DVD - 2 Disc Set - Remastered / Wide Screen / Restored / Slip Sleeve Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $11.69 |
| VHS | $59.99 |
Closed Caption; Disc 1: ; Commentary by producer Richard Shepherd; ; Disc 2:; A Golightly Gathering; Henry Mancini: More Than Music; Mr. Yunioshi: An Asian Perspective; The Making of a Classic; It's So Audrey: A Style Icon; Behind the Gates: The Tour; Brilliance in a Blue Box; Audrey's letter to Tiffany; Original theatrical trailer; Galleries
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Breakfast at Tiffany's: Feature Film
1. Chapter 1 [13:19]
2. Chapter 2 [3:42]
3. Chapter 3 [7:39]
4. Chapter 4 [15:10]
5. Chapter 5 [2:00]
6. Chapter 6 [1:55]
7. Chapter 7 [3:27]
8. Chapter 8 [4:43]
9. Chapter 9 [5:49]
10. Chapter 10 [6:40]
11. Chapter 11 [15:06]
12. Chapter 12 [6:21]
13. Chapter 13 [7:03]
14. Chapter 14 [11:29]
Blake Edwards's elegant 1961 adaptation of Truman Capote's novella has lost none of its sophisticated sheen or stylish sparkle, thanks to Audrey Hepburn's divine performance as wild child Holly Golightly, who lives a carefree, madcap existence in New York. She tells her new neighbor, struggling writer Paul Varjak (George Peppard), "I've taken care of myself for a long time." While the term “escort” and its less seemly variations don’t come into play, Holly’s sustains herself with $50 gratuities from the men she dates. Would-be novelist Paul is compromised, too, as he accepts cash on the nightstand from his "decorator" (Patricia Neal). Hepburn's Holly is a screen icon: the supremely elegant party girl who seems desperate for love yet thoroughly isolated from it. For all its fun and parties, Breakfast at Tiffany's is at heart a somber film, rich in the romance of the big city yet attuned to its soul-crushing realities. Hepburn and Peppard get wonderful support from the rest of the cast: Buddy Ebsen as a figure from Holly's surprising past; John McGiver as an incredibly patient Tiffany's salesman; Martin Balsam as a Hollywood sleaze who has Holly's number; and Alan Reed (best known as the voice of Fred Flintstone) as convict Sally Tomato, to whom the unwitting Holly delivers "weather reports" in prison. Contemporary viewers coming to the film for the first time may be shocked by Mickey Rooney’s turn as Mr. Yunioshi, Holly's perpetually exasperated and disapproving Japanese neighbor -- Rooney's performance begins at racially insensitive and never looks back. Perhaps the most significant performer after Hepburn, though, is Henry Mancini: It’s impossible to imaging the film without his dreamy Oscar-winning score and its melancholy theme, "Moon River." This Anniversary Edition sparkles in a pink box that contains a number of other gems: audio commentary by producer Richard Shepherd; a candid featurette, "The Making of a Classic"; segments devoted to Hepburn as fashion trend-setter; and the star's tribute to Tiffany's. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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