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War And Remembrance - Part 4 [1986]
War And Remembrance - Part 4 [1986]

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Director: Tommy Groszman
Actors: Robert Mitchum, Jane Seymour, Hart Bochner, Victoria Tennant, Polly Bergen
Studio: Odyssey Video
Category: Video

Buy Used: £29.99



Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 14316

Format: Pal
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), German (Original Language), Hebrew (Original Language), Japanese (Original Language), Russian (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: VHS Tape
Running Time: 212 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Discs: 1

EAN: 5018011007661
ASIN: B00004CODJ

Theatrical Release Date: November 13, 1988
Release Date: April 25, 1994
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: FAST DELIVERY! Video in great condition. Usually despatched first class same day where possible. UK Seller.

Similar Items:

  • War and Remembrance, Parts 1-7 (REGION 1) (NTSC)
  • The Winds of War [1983] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
  • The Winds Of War - Special Collector's Edition [1983]
  • The WINDS OF WAR - Complete Series (6 DVD Collectors Ed.)
  • Holocaust - 30th Anniversary Collector's Set [1978]

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Enthralling all through   August 5, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I found this final series exciting and deeply satisfying. The previous two parts (Winds of War, and part one of this) called very strongly for completion, and that is what we have here... IN SPADES! I found the same wonderful sense of historical perspective that I noted in my review of part one... I felt I had got an overall grasp of the essentials of a very important and complex period, but also, that I had seen, spelled out in graphic detail, the results of the concentrated arrogance, stupidity, and self-indulgence that the Nazi ideal foisted on this suffering planet during that time. Nothing in my life so far had prepared me for the absolute horror revealed in this coverage... and nothing, I am sure, will ever allow me to forget it... which is really good. This lesson in the consequences of selfishness comes at an opportune time. The sections on Theresienstadt and Auschwitch, were particularly forceful - the sheer heartlessness and purposeful cruelty of those in charge will remain with all who see this as a salutary moral beacon... dangerous reefs beneath the surface of our common human nature.


5 out of 5 stars STILL Keeping the Faith with Herman Wouk!!   November 30, 2005
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

...The entire "War and Remembrance" sets surpasses "Winds of War", if that can be believed.

A sleeper performance was Sky Dumont's portrayal of Count von Stauffenberg, Hitler's would-be assasin. He was faithful with Mr. Wouk's intentions, Mr. Curtis' intentions, and this world's historical record. Can you imagine the severe tension and anxiety that the Count experienced as he was arming the bomb, and, later making his getaway? Dumont did it all so masterfully!

The cinematographer's choice of raw film stock, and the techniques that he used to expose that stock was even BETTER than "Winds". You don't need no stinkin' airline ticket nor cruise ship ticket to experience Italy, Corsica, Poland, and unfortunately Theresienstadt.

And this segues to a stern warning to the overly sensitive viewer. I'd rate the depictions of Nazi brutality as strong, if not stronger than "Schindler's List", "Saving Private Ryan", or George Takei's ("Star Trek") portrayal of a sadistic Japanese POW camp commandant in a production that eludes me right now. The brutalizations of Natalie and Aaron; the gassings, with full frontal nudity, which, as I recall, were the same as I remember in the original ABC TV telecast; the SS's additudes that their conduct was a "funny" thing; and SS man Blobel's flashback of his Babi Yar Massacre participation. This was as close to the real thing as it gets and it's NOT for the timid. For a gutslamming juxstaposition, consider "Lady" Aster's actions on the Big Submarine Raid.

All of you fellow Mitchumomaniacs, you'll just love the way his "Pug" takes complete charge when faced with the extreme hazards of naval combat. Yeah, Pug finally got his ship!

I'm a stickler for continuity, so when they touched off the American 1945 Trinity A-Bomb shot, instead of Trinity stock footage, they used footage of U.S. OPERATION HARDTACK H-Bomb footage from the late 1950's, for some strange reason (more psychedelic to view, I suppose). I believe that there IS full color footage of Trinity in existence.

Jane Seymour's Natalie had a strange complimentary quality to Ali McGraw's Natalie, emphasizing the changing circumstances the character found herself in -- no time for the frivolous, more time for the serene and somber, pointing towards potential martyrdom.

Every time I view the death of Dr. Jastrow, played by Sir John Geilgud, I cry. He really made you love the old man.

As some of you out there may also know that Dan Curtis also produced the vampire soap opera "Dark Shadows" (for those of you who dote on "Yank" telly shows), please keep an eye out for Dan's production assistant, Barbara Steele, as party hostess Elsa in Singapore. Barbara Steele was a "favored victim" in the Hammer House horror pics of the '50's-'70's. In the 1991 NBC-TV revival of "Dark Shadows", she played the role of Dr. Julia Hoffmann (role pioneered by the late Grayson Hall), the erstwhile healer of Barnabas Collins' (Ben Cross, role pioneered by Jonathan Frid) vampirism.


5 out of 5 stars Intro for Herman Wouk's panoramic epic of the US in WW2   January 23, 2001
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Opening with the Japanese bombing on Pearl Harbour, this sweeping tale takes in Washington, London, Berlin, Singapore, and the Nazi death camps. Our stoic hero, US Naval captain, Victor "Pug" Henry takes command of his first ship, and battle is joined. A worthy introduction, true to the work of Herman Wouk, which sets the scene for the series as a whole



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