List Price: $26.98You Pay Only: $21.99 You Save: $4.99 (18%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 9780790795768
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, Special Edition, Subtitled, NTSC
ISBN: 0790795760
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 2
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: March 01, 2005
Running Time: 112 minutes
Sales Rank: 6181
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: December 01, 1940
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Product Description: Here comes the bride. And the ex-husband. And a gossip-rag columnist on assignment. The luminous tale of a fault-finding bride-to-be socialite who gets her comeuppance and an unexpected mr. Right. Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 03/01/2005 Starring: James Stewart Katharine Hepburn Run time: 112 minutes Rating: Nr
Amazon.com essential video: Re-creating the role she originated in Philip Barry's wickedly witty Broadway play, Katharine Hepburn stars as the spoiled and snobby socialite Tracy Lord in this sparkling 1940 screen adaptation of The Philadelphia Story, one of the great romantic comedies from the golden age of MGM studios. Applying her impossibly high ideals to everyone but herself, Tracy is about to marry a stuffy executive when her congenial ex-husband (Cary Grant), arrives to protect his former father-in-law from a potentially scandalous tabloid exposé. In an Oscar-winning role, James Stewart is the scandal reporter who falls for Tracy as her wedding day arrives, throwing her into a dizzying state of premarital jitters. Who will join Tracy at the altar? Snappy dialogue flows like sparkling wine under the sophisticated direction of George Cukor in this film that turned the tide of Hepburn's career from 'box-office poison' to glamorous Hollywood star. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Great Fun
A must for every fan of Katherine Hepburn, Jimmy Stewart and Cary Grant. Funny, sad, touching, wonderful!
Rating: - Actually Philadelphia Suburb Story
The Great Depression, some things never change. The rich are evil and the poor are sainted. Tracy Lord, the unfortunate name of a recent adult film star, she is kind of a glorious snot ; she'll marry a Nuevo-riche piker to get even with her suave but drunken ex-husband, Cary Grant.
Grant is Cary Grant, but Stewart, a newcomer, holds his own as the young writer skittish about rich folks and women. His long-suffering girlfriend, charming, Ruth Hussey, stands by demurely.
A little dated, but clearly courting mores were more distinct and perhaps safer way back then. Wonderful film!
Rating: - Timless acting, devastating wit, and, um... the script still neeeds work
I just watched this again and I simply must advertise my opinion on the whole of it. It's just that it was "almost" there. The classic screwball pairings of Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant are legendary, but this one was in need of a good rewrite. If you are in a sentimental mood and you have recently viewed your entire collection of 1934-1944ish screwball comedies, then you can't go too far off of the path with this offering, but...
Okay, so let's start at the beginning (not the beginning of the story, that would be just silly--let's start with the cast): Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn reunite to match wits in a slightly more "mature" (they are older, and it shows in that "Haven't we done this before, but it was more fun then, but I suppose this is nice too" kind of way) version of Bringing Up Baby. Perhaps between BuB and this story they did get married after all, and had different parental units, and jobs, but the rest is pretty much the same. They are both fine actors with presence and sublime comedic timing that seems so natural it is ethereal and almost aloof to the rest of us mere mortals viewing this grand spectacle unfolding. And then there is Jimmy Stewart in his early days. A true master of American cinema, this man redefines "the common man" made popular by Dickens a century past. Roland Young (Topper) is magnificent as always, so much so that it is best to view his scenes, remote in hand, again and again to scrutinize his subtle comic inflections. The rest of the cast ... Read More
Rating: - Classic movie
This is a great classic movie with three of the original movie stars, Jimmy Stewart, Catherine Hepburn, and last but certainly not lest, Cary Grant. The writing is flawless and witty. There is a hidden pearl in the movie in the form of the little sister.
Rating: - Katherine Hepburn is great but the screenplay did not stand the test of time
This 1940s film is supposed to be a classic. That's why it interested me. Originally adapted from a play, it stars Katherine Hepburn as a Philadelphia "main line" self-absorbed young woman. Recently divorced from Cary Grant, she is planning a marriage to someone else. But with the help of James Stuart and Ruth Hussy, Cary Grant sets about winning back his lady love.
My recollections of Katherine Hepburn are as an old lady, so it was a delight to see her young and gorgeous self. The role called for a lot of dialogue and a lot of shifting emotions. Despite her artificial makeup, she did a great job and I can understand the reason she left her indelible mark on the silver screen. She's unique in her own special way and she did the best she could with the material written for her.
Too bad the screenplay just did not stand the test of time. Despite its attempt to be smart and sophisticated, it's now 68 years later, and it came across to my modern mind as contrived and silly and too heavy on the dialog.
I give this film a mild recommendation for students of movie history. But for everyone else, don't waste your time.
Browse for similar items by category:
|