|
Bananas | 
enlarge | Director: Woody Allen Actors: Woody Allen, Louise Lasser, Howard Cosell, Carlos Montalban Studio: MGM (Video & DVD) Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy New: $3.78 You Save: $11.20 (75%)
New (45) Used (19) from $3.75
Rating: 56 reviews Sales Rank: 7862
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 82 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: MGMD1000672D ISBN: 0792846060 UPC: 027616850171 EAN: 9780792846062 ASIN: 0792846060
Theatrical Release Date: April 28, 1971 Release Date: July 5, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential video Woody Allen's second film as a director was a wild, unpredictable, and unlikely comedy about a product-tester named Fielding Mellish (Allen), who can't quite connect with the woman of his dreams (Louise Lasser, Allen's ex-wife). He accidentally winds up in South America as a freedom fighter for a guerrilla leader who looks like Castro. Once he assumes power, the new dictator quickly goes insane--which leaves Fielding in charge to negotiate with the U.S. The film is chockfull of wonderfully bizarre gags, such as the dreams Fielding recounts to his shrink about dueling crucified messiahs, vying for a parking place near Wall Street. Look for an unknown Sylvester Stallone in a tiny role--but watch this film for Allen's surprisingly physical (and always verbally dexterous) humor. --Marshall Fine
Product Description Woody allen leads a revolution in a small latin american dictatorship in this hysterical comedy that parodies everything from the american media and political activism to the cia and the judicial system. Studio: Tcfhe/mgm Release Date: 09/21/2004 Starring: Woody Allen Louise Lasser Run time: 82 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Woody Allen
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 51 more reviews...
One of Woody's best films, still hilarious today.... August 9, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This was Allen's second film, and it's one of my all time favorite Woody Allen films. It's still hilarious, filled with brilliant dialogue, incredibly funny setpieces (some of the best of Allen's career), funny performances, great satire, and a great musical score. Allen would go onto deeper material and even greater films, but I still love this one. With Howard Cosell hosting an assassination attempt (still funny even if you don't remember Howard Cosell), to Allen getting food for his revolutionary outfit from a local diner, Bananas is filled with brilliant comedy. Some have complained that the film is a bit rough, but that didn't bother me that much. Most of Allen's comedies are consistently funny, and there are few, if any, lulls in them. This is great comedic filmmaking, something future generations should study and emulate.
The themes keep tripping over the gags July 27, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm not a fan of physical comedy, and I generally dislike Woody Allen's earlier movies. Still, I acknowledge the possibility that my funny bone isn't as well developed as it might be, and that people better qualified than myself to judge comedy think "Bananas" is great. So be it.
Don't get me wrong. Even I can see that there are some really clever scenes in the film. The commercial for New Testament cigarettes--"I smoke 'em. HE smokes 'em"--is priceless, as is the generously proportioned black woman in the trial scene who identifies herself as J. Edgar Hoover--"I have many enemies. I rarely go out without a disguise."
But in general, the nonstop slapstick and silliness keep tripping up the themes that hold the film together: the almost ritualistic in its predictability violence of repressive regimes; the sex appeal of power (shades of Kissinger's "power is the best aphrodisiac"); this country's tendency to label as a traitor anyone who "disagrees with the President and others of his kind" (from the trial scene); the jab at mindless consumerism that Fielding Mellish's (Woody Allen) job as a product tester makes; the crowded and frenetic existence led by so many people who want to save-the-world (illustrated by Nancy's [Louise Lasser] crowded schedule); the media's invasion of privacy; the sad tendency of liberation movements to become repressive once in power; and the rather uncomfortable fact that the direction our lives take is often at the whim of chance events.
In his later films, Allen learns how to juggle comedy and theme so that they complement one another brilliantly. Think of "Annie Hall" or "Manhattan." In "Bananas," though, the gags for the most part suffocate the themes. Too bad.
Doesn't hold up too well June 30, 2008 This is one of Allen's earlier efforts when he was mostly concerned with just being funny. The movie starts off at breakneck gag pace - plenty of physical humour and slapstick as the hapless Fielding Mellish loses the girl, exiles to South America and gets involved with the Castro like rebel movement of the fictional republic San Marcos. By the end, the jokes are waning and it is just Allen on hyper auto pilot - a long and not particularly funny courtroom scene and a tagged on ending of the consummation of his marriage played out as a boxing fight. This movie would never get produced these days,such is the amateurish and sloppy nature of the whole thing though I grant it was probably a fresh and funny satire back in the day.
a wonderful political/social satire---classic early Woody Allen...... September 11, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I first saw BANANAS on the local Public Broadcasting channel in Seattle. It's honestly surprising to me that people don't talk more about this film. I happen to think that it's funny, enlightening and very intelligent. What's more, it has chilling parallels with the state of politically revolutionary and anti-American Latin American governments of today (and no, I am not "naming names"---that would only get me into hot water here, and that isn't the purpose of the review). Fielding Mellish (Woody Allen) is a gawky product tester who falls in love with a politically active young woman, Nancy (Louise Lasser--Allen's first wife before the age of Diane Keaton, Mia Farrow or Soon-Yi Previn). Though very drawn to her, Mellish is not able to truly capture the young woman's heart. Why? Because he isn't as politically involved as she would like him to be. Well, all that changes when the awkward (not so young) man takes a life-altering trip to San Marcos, a small island nation falling under the thumb of pronounced political upheaval. Their leader, with strong leanings toward dictatorship and supression, has been assasinated and everything is in flux. It is during Mellish's trip that a very unlikely and (perhaps) profoundly unbelievable political shift occurs. I won't ruin it for you. You will have to see it for yourself. I will tell you that as many years as it has been since BANANAS' 1971 release, it still remains a very bold and wonderful showcase for Allen's irrerepresible physical comedy, as well as the quirky/neurotic brand of incidental insight that he is known best for today.
"Yes, well, freedom is wonderful. On the other hand, if you're dead, it's a tremendous drawback to your sex life." June 3, 2007
In his earlier film, a pure comedy "Bananas", screen writer/director Woody Allen stars as Fielding Mellish, a timid and nervous New Yorker products tester for a marketing research. Fielding does not like his job, "I'm not suited to this job. Where do I come off testing products? Machines hate me. I should be working at a job that I have some kinda aptitude for, like donating sperm to an artificial insemination lab" and gets rejected by his political activist girlfriend Nancy (Louise Lasser, second Mrs. Woody Allen with whom he had made three comedies) who tells him that he's missing something and doesn't have leadership ability. Mellish takes a trip to the South American country San Marcos, reluctantly gets involved in a revolution and becomes the president of the country.
"Bananas" contains some great jokes and scenes and proves that Allen is one of the true comic geniuses along with Chaplin and Keaton. I liked the film a lot - but I liked the parts much better than the whole thing. Having seen every movie Allen directed, I prefer his later work and his funniest movie for me is "Manhattan Murder Mystery" (1993).
Very young Sly Stallone make a short appearance in "Bananas" - he played one of two hoods who terrorized the passengers in the subway car. 3.5/5 or 7/10
|
|
| This amazon.com affiliate Store Owned and Operated by Silkroad Retail Group
Accepted Payment Methods:
American Express, Diners Club, Discover, JCB, MasterCard, Eurocard, Visa, Visa Check Cards, Amazon.com gift certificates, payment directly from your bank account, and checks, money orders, or cashier's checks denominated in U.S. dollars and drawn on a U.S. bank, Borders Gift Cards and Waldenbooks Gift Cards as payment for qualifying orders. More information about Shipping & Handling, Delivery Date, Return Policy, Special Offers/Savings etc is available at the time of Secure CheckOut.
© 2006 AsianShoppingOnline.com All Rights Reserved | Powered by Silkroad Web
| |