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DVD Extras
Film Details
Cast
John Mills, Ian Carmichael, Richard Attenborough, Carol Marsh, Bernard Lee, Dennis Price, Terry-Thomas
Technical Details
Certificate |
PG |
Length |
672 mins |
Label |
OPTIM |
Format |
DVD B&W |
Region |
2 |
Aspect |
1.33:1 |
Cat No |
OPTD1210 |
Main Language |
English |
1895-1997, Various , DVD
£65.00
RRP: £75.00
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To commemorate the BFI...
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Film Description
Contains The Ship That Died of Shame, Brighton Rock, Dunkirk, The Man Upstairs, Private's Progress, Brothers in Law and The Angry Silence.
Richard Attenborough needs no introduction as the elder statesman of British cinema. Beginning his acting career in the classic war film In Which We Serve and continuing for the next 5 decades, Attenborough has had a distinguished acting career that is celebrated in this set. Featuring a range of his best roles, from the iconic Carol Reed / Graham Greene collaboration Brighton Rock, a BAFTA nominated turn in The Angry Silence to his everyman in stirring wartime classic Dunkirk, by way of some light relief in the classic Boulting Bros comedies Private’s Progress and Brothers in Law, this collection salutes an actor whose onscreen talents deserve to be lauded as richly as his considerable achievements in directing.
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By Julian Upton on 3rd June 2008
Even today, well-loved stars who have the courage to consistently play a range of snivelling cowards, rank outsiders and deviant psychopaths are few and far between. B... more >
Even today, well-loved stars who have the courage to consistently play a range of snivelling cowards, rank outsiders and deviant psychopaths are few and far between. But Richard Attenborough was doing it sixty years ago. From his legendary turn as Pinkie, the teenage gangster of Brighton Rock, Attenborough experimented with roles that were so unsympathetic it’s a wonder he retained his star status at all.
Brighton Rock is the most high profile film here, but just as interesting are the less well-known titles. In The Man Upstairs he is an unassuming lodger at the end of his tether, holed up in his room after an uncharacteristic act of violence. In The Ship That Died of Shame he is an obnoxious spiv, involved with an ex-Navy mob in a smuggling operation, while Dunkirk sees him play a small craft owner summoning up his courage to help the evacuation. Lastly, The Angry Silence is a bristling portrayal of a factory in the grip of industrial action. Attenborough plays the strike-breaker. < less
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