's Empress, and a devout Christian woman.
In Cleopatra Claudette Colbert returns as the queen of the Nile weaving her spell on both Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie. Especially the rolled up rug scene. While it does require you to suspend your good sense what movie, at some point, doesn't! Miss Colbert also returns in "Four Frightened People" as a very plain, almost drab, geography teacher. The four are on a ship when three of them notice an outbreak of bubonic plague and, wisely, decide to exit the ship, unannounced of course. As the three are making their escape they hijack Ms Colbert as a member of the party to stifle her screams as this would have given away their escape. Ms Colbert eventually finds the woman inside her and her soul mate, played by Herbert Marshall, recognizes this after a slinky waterfall bath. To help this line along DeMille has a chimp steal her clothes during the bath. This results in her being "dressed" in large leaves and a scarf for much of the movie. Not Mr DeMille's best effort, by any measure, but certainly not a waste of time to watch. "The Crusades", with Loretta Young, Henry Wilcoxon, and Ian Keith is an excellent movie if not anywhere near historically accurate. But all three of the actors mentioned do superb jobs in their roles. Ms Young as Berengeria-Princess of Navarre, Henry Wilcoxon as Richard, The Lion Hearted, King of England, and Ian Keith as Saladin the Sultan of Islam. One thing that struck me about this movie is how, even after all these centuries, very little has changed in the middle east. Christians and Muslims arguing/fighting over Jerusalem and associated sites. The movie is, naturally, based on/set in the Holy Crusades. This movie was set in the first Crusade around the year 1095. Also playing his normally evil role is Joseph Schildkraut as Conrad-The Marquis of Montferrat (also see him as Fouquet in The Man In The Iron Mask-1939) "Union Pacific" stars Joel McCrea, Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Preston, and Anthony Quinn. I was most impressed by Ms Stanwyck playing Mollie Monahan and Robert Preston as Dick Allen. Mr Preston normally played "good guys" but in "Union Pacific" he plays a morally conflicted part that, in the end, tries to do the right thing. All said this is one of my favorite collections and I strongly recommend you buy it. Especially at the prices I have being seeing on Amazon.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2024Reliable product and on time delivery.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2015The transfer on these films is amazing and gives them an unexpected immediacy. Maybe because of that, the surprisingly contemporary looking Sign of the Cross has horrific arena scene highlights (and I mean, dang!) that are almost an hour long, far more graphic than anything made in the 50's or 60's, with heartfelt Christian scenes a most welcome theme; DeMille proves he was a genius and great master of cinema. "Four Strightened Strangers" has been given a pass by many perhaps only because it stands out in contrast to other movies DeMille made, but we found it a well made, exotic and enticing tale of survival. I always wanted to see Union Pacific because of the train wreck in it, I wasn't disappointed. The Crusades is next and I am confident it will please as have the others. The movies in this box set are terrific and appear as beautifully done originally with what must have been a loving restoration job. They are pristine and sound great. Side note: I remember standing in a Borders a few years ago looking over this handsome package, not quite willing to spring $60 for it at the time because I had no idea how well restored they might be. I can safely say they were worth $60 bucks then as they are today, but what a bargain price I just paid. These are totally worth it. By the way, I am reading the DeMille book that just came out along with it and find it all a much entertaining value.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2006Universal's collection of several of the great showman's biggest hits is a half-hearted affair - the films are there, but the showmanship is completely missing in a lackluster presentation.
De Mille's Cleopatra is much more fun than you'd expect, played as much for deliberately camp comedy as for spectacle and a lot pacier at 104 minutes than the Elizabeth Taylor version. Warren William plays Caesar as De Mille himself, Henry Wilcoxen plays Anthony as an oaf and Claudette Colbert takes centerstage as the kind of vixen who knows which side of the Roman Empire her bread is buttered. At times De Mille's tongue is firmly in his cheek - not least a wonderfully drawn out death scene from Leonard Mudie that wouldn't look out of place in Carry On Cleo or Cleo's spectacular seduction of Tony on that fabled barge - but there's some fine filmmaking here too, not least a great battle montage padded out with footage from the silent Ten Commandments and a fine bit of censor baiting as a foreground hand ostensibly playing the harp seems to almost paw at Colbert's body. It ain't history but it is fun. Nice score from Rudolph Kopp too.
De Mille's The Crusades isn't history either, but it's certainly a lot more fun than its reputation implies. Wilcoxen reprises his macho oaf routine as Richard the Lionheart, but despite the film being best remembered for failing to make him the major star De Mille thought he could be, he's a surprisingly confident and rather likeable oaf: Wilcoxen was always a better actor than he was ever given credit for, even if his sword has a better part in the movie than he does. Loretta Young is the gushing God-botherer Berengaria and many of De Mille's regulars pop up - Ian Keith, C. Aubrey Smith, Joseph Schildkraut and John Carradine (all of whom feature in Cleopatra) - to add color to the monochrome proceedings. It's no Kingdom of Heaven, opting for simplistic melodrama at every turn, but it's done with zest and passion, not to mention some remarkably ambitious camerawork at times. And the songs are maddeningly catchy.
The Sign of the Cross was a surprise too, but not a pleasant one. Obviously intended as a pretty blatant ripoff of earlier movie versions of Quo Vadis (although the play its based on was first performed in 1895, the year Sienkewicz's novel was first published), it's hard to believe just how monotonous and relentlessly static De Mille managed to make it. Claudette Colbert and Charles Laughton are fun as Poppea and Nero, but they're hardly in the picture, far too much time being taken up with Frederic March hamming it up as Marcus Superbus (no, really) as he falls for Elissa Landi's Christian gal Mercia (no relation to the county). It's restrained to the point of being inert at times, with far too much of the dreary Christians, although it does perk up for the arena finale which features dwarfs battling Amazon women, elephants crushing Christians and gorillas menacing naked women. The last 15 minutes aside, Dreary with a capital D.
It's hard to avoid the phrase `run of De Mille' for Cecil B.'s Four Frightened People, one of his lesser efforts that sees four white folks jumping ship after an outbreak of Bubonic Plague and taking an ill-advised and badly guided trek through the Malay jungle that rips off their stereotypical civilized veneer to reveal the stereotypical clichés beneath. Claudette Colbert's Miss Jones goes from downtrodden mousy schoolmarm to red-hot, husky voiced wisegal almost as soon as she breaks her glasses, henpecked Herbert Marshall discovers his inner he-man (yes, they really do use that phrase), William Lundigan goes from self-obsessed indifference to obnoxious would-be lecher, while only Mary Boland's matron remains unchanged in her determination to bring civilization and a reduced birthrate to the islands. On the plus side, Leo Carillo is entertaining as their local guide who seems to think owning a tie makes him English and there are a few good exchanges - "It's practically virgin territory." "Perhaps that why Mr Corder doesn't like it." - and it's only 78 minutes long.
De Mille's last black and white film, Union Pacific is something of a rarity these days, rarely revived on TV and forgotten in the wake of the Biblical epics that form only a small part of his repertoire. Harking back to his earlier The Plainsman, instead of friends Gary Cooper and James Ellison fighting over Jean Arthur against the background of the Indian Wars on the Great Plains we get friends Joel McRea and Robert Preston fighting over Barbara Stanwyck against the background of the building of the first coast-to-coast railroad. McRea's the agent assigned to stop Brian Donlevy's saboteurs, with old friend Preston among their number and Stanwyck the Hollywood Irish engineer's daughter they both love. Throw in train wrecks, Injun attacks, the odd gunfight, plenty of spectacle, Akim Tamiroff and a complete disregard for history and you've got the closest thing to talkie version of John Ford's The Iron Horse going. It's not up to the 1939 gold standard, but it is entertaining hokum.
While this set does boast uncut versions of all five films, it's maddeningly devoid of any extras whatsoever - a real crime, since De Mille's overblown trailers, usually hosted by the man himself, are great value, as are the many promotional short films that were made for the films. Since all still exist and are regularly excerpted in documentaries, there's no excuse for such lazy treatment.
Top reviews from other countries
AviatorReviewed in Canada on November 28, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Great collection of old B&W movies.
Great collection of old B&W movies the set includes : The Sign of the cross, Four Frightened people, Cleopatra, The Crusades, and Union Pacific. I especially enjoyed the Union Pacific and the Four Frightened people.
G. E. M.Reviewed in Canada on February 21, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Picture and sound are great on all the films.
giorgia zoppiReviewed in Canada on October 16, 20154.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
thank you




