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A Streetcar Named Desire - Steelbook Edition
$23.99
A Streetcar Named Desire is the 1951 Elia Kazan/Tennessee Williams triumph that earned 12 Academy Award nominations, including "Best Picture", while also courting controversy with some last-minute edits undertaken to appease the censorship board.
Marlon Brando made his first indelible mark on audiences in this powerful adaptation of Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Gone With the Wind's Vivien Leigh is the neurotic belle Blanche du Bois who struggles to hold on to her fading Southern gentility against the brutish badgering of her brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski (Brando). Leigh, Kim Hunter, Karl Malden and the rich black-and-white cinematography were all awarded Oscars for this cinematic classic.
While Brando was the only one of the film's four Oscar-nominated actors not to secure a win, his passionate cries of "Stella! Stella! Stella!" remain etched forever in Hollywood history.
Special Features
- Commentary by Karl Malden, Rudy Behlmer and Jeff Young
- Elia Kazan: A Director's Journey (1995 First Run documentary)
- A Streetcar on Broadway
- A Streetcar in Hollywood
- Censorship and Desire
- North and the Music of the South
- An Actor Named Brando
- Marlon Brando Screen Test
- Outtakes
- Audio Outtakes
- Warner Bros. (1951)
- 20th Century Fox (1958 Reissue)
- United Artists (1970 Reissue)
- Warner Bros.
- 125 mins approx.
- 15
- 1.37:1 Widescreen
- English
- 1
- Warner Bros.
- Elia Kazan
Brazilian Portuguese
- Vivien Leigh
- Marlon Brando
- Kim Hunter
- Karl Malden
- Rudy Bond
- Nick Dennis
- Peg Hillias
Brazilian Portuguese, Castilian Spanish, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Latin Spanish, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovakian, Swedish
- 1951
- Free
A Streetcar Named Desire - Steelbook Edition
$23.99
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A Streetcar Named Desire is the 1951 Elia Kazan/Tennessee Williams triumph that earned 12 Academy Award nominations, including "Best Picture", while also courting controversy with some last-minute edits undertaken to appease the censorship board.
Marlon Brando made his first indelible mark on audiences in this powerful adaptation of Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Gone With the Wind's Vivien Leigh is the neurotic belle Blanche du Bois who struggles to hold on to her fading Southern gentility against the brutish badgering of her brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski (Brando). Leigh, Kim Hunter, Karl Malden and the rich black-and-white cinematography were all awarded Oscars for this cinematic classic.
While Brando was the only one of the film's four Oscar-nominated actors not to secure a win, his passionate cries of "Stella! Stella! Stella!" remain etched forever in Hollywood history.
Special Features
- Commentary by Karl Malden, Rudy Behlmer and Jeff Young
- Elia Kazan: A Director's Journey (1995 First Run documentary)
- A Streetcar on Broadway
- A Streetcar in Hollywood
- Censorship and Desire
- North and the Music of the South
- An Actor Named Brando
- Marlon Brando Screen Test
- Outtakes
- Audio Outtakes
- Warner Bros. (1951)
- 20th Century Fox (1958 Reissue)
- United Artists (1970 Reissue)
- Warner Bros.
- 125 mins approx.
- 15
- 1.37:1 Widescreen
- English
- 1
- Warner Bros.
- Elia Kazan
Brazilian Portuguese
- Vivien Leigh
- Marlon Brando
- Kim Hunter
- Karl Malden
- Rudy Bond
- Nick Dennis
- Peg Hillias
Brazilian Portuguese, Castilian Spanish, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Latin Spanish, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovakian, Swedish
- 1951
- Free
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