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Rating: Summary: ...Some treasures are more valuable than others.... Review: ..but these treasures are quite delightful. AMC broadcast them a few years back, and I am glad they are available on dvd. It is fun (well, it is for dyed in the wool movie freaks such as myself)..to see things that feature favorite performers that have not ever seen a movie screen. This has Alice Faye, Shirley Temple, Betty Grable...and OTHERS...doing alternate takes, sometimes completely cut numbers...a variety of things...all give one a fresh view of how movies were made and a look at some material that just never got used. These are very entertaining. One or two, of course, are good examples of why they were never seen. But, in many cases, restoration has been done and some interesting performances brought to light. I have my copy...but dear friends at Fox...there is a seven minute ballet missing from Betty Grable's "The Farmer Takes a Wife"... perhaps you could show us that on the NEXT installment???
Rating: Summary: Don't pass this up! Review: Anyone who enjoys old films should be tickled pink to find these bits trimmed from the final cut of 1930-1940 films are still in existence. 20th Century Fox, as most studios, threw gold into the garbage. But these survived somehow. Shirley Temple - that little bundle of talent - does a number with the great Jimmy Durante. It was cut because the studio decided Shirley doing a Durante impersonation did not fit her image. There is a lot of good stuff on this disc, cut for time because it is easy to cut a musical number or, as in Shirleys case, it does not fit the stars image. I thoroughly enjoyed this chance to see these scenes. I have to mention the Bert Lahr number: you have to see it to believe it. There is far too little of Bert Lahr on film and this is a chance to see him as a young Broadway style performer even if you can't figure out just what it is he is doing. If you like old movies or musicals this disc is for you.
Rating: Summary: Fascinating Busby Berkeley outtake Review: For years I have been more than familier with the 1943 Fox musical THE GANG'S ALL HERE directed by Busby Berkeley. But it was fascinating to see an outtake of a comedy sequence intended for late in the film, with Phil Baker doing a takeoff of his popular radio quiz show "Take it Or Leave it". Charlotte Greenwood slides down a bannister and lands behind a giant picture frame in an imitation of Whistler's Mother, in a bit of physical comedy almost broader than anything left in the final cut of the film, except-Charlotte Greenwood, doing her usual high kicking bit.
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