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Lifeboat (Special Edition)
Lifeboat (Special Edition)

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Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Actors: Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix, Walter Slezak, Mary Anderson, John Hodiak
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $6.19
You Save: $8.79 (59%)



New (50) Used (23) Collectible (4) from $4.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 75 reviews
Sales Rank: 4204

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Special Edition, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), German (Original Language)
Rating: Unrated
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 96
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.7

MPN: D2227226D
UPC: 024543172260
EAN: 0024543172260
ASIN: B000A9QK7I

Theatrical Release Date: January 12, 1944
Release Date: October 18, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: BSR Media sells brand new and factory sealed items. We offer super fast shipping with great service. PLEASE, NO WISCONSIN ORDERS.

Similar Items:

  • Alfred Hitchcock - The Masterpiece Collection (Psycho / Vertigo / Rear Window / The Birds / Shadow of a Doubt / Family Plot / Frenzy / The Man Who Knew Too Much / Marnie / Rope / Saboteur / Topaz / Torn Curtain / The Trouble with Harry)
  • The Alfred Hitchcock Signature Collection (Strangers on a Train Two-Disc Edition / North by Northwest / Dial M for Murder / Foreign Correspondent / Suspicion / The Wrong Man / Stage Fright / I Confess / Mr. and Mrs. Smith)
  • To Catch a Thief (Special Collector's Edition)
  • Strangers on a Train
  • Dial M for Murder

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Part mystery, part wartime polemic, Lifeboat finds director Alfred Hitchcock tackling a cinematic challenge that foreshadows the self-imposed handicaps of Rope and Rear Window. As with those subsequent features, Hitchcock confines his action and characters to a single set, in this instance the lone surviving lifeboat from an Allied freighter sunk by a German U-boat in the North Atlantic. A less confident, ingenious filmmaker might have opened up John Steinbeck's dialogue-driven character study beyond the battered boat and its cargo of survivors, but Hitchcock instead revels in his predicament to exploit the enforced intimacy between his characters.

Indeed, we never actually see the doomed freighter--the smoking ship's funnel beneath the credits simply sinks beneath the waves, and we're plunged into the escalating tensions between those who gradually find their way to the boat, a band of eight English and American passengers and crew, plus a German sailor (Walter Slezak) rescued from the U-boat, itself destroyed by the freighter's deck gun. Heading the cast and inevitably commanding their and our attention is the cello-voiced Tallulah Bankhead as Connie Porter, a cynical, sophisticated writer whose priorities seem to be hanging onto her mink and keeping her lipstick fresh. Gradually, the others find Porter and her lifeboat, forming a temporary community that inevitably suggests a careful cross section of archetypes, from wealthy industrialist (Henry Hull) to ship's boiler men (John Hodiak and William Bendix).

Hitchcock juggles the interpersonal skirmishes between the boat's occupants with the mystery of their German prisoner, which itself becomes a meditation on the fine line between nationalism and morality, a line that Slezak walks delicately until his identity is resolved. Visually, Hitchcock transforms his back-lot set and its rear-projected cloudbanks into a desolate stretch of ocean, while capturing the horror of an amputation through an economical set of images culminating in an empty boot. --Sam Sutherland

Description
Nominated for three Academy Awards, Alfred Hitchcock's "absorbing brilliantly executed" (Hollywood Reporter) World War II drama, is a remarkable story of human survival.

After their ship is sunk in the Atlantic by Germans, eight people are stranded in a lifeboat, among them a glamorous journalist (Tallulah Bankhead), a tough seaman (John Hodiak), a nurse (Mary Anderson) and an injured sailor (William Bendix). Their problems are further compounded when they pick up a ninth passenger - the Nazi captain from the U-boat that torpedoed them. With its powerful interplay of suspense and emotion, this legendary classic is a microcosm of humanity, revealing the subtleties of man's strengths and frailties under extraordinary duress.


Customer Reviews:   Read 70 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars lifeboat   June 21, 2008
This is a time less classic. What a great movie! They don't make them like this any more


4 out of 5 stars Standing Room Only   June 15, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'd never heard of this movie until it was mentioned in a 2003 New York Times obituary about Elizabeth Fowler, who spent 10 days in a 26' lifeboat with 35 men after their ship was sunk in the Atlantic by a German U-boat in 1942, and then wrote a book about it; the book was called "Standing Room Only." Hitchcock's movie gave me a better idea of how small such a boat would be---and there are only _8_ people in Hitchcock's lifeboat, not 36!---and it was intriguing to watch the survivors become a community, judging by concensus what was acceptable behavior and what was not, with the stronger personalities leading and the others following. One thing Fowler mentioned at the end of her book was how the survivors became strangers to each other almost immediately upon setting foot on dry land again; that sense of community was lost as soon as their lives returned to "normal." Interesting!


4 out of 5 stars Underrated Hitchcock   April 10, 2008
 21 out of 21 found this review helpful

Alfred Hitchcock's daring wartime drama rises to the technical challenge of being confined to a small set. Based on a story by John Steinbeck, "Lifeboat" (1944) remains among the director's most humanistic works with its emotional claustrophobia and incisive characterizations. Though a bit dialogue-heavy, the Master of Suspense creates a surprising amount of tension and intrigue throughout the film's 96-minute length. Tallulah Bankhead gives her finest screen performance, yet the entire cast is excellent. A minor classic in the Hitchcock canon.


5 out of 5 stars The boatride of a lifetime   March 29, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Hitch made great use of his directing skills with Lifeboat. The tension created when stuck on a boat and your life is in the hands of then enemy, twists of who to trust and where to go, all while the sun is baking you and evaporating every last drop of water out of your body. The rise and fall of the waves in this movie will keep you clinging to your life-jacket.


3 out of 5 stars Interesting   March 21, 2008
It is not my favorite Alfred Hitchcock movie but is better than I thought that It would be. You are always trying to figure out who is good and who is bad. It keeps you guessing. I had never heard of it when I rented it but was not disappointed at all after seeing it.

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