Anna and the King with Jodie Foster: DVD Cover

    Anna and the King Director: Andy Tennant Cast: Jodie Foster, Chow Yun-Fat, Bai Ling, Tom Felton

    DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 02/04/2003
    • Original Release: 1999
    • Rating: Rated PG13
    • Sales Rank: 14,514

    Viewer Rating: (9 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Commentary by Andy Tennant; Five Featurettes; Television special; Six deleted scenes; Theatrical trailer; Music video "How Can I Not Love You" by Joy Enriquez

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Anna and the King
    1. Main Titles (The Englishwoman)
    2. The Palace
    3. Meeting the King
    4. The Royal Family
    5. The Royal School
    6. Slavery
    7. The King's Approval
    8. The Rice Festival
    9. Burmese Death Squads
    10. A Royal Party
    11. The Marketplace
    12. A Small Gift
    13. Fever
    14. A Letter
    15. An Attack
    16. Tuptim
    17. Kincaid's Information
    18. Nong Khai
    19. The White Elephant
    20. End Titles

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Anna and the King is the third film to chronicle the adventures of British governess Anna Leonowens in 19th-century Siam, and it is far and away the most picturesque. Gorgeous location photography lends verisimilitude to the dreamily exotic setting and by-now-familiar story. Jodie Foster makes a placidly beautiful yet passionate Anna, who accepts the job of teaching the 58 children sired by Siam's King Mongkut (Hong Kong action star Chow Yun-Fat) and immediately finds herself locked in a battle of wills with the potentate. Director Andy Tennant draws repeated comparisons between Eastern and Western philosophies, and he sharply delineates Mongkut's dilemma: The king knows times are changing and wants his children to be equipped to cope with those changes, yet he remains strangely unwilling to jettison beliefs and traditions that have governed his people's behavior for countless centuries. Neither Anna and the King of Siam (1948) nor The King and I (1956) deal with political intrigue and physical danger as specifically as this adaptation of the tale. But it is those elements, along with the fine performances of Foster and Chow, that make Anna and the King such a rousing success and, in many ways, the best of the three versions. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    Excellent movieby Linux-Guy

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    July 04, 2009: The scenery is breathtakingly beautiful and in itself enough to merit watching the movie. However, it is more than the scenery. I thought that Jodie Foster and Chow Yun-Fat both put in a wonderful performance working off each other. The story is very entertaining and contains all of the characteristics of a movie that will keep your attention: romance, action, humor, and in this movie, the differences in culture.

    Worth the watch.

    This review was written about the DVD Special Edition \ Full Frame edition.

    I Also Recommend: The Last Samurai.

    A Modern Epicby E.Dzanda

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    June 08, 2009: Anna and the King is what I like to think of as a modern adaptation of The King and I, the Rogers & Hammerstein musical, but with a more relatable story. Jodie Foster plays a strong and yet elegant British schoolteacher to the King's (played by Chow Yun-Fat) many children. This film has a lot to offer its audience from the exotic culture of Siam, to the grand landscapes. This film touches on the worldview of the time (1860s) when England was colonizing countries all throughout Asia. It also explores the issues of slavery, arranged marriages, and forbidden love. This is family friendly film that brings the epic film genre into the twentieth century.

    I Also Recommend: Moulin Rouge, Tristan + Isolde, Knights of the Round Table, Planet Earth - The Complete Series, Waking Ned Devine.


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