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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9786304698723
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 6304698720
Label: Lopert Pictures Corporation
Manufacturer: Lopert Pictures Corporation
Number Of Items: 1
Picture Format: Pan & Scan
Publisher: Lopert Pictures Corporation
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 30, 1997
Running Time: 121 minutes
Sales Rank: 76532
Studio: Lopert Pictures Corporation
Theatrical Release Date: 1963
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Winner of four Academy Awards including best picture, director, screenplay, and music, this 1963 adaptation of Henry Fielding's classic novel is a rousing, bawdy comedy about a young man's ribald adventures in 18th-century England. Albert Finney is splendidly hilarious in the title role of a charming womanizer who was discovered as an abandoned infant in the bed of Squire Allworthy, a wealthy landowner who named the child Tom Jones and raised him as his own. As a young man, Tom yearns for the comely daughter (Susannah York) of a neighboring squire, but his amorous adventures (including an extended food orgy that becomes the film's funniest scene) lead him to London and to a duel with a jealous husband. He's sentenced to hang, but fate intervenes. A hit around the world, the film was expertly written by noted playwright John Osborne, and Richardson uses a variety of old-style movie techniques to heighten the lusty, good-natured fun. Don't miss this one! --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - WHATS NEW PUSSYCAT !!!
Tom Jones stars Albert Finny as a would be Casanova who LOVES shall we say
the delicate things in life. Winner of BEST PICTURE(???) 1963.
My friend Geri owns all the Best Pictures and I always give her pains and sorrows when she mentions this for all I can think of is....
~~~~ITS NOT UNUSUAL TO BE LOVED BY ANYONE~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~AND SHE STRIKESSSSS LIKE THUNDERBALL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~YOU LOVE THE WAY SHE WALKS THE WAY SHE MOVES THE WAY SHE ... Read More
Rating: - Worst "Best" Picture Oscar Winner Ever!
When you think that "Lawrence of Arabia" preceded this and "My Fair Lady" followed this it boggles the mind that something as terribly bad as this film could ever be mentioned in the same breath as those two brilliant all-time classics of film. I thought that "Gigi" was the worst film ever to win the Best Picture award until I saw this. Much of this film reminded me of the typical Benny Hill comedy and we all know just how "well" those jokes have aged over the years.
Not only is the ... Read More
Rating: - One of the Best Adaptations to Screen Ever
Tom Jones is one of the greatest books in English literature- and still very fun to read. This movie captures the spirit (and the essentials of the story) perfectly. Of course, there is a great deal more detail in the book but the movie would have had to be ten times longer to capture that- of necessity screen adaptations have to pare down the story to essentials in order to fit a two to two and a half hour time frame. The result is often a movie that bares little resemblance to the original story. ... Read More
Rating: - One of the worst "BEST PICTURES": TOM JONES,1963.DVD is like the VHS!
Oh well...it's just my opinion!
I found the movie,after all these years, not funny,trite,boring,but most of all not well researched as far as costumes and make up.This Period Piece about the foundling Tom Jones, and his "naughty" chasing of the ladies,is anything but that.As far as the look of the film,there is much that was overlooked in the production value of this film.The costumes were extremely dull and unimaginative.Some characters appear in the same get up in every scene. There was ... Read More
Rating: - Tom Jones
Winner of the Best Picture Oscar, Tony Richardson's rousing film has all vital elements in proper alignment: a brilliant screenplay by playwright John Osborne, swift pacing fueled by John Addison's zippy harpsichord score, and colorful performances from a powerhouse cast including Griffith, Joan Greenwood, Diane Cilento, Edith Evans, and a young David Warner as the priggish Mr. Blifil. York is the epitome of fair English beauty, and Finney carries off the central role with gusto. Sumptuous color photography ... Read More
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