Lolita with James Mason: DVD Cover
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Lolita Director: Stanley Kubrick Cast: James Mason, Shelley Winters, Peter Sellers, Sue Lyon

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  • DVD Release Date: 10/23/2007
  • Original Release: 1962
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 15,291
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
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Features

Production notes; Theatrical trailer

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Lolita
1. Polished Credits [2:06]
2. Sore Loser at Ping-Pong [4:59]
3. Portrait of Death [5:10]
4. Charlotte Haze [4:21]
5. The Decisive Factor: Lolita [2:00]
6. At the Drive-In [:39]
7. Bedtime for Lolita [:46]
8. Getting Relaxed [:23]
9. The Summer Dance [3:30]
10. A Daughter With a Lovely Name [4:53]
11. Something Cozier [4:02]
12. A Charming Evening's End [3:49]
13. Poetry for Breakfast [5:50]
14. A Glorius Surprise [1:42]
15. "Don't Forget Me" [2:07]
16. Charlotte's Confession [2:21]
17. The Happy Couple [6:24]
18. Lolita Calling [2:24]
19. Death Wish [3:25]
20. An Open Book [2:57]
21. The Accident [2:38]
22. Bathtub Grief [3:09]
23. Retrieving Lolita [3:19]
24. A Good Deal Together [5:10]
25. Two Normal Guys [5:28]
26. Comes the Cot [4:23]
27. A Game Idea [3:40]
28. Breaking Sad News [3:11]
29. Cross My Heart [3:26]
30. Father/Daughter Spat [5:18]
31. Dr. Zemf's Visit [6:59]
32. Revelations at the Play [2:26]
33. Family Rown [7:13]
34. On the Road Again [1:37]
35. Mystery Car [5:33]
36. The Hospital [3:30]
37. Midnight Caller [2:16]
38. In Care of Her Uncle [4:05]
39. Three Years Later [8:29]
40. Plans to Relocate [2:48]
41. "Come Away With Me Now" [3:18]
42. Epilogue [1:19]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

"How did they make a movie out of Lolita?" teased the print ads of this Stanley Kubrick production. The answer: by adding three years to the title character's age. The original Vladimir Nabokov novel caused no end of scandal by detailing the romance between a middle-aged intellectual and a 12-year-old nymphet. The affair is "cleansed" ever so slightly in the film by making Lolita a 15-year-old (portrayed by 16-year-old Sue Lyon). In adapting his novel to film, Nabokov downplayed the wicked satire and sensuality of the material, concentrating instead on the story's farcical aspects. James Mason plays professor Humbert Humbert, who while waiting to begin a teaching post in the United States rents a room from blowzy Shelley Winters. Winters immediately falls for the worldly Humbert, but he only has eyes for his landlady's nubile daughter Lolita. The professor goes so far as to marry Winters so that he can remain near to the object of his ardor. Turning up like a bad penny at every opportunity is smarmy TV writer Quilty (Peter Sellers), who seems inordinately interested in Humbert's behavior. When Winters happens to read Humbert's diary, she is so revolted by his lustful thoughts that she runs blindly into the street, where she is struck and killed by a car. Without telling Lolita that her mother is dead, Humbert packs her into the car and goes on a cross-country trip, dogged every inch of the way by a mysterious pursuer. Once she gets over the shock of her mother's death, Lolita is agreeable to inaugurating an affair with her stepfather (this is handled very, very discreetly, despite the slavering critical assessments of 1962). But when the girl begins discovering boys her own age, she drifts away from Humbert. One day, she leaves without warning. This is humiliation enough for Humbert; but when he discovers who her secret lover really is, the results are fatal. We are prepared for the ending because the film has been framed as a flashback; what we are not prepared for is Stanley Kubrick's adroit manipulation of our sympathies and expectations. An incredibly long film considering its subject matter, Lolita is never dull, nor does it ever stoop to the sensationalism prevalent in the film's ad campaign. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

Lolitaby Anonymous

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September 27, 2005: Stanley Kubrick's "Lolita", scripted by the novel's author Vladimir Nabokov, has managed to make a place for itself in the hearts of Humberts everywhere. It's filled with marvelous performances: James Mason as the tormented Humbert Peter Sellers as the degenerate writer Clare Quilty, who, in various disguises, chases Humbert and his Lotita as they journey across the American wasteland Shelley Winters as Lolita's mother,the repellent, hopelessly middle-brow Charlotte Haze, whom Humbert expediently marries. The film only hints at sex--a response, presumably to the realities of releasing movies in the early '60s. Fortunately, Nabokov was an ideal choice by Kubrick hired to write the screenplay, which helped keep "Lolita" from slipping into the exercise in sensationalism it might, very easily, have become. But "Lolita" the film is more a work of personal expression for it's director. His great theme--classical art, and its relationship to our lives--permeates "Lolita", as does his later works including "A Clockwork Orange", in which the protagonist beats a woman to death with a statue of Beethoven while listening to the Fifth Symphony. Even in his earlier work, Kubrick was defining his statement about he humanities: they do little to make us more human. Therefore, "Lolita" may not have offered a film version of what was most fascinating in the book is was based on, but it did provide audiences with yet another work of sophisticated entertainment that would have been impossible to make only a few years earlier. [filmfactsman]

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen / Black & White / Dolby 5.1 / Mono edition.

Lolitaby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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September 03, 2005: this is what the medium film was invented for: wonderful storytelling, wonderful images. thank god its black and white. please dont watch the remake. why remake such a masterpiece is beyond me anyway... after long deliberation, still my favorite movie!!

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen / Black & White / Dolby 5.1 / Mono edition.


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