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Pygmalion - starring Shannon Cochran and Nicholas Pennell (Audio Theatre Series)

Pygmalion - starring Shannon Cochran and Nicholas Pennell (Audio Theatre Series)

List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $22.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: My Fair Lady without the music.
Review: You already know the story. However to make this independent review Windy Hiller [Major Barbara (1941) ASIN: 6302969840] Plays a Cockney flower seller. Professor Henry Higgins (Leslie Howard) bets that he can pass her off as a duchess in six months by adjusting her speech pattern. It works but I miss the music. This is a screen adaptation of a George Bernard Shaw play just like Major Barbara.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pygmalion - the original "My Fair lady"
Review: Unlike its later (almost talking word-for-word) remake "My Fair Lady", Pygmalion is NOT a musical, and it is not in color. That said, everything about it is wonderful, and it is just as enjoyable as the remake. Leslie Howard is totally believable as the self-centered (and yet likeable) Higgins, and Wendy Hiller is the best Eliza of all. She brings an unsurpassed focus and comic intensity to the role - you can see the intelligence in her eyes. The DVD format does justice to the good picture quality.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is the edition to own
Review: The Criterion/Home Vision edition of this wonderful film is definitely the one to own. It is taken from a pristine print and the sound quality is amazingly vibrant for a film that is over sixty years old. The other available versions are all from worn public domain prints that are better left sight unseen and prove the old truism "you get what you pay for."

I have always been a fan of Leslie Howard: his delightfully cynical Higgins was no surprise. The real revelation for me was Wendy Hiller as Eliza. I was previously primarily familiar with her later roles, such as Paul Scofield's wife in A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS. She is absolutely luminous in this film.

If you are a fan of MY FAIR LADY, this is a must-have motion picture.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect...
Review: This play is absolutely marvelous. It is about a girl from the English gutter who dares to ask a wealthy man she met on the street to teach her how to speak properly. She goes through a painful process of relearning, but then finally one day, she goes to talk to some guests. This is probably the funniest parts in the book, for she says the most absurd things you ever heard. Then after a while, she goes to a garden party where she is exactly the opposite of what she was in the previous scene. People are amazed at her clarity in speech, and she also looks and acts like a queen. But then they think she is a fraud, and they start believing she really is of royal blood. It ends with her loving her teacher, but she never marries him. So it ends hanging, but it makes so much sense that is does not seem that way. The play is so funny, that if nothing else will make you laugh, this will. The play itself is short, but is brimming with satire and sarcasm. I myself read it few years ago at the age of 9 or 10, so I think that any child will also enjoy it. Enjoy! Cheers!!! : )

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Leslie Howard is One of the Greats
Review: Shaw's play is great, but Leslie Howard as Henry Higgins is pure genius. It is such a shame that he died young, because he was the equal of any of his british peers. Fans of My Fair Lady should see this to discover how musical the play was in its original form.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: caveat emptor
Review: Thinking that "Pygmalion" was public domain and that the bargain-basement price for the VHS tape was therefore understandable, I went ahead and purchased the least expensive version. Alas! It's recorded in EP (extended play) mode. The visuals are fuzzy, the sound is muffled, the tracking is awful. Factor in the postage, and what appeared to be a swan is a costly ugly duckling. This is one Eliza that gets tossed in the trash heap.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Holds Up Astoundingly Well! See It!
Review: Just in case you didn't know it, both Leslie Howard and Wendy Hiller were heavy weight British acting talents. Howard was even a major star in American movies and is mainly remembered for playing Ashley Wilkes in "Gone With The Wind." This is a very different role for him from that role. Wilkes and Hiller were both perfect for the roles of Eliza Doolittle and Henry Higgins, the cockney flower girl who is tutored by the linguistics expert to turn her into a lady. Many people don't like watching the original play because it doesn't end happily with the two together as it does in its musical version, "My Fair Lady." However, the filmmaker saw the writing on the wall here, even before the musical came out, and makes one change only to the Bernard Shaw play, that ending. So here too we have the happy ending. This is as fresh and perfect as the day it was made. Every word of dialogue counts and is perfect in this satire of the British class system. Every character is superb and I especially loved every moment Alfred Doolittle, the epitome of the lower classes kicked into the middle class, was onscreen. Hubby watched it with me and remarked several times, "I can't believe how good this is." Frankly, even I was surprised that this black and white film from the 1930s, set then as well, is in no need of a remake whatsoever. A true classic that no one should miss.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Pygmailion
Review: First of all, this is not a review of the play, which is brilliant. My rating is solely based on the quality of the DVD, which I found to be very disappointing.
Criterion has made a name for itself by distributing good if not excellent quality versions of movies on DVD. Having said that, I would like to warn people that the audio quality of this DVD is an absolute disaster. I returned the first DVD thinking the reason the audio wouldn't play was because I received a bad disk. However, the replacement Amazon sent was just the same. If you purchase this DVD, you might be lucky enough to get it to work, but I think I can safely say that you will be very disappointed in the audio of this DVD.

Having looked at the reviews of this movie, I find it annoying that so many of them are based on the VHS tape version. (I suppose that when you click on 'See all customers reviews' it scans the entire database giving you everything related to this play.) This seems to be a disservice to someone looking for the quality of the media not the quality of the play.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The wit of G.B. Shaw
Review: Made in 1938, the language of this film makes it a treasure. With a cast of superb actors, headed by the fabulous Wendy Hiller in her screen debut as Eliza, and Leslie Howard, who as Professor Higgins is a joy to watch and listen to.

Howard (who hated that his least favorite part as Ashley in "Gone With the Wind" would be his most famous), co-directed this award-winning masterpiece with Anthony Asquith, and Shaw adapted his play for the screen...which later became "My Fair Lady" on Broadway in '56. The music is by Arthur Honegger, and David Lean the editor. It was quite a group, in front and behind the camera.

This is great stuff, so don't be a "squashed cabbage leaf" and miss this terrific film !

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: I don't get it
Review: Bernard Shaw has written numerous plays, most of them brilliant. But sadly, Pygmalion isn't one of them. It builds up to become more and more exciting, but then drops at the last 10 pages, to hit ground stone-hard. One wonders if this man was actually serious with what he was doing?! Although it is -regarded as- a classic, it's not recommendable. I found it to be a big disappointment, and Bernard Shaw seems to have difficulty in deciding the story's outcome. It's claimed that the "Higgins" character is supposed to be Bernard Shaw, and perhaps that can be the reason for the abrupt ending. Maybe it was too hard on him.

It gets two stars because the idea is excellent, but the way it's been practiced is -to say the least- horrible


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