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The Bargain Nexus - Mr. Hulot's Holiday

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List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $44.95
Your Save: $ ( % )
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Manufacturer: Homevision Starring: Georges Adlin, Michèle Brabo, Valentine Camax, Raymond Carl, André Dubois
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786302969702 Format: Black & White ISBN: 6302969700 Label: Homevision Manufacturer: Homevision Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Homevision Release Date: 2000-06-06 Running Time: 85 Studio: Homevision Theatrical Release Date: 1954-06-16
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: M. Hulot's Holiday Comment: A delightful movie from a gentler time. I first saw this in a 16 mm. cinematic format at a friend's house and when it was announced recently that it would be available as a DVD I ordered it. Jacques Tati has no dialog but conveys a wealth of expression and develops very humorous situations via body language.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Timeless French classic - very funny, absolutely enjoyable Comment: Not much dialogue, but you don't need it. Just enjoy the idiosyncrasies of human nature and laugh. Absolutely charming.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Not so great Comment: Tastes in comedy must have really changed in the last 50 years. I found most of the humor in this to be very strained. How did this film ever win at Cannes? Must not have been anything better that year.
There are simply too many fabricated events: people almost getting hit by cars, spilling things, bumping into each other, etc. People getting scared by the "shark" was just silly. How could anyone think that looked like a shark?
There were a few convincing slapstick moments that made me laugh. What I liked most about the film, though, is that it brought me back to a time when people HAD to interact with others more than they do today. And it was something special to go on a picnic, or ride a horse, or go to the beach.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An aquired taste Comment: Having never seen a Tati film in my 40 something years, I was probably expecting too much from this 1950's French comedy. It certainly has its merits. There are some lovely visual gags, which are very clever and funny as well, together with a set of characters who develop with the film.
I found that at 83mins it dragged a bit and whilst the jazzy music theme was great the first time I heard it, after the theme had been repeated about a dozen times it began to get on my nerves. Tati himself was undoubtably a talented visual comedian, and if he had been working 30 years earlier, before the introduction of sound would probably have been a bigger star. If I had seen this film when I was very young I'm sure that it would have made a lasting impression on me (like Laurel & Hardy) and I would have rated it much higher.
As it is, I probably need to see it again to fully appreciate it. Then it may get four stars.
Customer Rating:      Summary: copied by peter sellers et al Comment: Oh, the utter charm of this 1953 black and white movie. When people come to stay at our house, I eventually have them watch this movie, and allow no conversational chatter about the grandkids or the weather...one might miss something!! There is a sweet innocence here, some dry humor and a few pokes of fun at things that...need poking.
If only there were more Mr Hulot films!! Does this film have a plot? Not really. Mr Hulot goes to the seaside for holiday and accidentally, and quite hysterically for us, impacts the same group of fellow holiday makers. One of the superb ironies, and there are many, is that Mr Hulot ends up with the most charming girl, and dances with her dressed in a shirt with a huge lobster on it. (His idea of a pirate costume for a costume ball)
Watch for the shark scene, the card players, the funeral wreath...watch this movie.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Jacques Tati introduces his wonderful character Mr. Hulot in this wildly funny satire of middle-class vacationers on a summer holiday. Tati portrays the endearingly eccentric Hulot, whose presence at a very proper French seaside resort provokes one outrageous catastrophe after another. Considered by many to be Tati's funniest film, Mr. Hulot's Holiday pays homage to the great classic silent comedies with a hilarious blend of colorful characters, sparse dialogue, impeccably timed sight gags, and an innovative sound track.
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