List Price: $14.98You Pay Only: $9.99 You Save: $4.99 (33%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
EAN: 9780792862055
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0792862058
Label: MGM (Video & DVD)
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD)
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 19, 2004
Running Time: 136 minutes
Sales Rank: 47441
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
Theatrical Release Date: 1956
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Editorial Review:
Description: Fierce military commander, magnificent warrior, world conqueror. Legendary Macedonian hero Alexander the Great is celebrated in this definitive film about his tumultuous life. Richard Burton, FredricMarch and Claire Bloom lead a 'remarkable cast' (Leonard Maltin) of thousands in this epic film that seamlessly blends spectacular action, vivid character portrayals and an age-old tale of wisdom, blood and glory! Alexander (Burton) is a man torn by conflict between the lofty wisdom of histeacher, Aristotle (Barry Jones), loyalty to his warrior father (March) and his own grand design for world domination. In a turbulent world of political unrest, this ambitious young man must rise above all conflict to unite the continents of Europe and Asia and become one of the most celebrated rulers of all time!
Amazon.com: Richard Burton stars in Alexander the Great, a middling entry in the 1950s CinemaScope epic cycle. The film boasts excellent production values and a fine cast--including Frederic March, Claire Bloom, Harry Andrews, Stanley Baker, Peter Cushing, Michael Hordern--but rarely comes to life other than as a big fat ancient Greek wedding of the talents of Burton and Bloom. They strike real dramatic sparks together, so much so they would be reunited in Look Back in Anger (1958) and The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (1965). Otherwise the blame must be laid at the feet of writer-director-producer Robert Rossen, who never before or after helmed anything remotely on this scale; his best work would follow with the intimate The Hustler (1961). Rossen simply shows little sensibility for the epic, staging lavish but brief and rather pedestrian battles, and somehow drawing from the usually mesmerizing Burton a performance lacking the charisma essential to a great military commander. Burton fans can enjoy him at his epic best as Marc Anthony in Cleopatra (1963). --Gary S. Dalkin
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Alexander the Great
This is a better movie then the new one they made with Colin Farell. It is more refreshing to watch a movie that is easier to understand about the history then the confusing flashbacks that do not explain enough.
Rating: - Source Material
I remember from my youth the comic book being way better than the film. Watching as an adult only reaffirmed my childhood acumen as a critic. This movie is so amazingly boring it made me long for the comic book and a Vicodin. Failing that, I found the remote and put this epic on permanent pause.
Rating: - Greek history
A much better movie than the recent version. Add it your collection or a makes a nice gift for that Ancient History major you may know.
Rating: - Alexander the Lesser
I'm a moderate fan of Fredric March and I happened to notice that he was in this movie so I watched it. As the movie unfolded, I had a hard time believing that he would participate in this film of near-epic length. He plays the role of Phillip, the father of Alexander and manages to appear through nearly half of the movie. We get a sort of Oedipal understanding of Alexander and his parents which adds nothing to the movie. The role of Phillip requires that March convey a robust masculine appearance which, at this stage of his life, required as much make-up as acting ability. On the other hand, once we get a look at Richard Burton as the adult Alexander, we can't see anything but his curly blond hair. I mention these things because this lengthly movie tends to underscore the importance of costume, makeup, coiffering, sets, special effects, etc. by doing such a sloppy job with each. The story is disjointed and might have survived impressing the pre-teen male audience if it at least had some powerful battle scenes. However, each battle shows us a mass of soldiers on horse and afoot who hold their swords in the air and occassionally swing them about weakly. Nobody seems to be agressive (or even assertive) in these encounters. They seem more like commuters trying to get through Grand Central Station at rush hour; they don't mean to hurt anyone but they're too busy trying to get through the crowd to care if they do. I have to admit that I am confessing my own personal short-comings by acknowledging ... Read More
Rating: - Rossen the Lesser
The faux Shakespearian dialog by Robert Rossen not only induced me to chuckle but it has the unfortunate effect of inspiring Richard Burton to give a bellowing, mannered performance -- maybe hoping to distract from his pitifully non-athletic physique and grotesque blonde wig.
The direction, also by Robert Rossen, reminds me of the worse of the old Italian sword-and-sandals films with failed efforts to make a cast of tens seem larger and make cheap sets to look lived-in.
The history is mix of authentic and questionable, but the vital importance of military tactics has been reduced to simple brute force in cheaply staged battle scenes.
Lovely French icon Danielle Darrieux (in a dark wig -- contrary to Burton) comes off best as the embittered and ambitious mother of Alexander. She and the 'famous moments of legend' earn any positive rating I give this.
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