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| Heaven Can Wait (Criterion Collection) | 
enlarge | Director: Ernst Lubitsch Actors: Gene Tierney, Don Ameche, Charles Coburn, Marjorie Main, Laird Cregar Studio: Criterion Category: DVD
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $18.99 You Save: $10.96 (37%)
New (48) Used (11) from $16.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 29 reviews Sales Rank: 17544
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Special Edition, Subtitled, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 112 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: PMIDCC1613D ISBN: 1559409614 UPC: 715515016322 EAN: 9781559409612 ASIN: B00092ZLEE
Theatrical Release Date: August 11, 1943 Release Date: June 14, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Studio: Image Entertainment Release Date: 06/14/2005 Run time: 112 minutes
Amazon.com essential video The last masterwork by Ernst Lubitsch--whose other gems include Trouble in Paradise, Lady Windermere's Fan, Ninotchka, and The Shop Around the Corner--Heaven Can Wait was nominated for best picture and director Oscars in its day but largely neglected thereafter. Partly it's a matter of no one expecting a 1943 Fox movie featuring Don Ameche, the star of so many bland Technicolor musicals at that studio, to be a comedy of rare loveliness. Also, there's the confusion engendered by the existence of another film with the same title: the 1978 Warren Beatty movie that was the remake of a classic '40s comedy-fantasy--but Here Comes Mr. Jordan, not Heaven Can Wait. It's high time to get our priorities straight. Following his demise, the aristocratic Henry Van Cleve (Ameche), having no hope of Paradise, betakes himself "where all his life so many people had told him to go." Hell, or at least its antechamber, would appear to be a luxury hotel in neoclassical mode, and--this is a Lubitsch movie, after all--His Satanic Excellency (Laird Cregar) is a perfect gentleman and the most gracious of hosts. To establish his credentials for spending eternity there, Henry begins to narrate a life which, though lacking any notable crimes, "has been one continuous misdemeanor." Centered in a Fifth Avenue mansion left over from 19th-century New York, the film is Lubitsch and writing partner Samson Raphaelson's valentine to "an age that has vanished, when it was possible to live for the charm of living." Spanning more than half a century, it chronicles the high points of Henry's life so delicately that--in a variation on the strategies of Lubitsch-Raphaelson's risque '30s classics--it leaves some of them entirely offscreen, their emotional impact measured by what the characters feel and say about them afterward. We'll leave it to you to find out what they are. Suffice it to say that Ameche and Gene Tierney--as Martha, the love of Henry's life--give performances far subtler than anything else in their Fox contract-player careers, and there are sublime opportunities for those peerless character actors Charles Coburn, Eugene Pallette, and Marjorie Main. --Richard T. Jameson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 24 more reviews...
Heaven Can Wait (1943) unaccountably overrated and stupifying dull! December 20, 2008 This movie is one of the reasons the Criterion Collection's selection process has little credibility with me - the movie, a 1943 vehicle directed by Ernst Lubitsch, features mediocre casting, turtle-like pacing, self-consciously cutesy dialogue, and direction by numbers. Ninotchka it's not!
I bought the movie to see Gene Tierney in one of her first big roles, and she is wasted in curiously unattractive clothing with platitudes for dialogue. She is not helped by the miscasting of Don Ameche as a romantic lothario - he has little affect to his personality, and is definitely not leading man material. I could not believe for a minute that he was a ladies man. Cornel Wilde or Cary Grant would have been more believable.
And why is this a Criterion Film? Beats me. Leave Her To Heaven had better color cinematography, Laura is more of a classic thriller, and All About Eve is one of the all-time best Fox films EVER. Period. Yet this Lubitsch title was chosen for inclusion ......WHY? Thank God I bought this used through a vendor on Amazon - at 39.99, it is a disgraceful waste of money and time!!
Lame story, lackluster leading man, artificial looking color, direction by numbers ..... tbis is a film worth preserving?????
what happened anyways? February 4, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
Hmmm. This movie could have been very cute, and has several fine and comical parts. Unfortunately, too many things don't follow or are clumsily explained, not too mention it should be a good 15 minutes shorter. For me, it would have been a much better story if all of Ameche's so called "sins" were only misunderstandings/misperceptions from his squareish family (as many seem to be). I was fully expecting them to explained as such by the devil himself at the end, and that he would fully realize his fine character as the devil boots him to heaven. But if i'm supposed to understand that he really sinned, why is he going to heaven, and what sense does that make alongside his doting relation to his wife? I think this movie is either generally misunderstood or not fully realized, or worse both.
A great old movie September 27, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This movie was a delight to find! I enjoyed it when I was a teenager and never forgot it. A wonderful movie. I highly recommend it!
Heaven Can Wait June 22, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
A deft, subtly brilliant romantic comedy by the great Lubitsch, "Heaven" examines a privileged man whose boyish love of courtship colors his devotion to his wife, making his life "one continuous misdemeanor." Penned by the gifted Samson Raphaelson and shot in lavish Technicolor, "Heaven" marries urbane wit and bittersweet themes about youth and aging, folly and regret. Ameche and Tierney are a handsome, appealing pair from their first meeting in a bookshop, while Charles Coburn (as scampish Grandpa Hugo) and Allyn Joslyn (as Henry's strait-laced cousin Albert) round out a fabulous supporting cast. Delicate, charming, and almost effortlessly moving.
Great story with great actors April 12, 2007 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Extremely well done story about married people in the 1900s. If you don't cry at the end you're really tough. I recommend this movie to anyone who likes people.
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