The King and I with Deborah Kerr: DVD Cover
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The King and I Director: Walter Lang Cast: Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner, Rita Moreno, Martin Benson

DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Stereo / Mono Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 04/27/1999
  • Original Release: 1956
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 8,771

Viewer Rating: (13 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Unforgettable" See All

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DVD - Letterbox$22.94

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
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  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Widescreen format [aspect ratio 2.55:1]; Interactive menus; Scene selection; Original theatrical trailer; Languages: English 5.1 Surround; English stereo; French mono; Subtitles: English; Spanish; Movietone news trailers; Singalong

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 --
0. Scene Selections
1. Overture [3:53]
2. Main Title [1:55]
3. Siam 1862 [2:26]
4. I Whistle a Happy Tune(Anna and Louis) [1:59]
5. The Kralahome [2:49]
6. The Trip Through Bangkok [1:21]
7. The Royal Palace [2:18]
8. Anna Meets The King [1:54]
9. The Harem [3:03]
10. The March of the Siamese Children(Orchestra) [4:42]
11. Anna and the Royal Wives [2:27]
12. Hello, Young Lovers(Anna) [3:31]
13. East Meets West [2:05]
14. A Puzzlement(The King) [3:41]
15. The Classroom [1:45]
16. Getting to Know You(Anna, Wives, Children) [11:18]
17. Anna is Summoned [:43]
18. Moses, Lincoln and Elephants [4:55]
19. Garden Rendezvous [:48]
20. We Kiss is a Shadow(Lun Tha and Tuptim) [1:34]
21. News From Singapore [3:50]
22. The King's Promise [1:33]
23. Lady Thiang's Appeal [2:21]
24. Something Wonderful(Lady Thiang) [1:42]
25. Anna's Advice [3:14]
26. The Temple [6:14]
27. Intermission Music [2:41]
28. The Banquet [4:05]
29. Arrival of the Ambassador [2:26]
30. Anna and Sir Edward Ramsay [2:22]
31. The Grand Entrance [2:05]
32. The Small House of Uncle Thomas(Tuptim and Chorus) [4:05]
33. "Loving friends" [1:32]
34. "The Escape" [1:50]
35. "King Simon of Legree" [1:14]
36. "Buddha Make a Miracle" [2:43]
37. "I beg of you..." [4:18]
38. "Poor Little Eva" [:27]
39. The Lovers Escape [2:03]
40. Song of the King(The King and Anna) [:28]
41. Shall We Dance?(Anna and the King) [3:04]
42. "Not Holding Two Hands" [:10]
43. Tuptim is Found [2:30]
44. Leaving Siam [2:45]
45. The King's Letter [2:05]
46. Deathbed [3:36]
47. Princess Ing Yaowalak [1:50]
48. The Next King. [1:06]
49. No More Bowing [3:21]
50. Something Wonderful Reprise(Chorus) [3:04]
51. Exit Music [2:24]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

All the qualities that made Rodgers and Hammerstein's Broadway smash The King and I a memorable stage experience are faithfully translated to the big screen in this dynamic 1956 film version. Another brilliant musical treatment of a "straight" work (like State Fair, Oklahoma, and Carousel), King tells the story of widowed British schoolteacher Anna Leonowens (winningly played by Deborah Kerr), who accepts a commission to educate the children of the Siamese king (Yul Brynner), a crafty potentate who at once realizes the need for his offspring's tutelage in Western ways yet resists the resultant liberation from tradition. Kerr, who benefits from Marni Nixon's dubbed-in singing voice, invests Anna with the requisite charm, tact, and subtlety, all the while maintaining a self-assuredness that frequently borders on the defiant. Re-creating his stage role, Brynner is outstanding as the petulant but not altogether dictatorial monarch. Among the supporting players, Rita Moreno excels as the King's slave Tuptim, and Carlos Rivas commands sympathy as her lover Lun Tha. Young Rex Thompson portrays Anna's young son with the proper mixture of youthful exuberance and impishness, and veteran character actor Alan Mowbray steals scenes left and right as a minor functionary befuddled by the teacher's growing influence over the king. Although four of the stage show's numbers were eliminated from the film, the best songs were retained, among them "I Whistle a Happy Tune," "Getting to Know You," "Shall We Dance," and "Hello Young Lovers." Having achieved the rare distinction of being more satisfying than the original stage presentation, this memorable movie still holds up as pictorially exquisite, dramatically sound, musically exciting, and altogether glorious. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

King and Iby yellowroses

Reader Rating:
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February 16, 2009: This is an older movie, but one you won't forget, and is worth adding to ones collection.

This review was written about the DVD Letterbox edition.

Glorious to Beholdby Anonymous

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July 24, 2008: Fifty years and counting, this is a show that is in the memory of many forever...the legendary performance of Yul Brynner, the elegance of Deborah Kerr in her whirling hoopskirts...the beautiful Rodgers and Hammerstein score conducted Alfred Newman...A bit innacurate historically? Well, yes...But it is still a feast for the eyes and ears.

This review was written about the DVD Letterbox edition.


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