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
 
Classic Films
Classic Comedy on DVD

Marx Brothers:
The Marx Brothers Collection

see 9 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: Somebody Up There Likes Me

  Classic Film > Oscar® Films > 1956

 
DVDs   Somebody Up There Likes Me    Discs    DVD Release Date  
 
 
The Paul Newman Collection

Harper / The Drowning Pool / The Left-Handed Gun / The Mackintosh Man / Pocket Money / Somebody Up There Likes Me / The Young Philadelphians

 
7
 
November 14, 2006  

check prices
 

 

Paul Newman's career slipped onto an unstoppable track with Somebody Up There Likes Me, his 1956 biopic about boxer Rocky Graziano. Of course that was his second picture, the first being the oft-joked-about bungle The Silver Chalice. Newman's Method-y intensity and dazzling good looks brought him stardom, and his intelligence and uncommon seriousness as an actor kept his movies interesting, especially as he tackled some of the best roles of the "antihero" era--an era he helped create.

Somebody Up There Likes Me is included in The Paul Newman Collection, a bulging seven-DVD package that shakes out thusly: three late-1950s titles from the beginning of his career, one mid-sixties hit, and three lesser films of the early 1970s. It's by no means a "best of" compilation, being limited to Warners and MGM titles, but it gives a flavor of Newman in his prime time. He got the Graziano role after James Dean died, and his performance is a very busy, post-Brando jumble of tics and mumbles. The movie holds up nicely as a boxing picture, and the location NYC shooting won an Oscar for cinematographer Joseph Ruttenberg (you can see why director Robert Wise got hired to do West Side Story after this). Sal Mineo and Steve McQueen are in the cast as Newman's fellow j.d.s.

The Left-Handed Gun (1958), based on a teleplay by Gore Vidal, is a truly weird, compulsively watchable artifact from the psychological-Western genre. Newman plays Billy the Kid, glowering and grimacing like a rebel without a cause. It's one of those films that has much more to do with the time it was made than the time it is set; also notable as the big-screen debut for stage and TV director Arthur Penn. The Young Philadelphians (1959) is more conventional, an entertaining soap opera about a young lawyer (Newman) with an old-money Philly name but no money, who gets burned by love and decides to connive his way to the top. Young Robert Vaughn snagged an Oscar nomination for a showy turn as an alcoholic society lad.

Harper (1966) is chockfull of kooky mid-Sixties design and Rat Pack patter (courtesy screenwriter William Goldman). But it must be said that Newman is miscast as the melancholic private eye of Ross Macdonald's literary world, here re-imagined as a wisecracking hepcat who mugs his way through a missing-persons investigation. The supporting cast is a weird over-the-hill gang including Lauren Bacall, Janet Leigh, and Shelley Winters. That film's hero, Lew Harper (renamed from Macdonald's "Archer"), returned in 1976's The Drowning Pool, a more bearable if somewhat humdrum whodunit set in New Orleans. Newman's wife, Joanne Woodward, has a supporting part, but the picture is most notable for an early Melanie Griffith nymphet role.

Pocket Money (1972) is one of those only-in-the-seventies movies that pairs Newman with Lee Marvin in a drowsy, nearly plotless comedy. Both actors give elaborate performances: Newman plays a numbskull two-bit cattle broker who takes absolutely everything literally, and Marvin is his buddy in Mexico who signs on for an ill-considered cattle-buying job. One of the credited screenwriters is Terrence Malick, and the movie has a highly eccentric feel for language. Finally, The Mackintosh Man (1973) is one of the periodic duds that director John Huston would crank out in his otherwise starry career, with Newman as a spy on an incomprehensible case in England. The first half is a red herring, and Dominique Sanda (more recently of The Conformist) is out of depth with the English language. It's a bleak film with a kind of grinding fascination, and the Maurice Jarre score is catchy but fatally overused. --Robert Horton   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