Average rating: 4.10   82% from 20 members


Beau Geste

It was war-time. I was three or four. My Mum took me to see my first film at the Old Grand in Barking Road E13. I saw the wonderful Gary Cooper in P.C. Wren's epic story, I guess that's when I lost my heart to the silver screen.
  • Beau Geste (1939)
    Starring: Gary Cooper,  Ray Milland,  Robert Preston
    Director: William A. Wellman
    Certificate: Certificate: TBC
    Michael "Beau" Geste leaves England in disgrace and joins the infamous French Foreign Legion. He is reunited with his two brothers in North Africa, where they face greater danger from their own sadistic commander than from the rebellious Arabs.
    Rate this: 3.5 stars out of 5 66% from 25 members

The Razor's Edge

My Uncle Harry treated me to a trip to the Odeon Upton Park (with a box of Pontefract Cakes), and exposed me to Somerset Maugham's mystical masterpiece. I recall wanting to be Tyrone Power's Larry and marrying Gene Tierney. I was eleven.

East Of Eden

It was 1957, New Year's Eve. Alone, and listlessly wandering around the West End, I drifted into a little cinema on Tottenham Court Road. James Dean was already dead, and I had yet to see his work. I sat through the film twice (you could do that in those days) and when I finally left the cinema, life had changed. My empathy with the young actor compelled me to try to become an actor myself.

Elmer Gantry

Although I saw The Flame And The Arrow many times, it wasn't until Burton Lancaster's towering performance as Gantry that I fully realised what an actor's presence - given the right part - could achieve.

Viva Zapata

My personal favourite from the best cinema actor of his generation: Marlon Brando
  • Viva Zapata on DVD (1952)
    Starring: Marlon Brando,  Jean Peters,  Anthony Quinn
    Director: Elia Kazan
    Certificate: Certificate: PG
    Set in the early 1900s, VIVA ZAPATA! tells the story of Mexican rebel Emiliano Zapata (Marlon Brando), who rallies the countryside against the government and eventually assumes the role of president. John Steinbeck wrote the film's screenplay.
    Rate this: 3 stars out of 5 59% from 353 members

North by Northwest

Sometimes, films just work. From the day I saw it (in Edinburgh, on tour with Michael Caine), I only ever wore my single-breasted suits three buttons pressed to two.

From Here To Eternity

Montgomery Clift, Burt Lancaster, Frank Sinatra, not to mention Donna Reed and Deborah Kerr. A real Saturday night film.

Great Expectations

I never did get to work with David Lean. But from the day I saw his version of Dickens' masterwork, in a converted air-raid shelter at Plaiston Grammar School, I longed to.

Adventures Of Priscilla, The - Queen Of The Desert

It's a gem, even if Bernadette does say so herself.

Water

Deepa Mehta directed this exquisite Indian story. It's a heart-breaker, but don't miss it.
  • Water on DVD (2005)
    Starring: John Abraham,  Lisa Ray,  Seema Biswas
    Director: Deepa Mehta
    Certificate: Certificate: 12
    Set in the 1930s during the rise of the independence struggles against British colonial rule, the film examines the plight of a group of widows forced into poverty at a temple in the holy city of Varanasi. It focuses on the relationships of one widow, who wants to escape the social restrictions ..read more »
    Rate this: 3.5 stars out of 5 69% from 2,490 members




Average rating for this collection: Average rating: 4.10   82% from 20 members

Report offending content.

* The Amazon.co.uk prices on our site are updated every 24 hours and may not be up to date at the time you view this page.
To see the current new and "new and used" Amazon.co.uk prices, please click on the Buy button.