Kind Hearts and Coronets with Dennis Price: DVD Cover
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Kind Hearts and Coronets Director: Robert Hamer Cast: Dennis Price, Alec Guinness, Valerie Hobson

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  • DVD Release Date: 02/28/2006
  • Original Release: 1949
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 6,402
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Features

Disc One:; New, restored high-definition Digital transfer; American ending; Original theatrical trailer; Gallery of archival production and publicity photographs; Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing; ; Disc Two:; A feature-length BBC documentary on the history of Ealing Studios; A rare, 70-minute talk-show appearance by Alec Guinness, from 1977; Plus: A new essay by film critic Philip Kemp

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Kind Hearts and Coronets
1. Noblesse Oblige [4:58]
2. A Brief History [6:17]
3. Poor Relations [6:20]
4. A Humiliating Experience [5:23]
5. Fate Worse Than Death [7:14]
6. Henry and Edith D'Ascoyne [6:30]
7. "An Agony of Suspense" [4:40]
8. En Masse [5:20]
9. Bachelor Apartment [3:18]
10. Reverend Henry and Lady Agatha [6:16]
11. Family Curse [1:47]
12. Guilty Secret [6:33]
13. Extreme Indelicacy [6:40]
14. An Adroit Maneuver [7:44]
15. The Tenth Duke of Chalfont [7:32]
16. The Trial [2:52]
17. Miracles [7:58]
18. End Credits [8:19]
19. Color Bars [:39]
Disc #2 -- Kind Hearts and Coronets
1. "Decent British Values" [10:18]
2. The War Effort [6:47]
3. The Club [9:24]
4. Three Brilliant Films: 1949 [10:57]
5. Robert Hamer [3:19]
6. A Puritan Streak [6:27]
7. Resident Nonconformist [8:05]
8. Boats and Trains [7:58]
9. Sold [10:44]
10. End Credits [1:28]
1. The Man With No Face [6:16]
2. Oliver Twist [4:44]
3. Student Years [10:41]
4. Ealing and Comedy [5:54]
5. Animal Stories [8:12]
6. Walks [6:27]
7. Film Stars [9:09]
8. Playwrights [4:29]
9. Star Wars [4:32]
10. The Best Advice [7:55]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Charm, elegance, and serial murder are mixed together like a perfect martini in this exquisitely dry and quintessentially British black comedy. Directed by Robert Hamer, it's the first of the great run of comedies featuring Alec Guinness that emerged from England’s Ealing Studios. Dennis Price stars as an English duke and convicted murderer who, on the eve of his execution, relates in flashback how he methodically killed off all the rival heirs to his titles -- murders that become increasingly inventive and amusing as his chronicle unfolds. The peerless Guinness plays all of the victims -- male and female -- in a chameleonlike tour de force. That the conceit never feels gimmicky is an enduring testament to Guinness's brilliance. Price is wonderful, too; his would-be duke is one of the most appealing cold-blooded killers ever put on film. Consummately refined, yet spiced up with delicious twists and intrigues, Kind Hearts and Coronets stops short of hilarity, opting instead for a subtle comic tone that brings the morbidity of the narrative into startling relief. Perhaps the most familiar of Guinness's Ealing productions, it is also one of cinema's all-time great comedies. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 1

Jacket of the film is misleading...it ain't corny.by Anonymous

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December 17, 2003: Avoided for months watching this after the old man gave it to me, the video jacket giving off the smell of Britsh silliness. Surprisingly effective, flowing, and intriguing narrative yarn similar to And Then There Were None. This one has less hollywood, and a commanding performance by Dennis Price(whom I've never seen either, but will look for from now on). The writing is more Balzac than Agatha Christie (I'm not much of a mystery reader; anyway, its more severe). The comedy is slight, mostly in the black humor and Guiness' performances. This mystery also has more charm for me, tastefully created through set design, costume, and Price's quietly intelligent portrayal.

This review was written about the DVD Black & White edition.