The Good Earth with Paul Muni: DVD Cover
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The Good Earth Director: Victor Fleming, Sidney Franklin Cast: Paul Muni, Luise Rainer, Walter Connolly, Tilly Losch

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/31/2006
  • Original Release: 1937
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 8,158
 
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Features

Closed Caption; Vintage musical short Hollywood party; Supreme Court of films picks the Champions Newsreel; Theatrical trailer; Languages: English & Français; Subtitles: English, Français & Español (Feature film only)

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- The Good Earth
1. Credits [2:05]
2. Wang Lung's Marriage Day [7:02]
3. O-Lan. [6:43]
4. Planting a Seed [5:11]
5. I Am With Child [4:08]
6. Racing the Rain [5:11]
7. A Son [4:33]
8. More Land [5:05]
9. Return to the Great House [4:46]
10. Famine [5:37]
11. Hunger Makes Men Mad [6:09]
12. No Sale, No Life [4:39]
13. Migrating Soutn [4:19]
14. Meat and Job Theft [4:04]
15. Revolution [3:31]
16. Storming the Great House [4:24]
17. Firing Squad [3:30]
18. Precious Stones [5:44]
19. Contracts Agreed and Proposed [3:25]
20. Dancing Lotus [3:51]
21. Another Woman [6:48]
22. Second Wife's Wish [3:15]
23. Taken Her Fancy [2:18]
24. Better Dead Than Here [3:59]
25. Friends Part [3:14]
26. Banishment [3:53]
27. Preparing for Invasion [3:48]
28. Locust Plague [7:42]
29. On the Land Again [2:23]
30. Wedding Feast [3:04]
31. You Are the Earth [3:27]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Producer Irving Thalberg, the filmmaking genius known as Hollywood's Boy Wonder, died tragically young at the age of 37, just as production was wrapping up on this epic adaptation of Pearl Buck's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about life in China. Consequently, the film was dedicated to Thalberg -- and what a fitting monument it proved to be. Produced for a then-whopping $3 million, The Good Earth spared no expense in creating a believable Chinese countryside out of MGM's Culver City back lot and surrounding environs. It's the story of Wang Lung (Paul Muni), a simple farmer who takes wife O-Lan (Luise Rainer) in an arranged marriage and builds a family and a farm, only to abandon both after becoming showered with wealth. Fate eventually intervenes, and Wang learns what is truly important. Director Sidney Franklin, not known as a master stylist (and with good reason), allows the pace to flag, and at times the film seems ponderous. But it has several elaborate, powerful sequences -- a violent storm, the pillaging of a Chinese village, and, most memorably, the devastation caused by a plague of locusts -- and incredibly skillful performances by a mostly Occidental cast with Asian makeup. Vienna-born Rainer won her second consecutive Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of the humble, dignified, and loving O-Lan; Muni, an actor prone to over-emoting, hits every note with perfect pitch here. Long and (by today's standards) occasionally turgid, The Good Earth nonetheless remains an extraordinary achievement, one that belongs in any collection of classic movies from Hollywood's Golden Age. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Good Earthby Anonymous

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May 20, 2004: This is one of my favorite movies. I remember seeing it as a child, long before I was old enough to read Pearl S. Buck's book. It is a good adaptation and a great movie. It is deservedly called a 'classic'.

This review was written about the VHS edition.

Good Earthby Anonymous

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June 28, 2003: I first saw The Good Earth as a Junior in High School for English class; it's been on my list of favorites since then. The classic movies need to be returned to TV for us older people to enjoy again.

This review was written about the VHS edition.


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