Picnic (1955) / (Full) (USAมีสต็อกDVD)

- SRP (Baht) : 880.00
- Our Price (Baht) : 629.00
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- Release Date : 18/04/2000
- Distributor : Import
- Genres : Classic
- Aspect Ratio : 2.35:1
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Language :
English Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Spanish Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround - Subtitles : Chinese, English, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Thai
- Number of discs : 1
- Package : Keep Case
- Rated : PG
- Special Features
- Photo Montage
Vintage Advertising
Bonus Previews
Talent Files
Theatrical Trailer
- Credits
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- Actors : William Holden, Kim Novak, Betty Field, Susan Strasberg, Cliff Robertson, Rosalind Russell
- Directors : Joshua Logan
- Studio : Sony Pictures
- Run Time : 113 mins
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Synopsis :
William Holden is the hunky drifter who rides the rails into a small Midwest town with dreams of landing a "respectable" job with his rich college buddy (Cliff Robertson). Kim Novak is the small-town beauty queen engaged to Robertson who falls for the cocky dreamer; as do repressed schoolmarm spinster Rosalind Russell and Novak's tomboyish kid sister Susan Strasberg. Their unleashed passions reach a crescendo at the Labor Day picnic.
Joshua Logan directed William Inge's play on Broadway and carried it to Hollywood; earning Oscar nominations for Best Picture and Best Director in his screen-directing debut. Holden is years too old for the role but oozes sex appeal and makes a swoony stud when he takes his shirt off (or when; better yet; it's ripped from his back by a boozing Russell); and Novak is a lovely lost girl yearning for something she can't quite grasp. Arthur O'Connell earned an Oscar nomination as Russell's tippling boyfriend. The film was a huge popular and critical hit; but Logan's stiff and strident direction hasn't dated well. He makes his points in big capital letters--subtlety was never his strong point--and loses the natural beauty of the Kansas locations when he takes the climactic picnic scenes into an obviously artificial soundstage. Picnic remains a loved American classic; largely for Holden's tough-guy vulnerability and James Wong Howe's brilliant widescreen color photography. --Sean Axmaker