Cheap I Know Where I'm Going (Video) (Emeric Pressburger, Michael Powell) Price
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| CATEGORY: | Video |
| DIRECTOR: | Emeric Pressburger, Michael Powell |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 09 August, 1947 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Home Vision Ent |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Black & White, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Feature Film-comedy |
| MEDIA: | VHS Tape |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 037429041734 |
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Customer Reviews of I Know Where I'm Going
Wonderful Scottish movie This is a wonderful movie! Funny and romantic and VERY Scottish. I nearly fell out of my chair when I heard them speaking Gaelic! The story line is predictable but very nicely so! It is nice to see a movie with a happy ending; one that the whole family can watch together. The photography was excellent - the footage of the Corryvreckan whirlpool was amazing.
The life is a continuous work in progress!
Two successful events blended in this romantic but mature drama: the emerging figure of Michael Powell one of the finest and creative British directors in any age and the presence of that beloved and unforgettable actress of incalculable carats: Wendy Hiller. As a matter of fact, the impressive gamut of hues of this hyper talented actress whose limitless expressive range seemed to be infinite.
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>A rich girl is at the eve of her wedding, but suddenly decides the right movement and run away, where she will find her bliss on a picturesque island of the coast of Scotland; the forces of the nature will complete the splendid cast in this fascinating and enriching life ?s experience where the promises of love simply give up before the reality of the life.
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Be sure to obtain the Criterion version.
"I know where I'm going,
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>I know who's going with me,"
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>A young lady (Windy Hiller) pretty much knows what she wants in life. On her way to her wedding on a remote Scottish island she is delayed long enough to experience a different way of life and a reality that she was never exposed to. Here she finds different values and the difference between real nobility and the early version of plastic money. She is overwhelmed by her new discovery and the man (Roger Livesey) who introduced her to it. Now she must desperately escape or be lost forever in this different world.
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>I was surprised to find that a young girl in the movie was Petula Clark.
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>There are advantages to having a movie with a story that is not based on a book. You can enjoy the story for what it is and not have to compare. However this may make a good play. In the Criterion extras you will find speculation on the pro's and con's of remaking the movie.
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>This film is impressive on its own but the Criterion treatment adds many fascinating dimensions that make you have to re-watch the film just to se the parts that you missed while paying attention though the plotline and scenery.
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>There is a commentary track that covers the entire film. A behind the scenes stills that even has a commentary. Home movies add to the information about the designers of the story and producers. There is a section from "The edge of the World." A great insight and a different way off looking at the story are found in "I Know Where I'm Going! Revisited" a 30 minute making of. The location photo essay allows you to see if the color is what you imagined (maybe better).
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