DVD - 2 Disc Set - Remastered / Slip Sleeve / Subtitled / Pan & Scan / Dubbed Learn more
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Closed Caption; Disc 2:; Audrey Hepburn - The Paramount years; Remembering Audrey; Rome with a princess; Dalton Trumbo: From a-list to blacklist; Restoring Roman Holiday; Behind the gates: costumes; Paramount in the '50s - retrospective featurette
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Roman Holiday: Feature Film
1. Chapter 1 [1:40]
2. Chapter 2 [5:39]
3. Chapter 3 [6:06]
4. Chapter 4 [5:06]
5. Chapter 5 [5:53]
6. Chapter 6 [6:17]
7. Chapter 7 [9:28]
8. Chapter 8 [9:29]
9. Chapter 9 [5:19]
10. Chapter 10 [6:08]
11. Chapter 11 [4:08]
12. Chapter 12 [7:29]
13. Chapter 13 [4:25]
14. Chapter 14 [5:03]
15. Chapter 15 [9:47]
16. Chapter 16 [7:59]
17. Chapter 17 [8:00]
18. Chapter 18 [10:00]
A charming and poignant fairy tale, Roman Holiday stars that most ethereal and graceful of actresses, Audrey Hepburn, in a role that nearly rivals her dizzying turn in Breakfast at Tiffany's. The plot? Once upon a time, a lovely princess tired of her ivory tower sheds her identity the romantic city of Rome with the help of a handsome American journalist (played by Gregory Peck). Though he initially cares more for the princess' story than for the woman herself, his sentiments gradually shift, deepening and enhancing the movie's emotional impact. Shot on location, scene after scene captures the city's magic, allowing the audience to share the princess' joy in her newfound liberty. Whether she's swimming in the Tiber, smoking a cigarette for the very first time, or walking through glamorous mirrored halls -- an image that mulitplies the loneliness of her aristocratic life -- each experience fairly sparkles -- and is made all the more touching by the knowledge that it may be only fleeting. Beautifully directed by William Wyler (Mrs. Miniver, The Best Years of Our Lives,), and written by the esteemed Dalton Trumbo (Spartacus), this is Hollywood romanticismat its finest -- visually stunning, psychologically complex, and plotted with an emotional punch that makes tissues are essential as popcorn. Karen Backstein, Barnes & Noble
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