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Loading... Casablanca (edition 2008)by Humphrey Bogart (Actor)
Work InformationCasablanca [1942 film] by Michael Curtiz (Director)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I don't usually list all the extra features on my discs, but this two-disc Special Edition has so much content that simply saying the DVD contains the 1942 film would be missing the point of owning it. Here (for those, like me, who own this edition) is what can be found on the discs. Even if you don't have this version, the film is worth owning on its own. Commentary by film critic Roger Ebert Commentary film historian Rudy Behlmer Introduction by Lauren Bacall Theatrical trailer 50th Anniversary 1992 re-release trailer Bonus trailers: "The Adventures of Robin Hood" and "The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre" Cast and crew list Awards list "As Time Goes By: The Children Remember" featurette 2 deleted scenes 8 outtakes Scoring stage sessions (six vocal tracks from Dooley Wilson, and 2 instrumental) "Bacall On Bogart" documentary "You Must Remember This: A Tribute To Casablanca" documentary & backstage tour Screen Guild Theater Radio Show (1943) Television Adaptation, 1955: "Who Holds Tomorrow" Cartoon Homage, 1995: Carrotblanca Production notes DVD-ROM: Warner Brothers website no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesCriterion Laserdiscs (73) Is contained inThe Humphrey Bogart Collection: The Big Sleep / The Maltese Falcon / Casablanca / Key Largo by Howard Hawks Is retold inHas the (non-series) sequelHas the (non-series) prequelIs an adaptation ofIs parodied inHas as a reference guide/companionHas as a supplementHas as a commentary on the textHas as a student's study guideAwardsNotable Lists
In World War II Morocco, seething with European refugees desperate for passage to neutral Lisbon, only a world-weary and bitter nightclub owner can help his former lover and her Resistance-hero husband escape from the Nazis. No library descriptions found. |
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“My health. I came to Casablanca for the waters.” — Rick
“The waters? What waters? We’re in the desert!” — Renault
“I was misinformed.” — Rick
Any film buff watching this screen classic today will certainly get a sense of having seen this formula over and over. Howard Hawks remade it in a fashion — and actually improved upon it in some ways by putting his distinct spin on it — in To Have and Have Not. While it often gets overpraised because it is a beloved favorite of critics, it also doesn’t receive the credit due it. The four strongest performances here, namely Bogart, Rains, Lorre, and Joy Page, who rarely even gets a mention, didn't get the Academy Award. It can be argued that any solid studio director from this period could have made a great film out of the terrific screenplay from Howard Koch and Julius and Philip Epstein, and the fine cast assembled. But it is a film which is more than the sum of its parts, and the reason why it has been copied so often over the years.
Bogart is Rick Blaine, doing okay running Rick’s Cafe Americain in Casablanca, in French Morocco. Everyone must go through Casablanca to get to Lisbon, and freedom from the turmoil brought about by the War’s ever expanding boundaries. Rick runs his cafe and gambling house unencumbered by politics, looking out only for himself and a few close and loyal employees like Sam (Dooley Wilson) and Carl (S.Z. Sakall). Peter Lorre is marvelous as the criminal who worships Rick, and seeks his approval. It is really what happens to Ugarte (Lorre) which turns Rick in favor of the French Resistance; though it won't become evident until the film is nearly over. It is perhaps, the most interesting relationship in the film, made more so due to Lorre’s small amount of screen time.
Ugarte leaves Rick a letter of transit which can't even be questioned, when in pops Rick’s reason for hiding out in Casablanca — Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman). Rick's bitter disillusionment with love all goes back to what happened in Paris, where Ilsa left him holding his heart in his hands. The flashback montages were in part directed by Don Siegel, who would direct Mitchum and Greer in The Big Steal, and later become well known for Dirty Harry with Clint Eastwood. Ilsa isn't alone, however, bringing along her husband, Victor Laszlo (Paul Henreid). He is the lead figure behind the movement to rid the French of the Germans, who would prefer he never make it to Lisbon.
Caught in between is the pragmatic Captain Renault — Claude Rains in a splendid turn, full of larceny and humor. It is never clear exactly which side he is on. Ilsa wants her husband Victor to escape with his life but Rick isn't so ready to hand over those transit papers; not without some graveling and an explanation for the way he was burned by her.
Bergman proved a good second choice for Ilsa. The viewer knows she’s messed Rick up, and wants it to be righted, while at the same time sensing those two don’t belong together. Her casting opposite Bogart makes the ending easier to take than had someone with more natural chemistry with Bogart been cast in the role. Don’t get me wrong, they are good together in a timeless classic, but that bit of ‘unbelievability’ in their pairing works in the film’s favor at the legendary ending to this film. Howard Hawks had Bogart and Bacall, for example, go off together at the end of To Have and Have Not, which was his own take on Casablanca.
Before we get to the famous ending of Casablanca, however, there are some terrific moments from Joy Page as a young wife fleeing Bulgaria, desperate to get she and her husband out of Casablanca. What Rick does to help her out, and get around her making a mistake with Renault, highlights the effect Ugarte’s killing had on Rick, who at heart is a romantic. Once he knows the reason behind what happened in Paris, he'll come to the same decision the viewer has about where Isla belongs.
Casablanca won the Academy Award for Best Picture, Screenplay, and Direction (Michael Curtiz). Bogart would have won for Best Actor, Rains for Supporting Actor, and Joy Page for Best Supporting Actress in a different time and place. While this isn’t quite the romantic noir masterpiece of Preminger’s Laura, it is one amazingly smooth blend of genres — including noir — which pleases every film buff, and makes it one of the great films of all time. Silent film fans might can even catch a glimpse of star Monte Blue as an uncredited American. Bogart and Bergman fans can enjoy watching this one over and over, as it is one of those films almost universally cherished by movie lovers. ( )