NowChannel.com
– Discover Great DVDs Fast and Simple  (How?)
More Results, Less Clutter
  We filter and prioritize – you'll see excellent DVDs. 
  Find it here, then buy it at Amazon   (Learn More)  

 
    
    Box Sets DVDs
 
TV Shows
Entire Series of Classic TV

DVD:
The Doris Day Show - The Complete Series

see 33 items like this...
 
 

    Product Search
 
Search
 
Advanced DVD Search 
 
 
    DVD New Releases
 
 Last 30 Days:
    - TV Shows on DVD
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 Coming Soon:
    - TV Shows on DVD
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 All New & Future Releases
 
 
    DVD Bestsellers
 
 Top DVDs Today:
    - TV Shows
    - Classic TV
    - Classic Film
    - Blu-ray
 
 
    Home
 
 NowChannel
 
Discover Great Home Media

- Fast and Simple
- Real Human Editors
- Multiple Merchants
- Learn More

 
 

       
 

DVD: Footlight Parade

  Classic Film > 1933

 
DVDs   Footlight Parade    Discs    DVD Release Date  
 
 
The Busby Berkeley Collection

Footlight Parade / Gold Diggers of 1933 / Dames / Gold Diggers of 1935 / 42nd Street

 
6
 
March 21, 2006  

check prices
 

 

The Busby Berkeley Collection celebrates the work of one of the most visually inventive director-choreographers in the history of film. The centerpiece is of course 42nd Street (1933). This is the quintessential backstage musical in which young Peggy Sawyer (Ruby Keeler) goes from wide-eyed chorus girl to leading lady, urged by Warner Baxter, "You're going out there a youngster, but you've got to come back a star!" A cast that also includes Dick Powell and Ginger Rogers (when she was an RKO contract player and before she teamed up with Fred Astaire) performs "Shuffle Off to Buffalo, " "You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me," and the title tune, in which Keeler tap-dances on a black surface that turns out to be the roof of a car. Berkeley's numbers are known for their kaleidoscopic patterns, their stark black-and-white contrast, and their sheer sense of spectacle. But more than anything, they're known for their celebration of women. By the dozens, they dance, play pianos, frolic in waterfalls, and, in some of the most overtly sexual numbers, stand spread-eagled in a line as the camera passes through their legs. In many ways, the title song from Dames sums it up best: "What do you go for / to see a show for? / Tell the truth, you go to see those beautiful dames."

While Berkeley choreographed and directed the musical sequences in these films, the plot sections were generally directed by others such as Lloyd Bacon. Keeler and Powell were the most frequent headliners, supported by character players such as Joan Blondell, Guy Kibbee, and Ned Sparks, and most of the songs were contributed by Harry Warren and Al Dubin. The stories aren't much, usually revolving around the putting-together of a musical show as well as the lives and loves of chorus girls. The term "gold diggers," which is the source of the title of two of the films included in this set, refers unflatteringly to chorus girls in search of wealthy husbands.

Gold Diggers of 1933 opens with a justly famous shot of Ginger Rogers wearing an outfit of coins and singing "We're in the Money" first in English then in pig Latin. Gold Diggers of 1935 is capped by "The Lullaby of Broadway," a 14-minute story-within-a-story that seems one of the inspirations for Singin' in the Rain's "Broadway Melody." Dames (1934) has the aforementioned title tune as well as "I Only Have Eyes for You" (with Powell singing to dozens of Keeler faces). Footlight Parade changes things up a bit by starring James Cagney as a producer desperately cranking out musical numbers. Keeler and Powell emerge from their bit-character roles to headline two of the big productions stacked together at the end, while Cagney replaces Powell in the third, showing off the vaudeville hoofing skills he would use later in 1942's Yankee Doodle Dandy.

DVD supplements are generous. The sixth disc is the 163-minute Busby Berkely Disc, a former laserdisc program that collects just the musical numbers from nine films without the plot filler. Most of the numbers are already included in the films in this collection, but there are also one number each from Fashions of 1934, Wonder Bar, In Caliente, and Gold Diggers of 1937. Also on the discs are new and old featurettes (one tracks the development of 42nd Street from book to screen to stage), and vintage cartoons and shorts (one promotional short has Berkeley on-screen talking up Dames). Picture quality is about the same as on the Astaire and Rogers Collection, Vol. 1: good for the age of the material, but with noticeable fuzz and print damage. --David Horiuchi   More...
 

 
 

See also:
Classic Film on DVD - 1930-1969

1930   1931   1932   1933   1934   1935   1936   1937   1938   1939

1940   1941   1942   1943   1944   1945   1946   1947   1948   1949

1950   1951   1952   1953   1954   1955   1956   1957   1958   1959

1960   1961   1962   1963   1964   1965   1966   1967   1968   1969

 

Top Films on DVD - Oscar® Winners and Nominees

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z

 

NowChannel
TV Shows on DVD
Classic TV   Entire Series on DVD

Classic Film   Oscar® Winners

More Genres of DVD

 
Oscar® is a registered trademark of Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
This site has no relation to Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
See www.oscars.org for comprehensive Oscar® database.
 
Can't find it here?  Try Amazon DVD Search:
 

 

 NowChannel.com   about this site     Copyright © 2004-2009 NowChannel.com   All rights reserved. web@nowchannel.com