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The Bargain Nexus - Martin Luther King, Jr. - I Have a Dream

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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $9.99
Your Save: $ 4.99 ( 33% )
Availability:
Manufacturer: Mpi Home Video Starring: Martin Luther Jr. King
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786300200081 Format: Black & White ISBN: 6300200086 Label: Mpi Home Video Manufacturer: Mpi Home Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Mpi Home Video Release Date: 1994-08-31 Running Time: 22 Studio: Mpi Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 1963
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: MLK I have a dream Comment: If you thought you could hear ML King's I Have a Dream speech, you are sadly mistaken. There are just a few sentences.
Customer Rating:      Summary: MLK Jnr. I have a dream Comment: Its a very good movie,clear and memoriable; however;it was just too short and I had expectated a longer version, rather than just short clips.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Martin Luther King Jr. - I Have a Dream Comment: I felt short changed, expected all the events that lead up to the monumental speech, including Dr. King's speech that day. It's obvious the distributors of this video just wanted to make money. They really should be ashamed of themselves. Our children lose on this one.
Customer Rating:      Summary: If you are looking for the speech, then here it is! Comment: I was looking for just the speech and found it. While the first few minutes are documentary style, it then moves into the speech and from what I understand it is the complete speech. We played it on MLK Day and it really moved a lot of people (again).
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Speech that Changed America Comment: Set amidst the backdrop of the Lincoln Memorial, Martin Luther King Jr. gave the speech that changed the social dynamic of America. I Have A Dream, he repeated between refrains of equality and social justice. From that speech erupted a movement - his dream become their dream and now it's our dream and closer to reality than ever before.
I've heard the speech before, and I've read the speech, but seeing it in its setting was a challenge to our basic institutions. It was a challenge to Lincoln himself. A challenge in oration, a challenge in tone, and a challenge to change America more
Peter Jennings narrates the dvd and it incorporates raw footage from marches and protests and concludes with a tribute to the man, murdered for his beliefs. Three hundred thousand people stood before Dr. King that Summer day in 1963 but that's only a fraction of a fraction of those who have been touched by his powerful cadence. It's both poetry and sermon. I'm better for having watched it.
- CV Rick, February 2008
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Editorial Reviews:
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One of the greatest and most memorable moments in the civil rights movement occurred when 200,000 people marched on Washington, D.C., on August 28, 1963. Not only was the gathering of so many united people extraordinary, but that day Martin Luther King Jr. stood before the marchers and delivered his most eloquent and inspiring speech. This video offers the "I Have a Dream" speech in its entirety, as well as footage of the opposition the protesters faced, such as the fire hoses the police in Alabama used to disperse the crowds. The narrator explains that the hoses shot 700 pounds of pressure, enough to strip the bark off a tree. However, the grimness of this era is not the only focus in this video. Dr. King had so much hope and faith in the success of the civil rights movement, and the greatest demonstration of this is in the famous speech. He uses modern metaphors and poetry to get his message out clearly, as when he describes the capitol as having given blacks a check marked "insufficient funds," but he reminds us that they will refuse to believe the bank of justice is bankrupt, that they will cash their check for riches of freedom and security of justice. Throughout the speech he emphasizes his mission: nonviolence as a method of overcoming ("Soul force against militant force") and the importance of walking together as a unified group, and never walking alone. Although the video ends with his death, it still leaves the viewer feeling uplifted with Robert Kennedy's memorial address, pleading with Americans to hold on to Dr. King's views and adopt them as their own. A concise video with one of the greatest speeches of our time. --Samantha Allen Storey
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