Olivier's Shakespeare DVD - Criterion Collection


Item Number: 269

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $150

Online Close: Nov 2, 2020 10:00 PM CST

Bid History: 1 bid - Item Sold!

Description

Shakspeare and Olivier - if they can't help you make it through the pandemice, nobody can!
Henry V, Hamlet, Richard III from the CRITERION COLLECTION


Winter Pandemic Packages are combinations we have put together with an eye towards helping people make it through a Chicago winter that in many ways will be tougher than ever. Each one is designed to provide you some joyful experiences that can bring you happiness at home!


BONUS: 2 boxes of Movie Theater Classic Candy and 2 packages of Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn (Movie Theater Butter, of course!).


Dubbed the greatest actor of the twentieth century, Sir Laurence Olivier, the classically trained and majestically handsome English theater veteran and one-time co-director of London’s Old Vic, first transplanted his passion for Shakespeare to the big screen in the 1940s, and in so doing, allowed Elizabethan verse to break free of its stage-bound origins. Olivier directed only five films in his sixty-year career, yet his three Shakespeare adaptations, presented here together on DVD for the first time, are still widely considered the definitive film adaptations: his thrilling directorial debut, Henry V, stunned 1944 audiences with its vivid Technicolor and full-throttle battle scenes; Hamlet, which won the Academy Awards for Best Picture and Actor, in 1948, brought to stunning life literature’s greatest protagonist; and his legendary Richard III, thought by many to feature Olivier’s most magnetic performance. Faithful to the playwright’s words yet open to the visual potentials of the cinema, these works transcend both screen and stage with timeless passion. Criterion is proud to present this unprecedented filmmaking legacy.

Special Instructions

All items will be available for pickup in Clarendon Hills from Nov. 3 - Nov. 10. Shipping available at an additional charge.

Donated by

Ellen Callahan