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Closed Caption; Audio commentary by singer Marni Nixon and film historian Joseph McBride; AMC Backstory episode: "An Affair to Remember"; Movietone newsreel (shipboard premiere); Still gallery; Theatrical trailer; Anamorphic widescreen (aspect ratio 2.35:1); Audio: English Stereo, French Stereo, Spanish Mono; Subtitles: English, Spanish
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Main Titles
2. On the Air
3. A Most Eligible Bachelor
4. A Cheat and a Thief
5. Dinner With Nickie
6. A Shipboard Romance
7. A Magical Day Ashore
8. Back on Board
9. Keeping a Distance
10. The Last Night
11. Making Plans to Reunite
12. An Interview
13. A Starving Artist
14. Landing in New York
15. Tragedy Strikes
16. Visiting a Memory
17. A Devastating Secret
18. Visiting the Teacher
19. A Surprise Reunion
20. The Painting
Director Leo McCarey's remake of his own equally satisfying Love Affair, this glossy, perfectly engineered romantic drama from 1957 glorifies the virtues of well-appointed sacrifice, while turning a tourist-saturated Manhattan landmark into one the world's most alluring destinations. A notorious playboy (Cary Grant) and an ex-nightclub singer (Deborah Kerr) fall in love on their way to marrying other, wealthier people. They agree to reunite six months later at the observation deck of the Empire State Building if they find that they can't go on without each other. As always, fate intervenes, and Cupid's arrow veers off course despite the lovers' best intentions. Kerr's innate goodness works well here and makes her continuously self-denying behavior believable and free of self-pity. Grant is never less than charming and perpetually suave, even when his underlying distrust of women pokes through. And seasoned pro McCarey's sure handling of the witty, adult script keeps it all together. An unbeatable blend of noble suffering and beautiful surroundings, An Affair to Remember is a classic romantic melodrama. So classic, in fact, that one of the most successful romantic movies of the '90s -- Sleepless in Seattle --used it as a defining line between those who understand love and those who can't hope to., Barnes & Noble
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