DVD - Ford on Fox Collection Learn more
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Audio commentary by film historian Joseph McBride and Steinbeck scholar Susan Shillinglaw; U.K. prologue; Darryl F. Zanuck: 20th Century Filmmaker as seen on Biography on the A&E Network; Restoration comparison; Original theatrical trailer; Still gallery; Fox Movietone News: 1934 - Worst Drought in Many Years Hits Middle West, Midwest Drought Distress Becomes National Disaster, Outlaws; 1941 - Roosevelt Lauds Motion Pictures at Academy Fete
Full Product DetailsDisc #1, Side A -- The Ford at Fox Collection: The Grapes of Wrath - Feature
1. Main Titles [1:04]
2. Hitchin' a Ride [3:14]
3. Losing the Cell [5:27]
4. Emptiness [3:36]
5. Muley's Story [7:02]
6. Hidin' Out [2:11]
7. California Promise [3:16]
8. Joad Reunion [2:21]
9. Letting Go [2:30]
10. "I Belong Here!" [5:13]
11. Don't Look Back [5:07]
12. Employment Equation [5:22]
13. A Ten Cent Loaf [4:05]
14. California Border [4:24]
15. Driving Through the Desert [5:20]
16. Beautiful Valley [2:09]
17. A Fair Share [6:32]
18. Business Practices [4:27]
19. No More Okies [4:12]
20. A Job [6:57]
21. Uprising [7:46]
22. "Nothing to Trust" [4:40]
23. Gone for Good [2:17]
24. A Stroke of Luck [5:19]
25. Word of Warning [2:40]
26. Dance Night [3:49]
27. The Red River Valley [3:02]
28. On the Trail [3:28]
29. "I'll Be Everywhere" [5:00]
30. Good-bye [1:13]
31. "Twenty Days Work" [1:53]
32. "We're the People That Live" [3:01]
It's rare for cinematic adaptations of classic novels to attain the same status as their sources, but John Ford's 1940 version of The Grapes of Wrath is every bit as meritorious as John Steinbeck's novel about displaced dirt farmers making their way to California during the darkest days of the Great Depression. Some of Steinbeck's most memorable bits -- including the novel's startling but poignant ending -- are softened or eliminated for the movie, but overall Ford captures the book's essence with remarkable skill and sensitivity. Henry Fonda, in one of his best-remembered roles, plays the scion of an Oklahoma family, the Joads, forced off their land by extended droughts and desperate economic conditions. Like so many others seduced by the promise of employment in California, the so-called "land of milk and honey," they pack their meager belongings into a ramshackle car and head west. Their odyssey exposes the Joads to all sorts of people -- some of them willing to exploit the downtrodden Okies, and others equally willing to lend a hand to fellow Americans down on their luck. Fonda's gradual transformation from mild-mannered farm boy to committed political activist culminates in a memorable curtain speech that's only one of the highlights of a masterful job of acting; indeed, his Tom Joad is among the most vividly drawn characters in Hollywood history. Supporting player Jane Darwell won an Oscar for her turn as the strong-willed matriarch of the Joad clan, and Charlie Grapewin, Russell Simpson, John Carradine, John Qualen, and Eddie Quillan also turn in top-drawer performances. Yet Ford's directorial contributions go far beyond steering the actors: He stages sequences and frames shots with sublime attention to detail. The saga of the Joads is tragic in many ways, but this movie doesn't wallow in the mire -- instead, it celebrates the uniquely American qualities of self-sufficiency and perseverance. And it offers, from the viewpoint of milepost 1940, the promise of social change that, ironically, is not yet complete. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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