The Lady from Shanghai
1948 -
Not Rated
Release Date: 10/03/2000
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Full Frame - 1.33:1
Audio:
Dolby Digital Mono - English, French, Spanish, Portuguese
Subtitles - English, Chinese, French, Korean, Portuguese, Thai - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - 1. Peter Bogdanovich - Film Scholar
Featurette - "A Conversation with Peter Bogdanovich"
Trailers - 1. Original Theatrical Trailer
- 2. Bonus Trailers - THE LAST HURRAH, THE LOVES OF CARMEN, A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS
Interactive Features:
Scene Access
Interactive Menus
Text/ Photo Galleries:
Vintage Advertising
Production Notes
Biographies - 1. Orson Welles - Director/ Star
2. Rita Hayworth - Star
Time:
87
mins.
J&R Item # 1011791_6
UPC # 043396048591
Label: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
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THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, an atmospheric film noir based on Sherwood King's novel IF I DIE BEFORE I WAKE, features Orson Welles as producer, director, co-screenwriter, and star. Welles plays rogue seaman Michael O'Hara, complete with Irish brogue. After saving beautiful Elsa Bannister (Rita Hayworth) from thieves in Central Park, O'Hara is requested to serve on the yacht owned by Elsa's husband, Arthur (Welles veteran Everett Sloane), an older man who needs special crutches in order to walk. A fiery passion lurks underneath the relationship between Michael and Elsa; in actuality, the marriage between Welles and Hayworth was ending at the time the film was shot. Enter George Grisby (the eerie-sounding Glenn Anders), one of Bannister's associates and a man with a very special offer for O'Hara, luring him into a web of lies and murder.
Although Welles claimed he made THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI just to finance other projects and the film does not show off his typical Wellesian flair, it still plays like a classic noir that draws the viewer in and never lets go. The characters are complex and fascinating, and the tension runs high and hot as the truth behind all the lies starts to come out. The film is most famous for its thrilling climax, which takes place in a hall of mirrors. Welles might have considered THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI workmanlike, but this noir thriller is only as workmanlike as any Welles film can be.
Cast:
"...A lot of fun....Welles' usual technical invention is everywhere..."
-- Mark Chalon Smith
, (Los Angeles Times)
"...A noirish murder mystery that'll push the pin all the way to the right on your bizarro meter..." -- Mike Clark , (USA Today) "...[With] some fascinating visual set-pieces....They're up there with the darkest imaginings of Welles' genius..." -- Jonathan Crocker , (Total Film)
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