Computer Shop | AMD based products
 Location:  Home » VHS » The African Queen [VHS]    
Categories
Books
Computers
DVD
Electronics
Industrial & Science
Kindle Store
Magazines
MP3 Downloads
Music
Musical Instruments
Office Products
Photo & Camera
Software
Toys
VHS
PC & Video Games
Wireless
Related Categories
• Movies
Departments
Movies & TV

The African Queen [VHS]

The African Queen [VHS]Director: John Huston
Actors: Humphrey Bogart, Katharine Hepburn, Robert Morley, Peter Bull, Theodore Bikel
Studio: CBS/Fox VIdeo
Category: Video

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $1.00
as of 2/11/2012 23:32 EST details
You Save: $13.98 (93%)

In Stock


New (26) Used (119) Collectible (11) from $0.01

Seller: ChrisEly
Sales Rank: 20,386

Format: NTSC, Color, HiFi Sound, Full Screen
Languages: English (Original Language), German (Original Language), Swahili (Original Language), English (Published)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: VHS Tape
Discs: 1
Running Time: 105 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 630150528X
UPC: 086162202537
EAN: 9786301505284
ASIN: 630150528X

Release Date: August 26, 1997
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
One of Bogey's best movie. If you are a Bogey fan, then you want this movie for your collection.

Amazon.com
John Huston made better, more powerful films than The African Queen, but none so universally beloved, on first appearance and over the decades since. In this adaptation of the C.S. Forester novel, Humphrey Bogart (who would win the best-actor Oscar®) and Katharine Hepburn costar as an unlikely pair thrown together in German East Africa during the First World War. He's the gin-soaked skipper of what we might call the title character, a none-too-reliable steam launch chugging along the backwaters of the "Dark Continent." Hepburn's a straitlaced Methodist missionary who, following the demise of her bachelor brother (Robert Morley) and the burning of their village by Kaiser Wilhelm's troops, determines that the Queen should be used to attack the Königin Luise, a large German gunboat patrolling a lake downriver. It's an absurd proposition. Then again, John Huston and the absurd were always on familiar terms.

It wasn't until he got to the Congo that the director realized what a funny picture The African Queen was going to be, thanks to the odd coupling of Bogie and Kate: "One brought out a vein of humor in the other, and this comic sense, which had been missing from the book and screenplay, grew out of our day-to-day shooting." Within the gunwales of a not-very-large boat, Huston managed to devise myriad ways to keep his two leading characters on separate visual planes even as circumstance and tender emotional urgency conspired to push them together. This was Huston's first feature film in Technicolor, and the peerless Jack Cardiff (The Red Shoes) was there to shoot it. Unfortunately, neither of them could do anything about the process-screen technology needed for, and glaringly inadequate to, the sequence of Bogart and Hepburn shooting the rapids--just about the only lapse in an enchanting fairy tale for adults. The script is credited to Huston and James Agee; the uncredited Peter Viertel, summoned to the African locations to write some additional material, would later fictionalize the experience as White Hunter, Black Heart, a savage roman à clef. --Richard T. Jameson


CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.


US | CA | UK | DE | FR


Associate-O-Matic