Julie Christie 5 DVD Collection boxset due out 12 March 2007:
The divine Julie Christie brings her glamorous presence to this superb box
set containing 5 of her finest films.
Featuring:
Darling (1965): Julie Christie plays Diana Scott, a beautiful and charming
model, who enjoys the new freedoms of 1960's Swinging London society more than most. Alongside her goodtime girl attitude lays a propensity to discard people and relationships as soon as she gets bored and as frequently as she might the latest fashion, for example. Abandoning her young, immature husband, she runs off with the older, more sophisticated Robert (Dirk Bogarde) who in turn has left his wife and family so they can set up house together. It isn't long
before Diana is restless again, but this time has she got herself into a situation
that she may not be able to so easily escape from?
Billy Liar (1963): Scripted by Keith Waterhouse from his own novel, Billy
Liar is a warm and sensitive work from John Schlesinger (Midnight Cowboy) that
undoubtedly remains one of the finest British films of the 60s. Oozing a blend
of immaturity, intelligence and good intent, Tom Courtenay (Last Orders)
delivers a star-making turn as William Terrence Fisher, an undertaker's assistant in
a drab Northern town who escapes his humdrum existence by escaping,
Walter-Mitty-like into a world of fantasy. Fisher's parents despair of his antics, but
could Liz (an early, charismatic turn from Julie Christie), with her dreams of
a life in London offer hope of genuine excitement and escape? Gently
subversive, the film marries visual and verbal wit and a genuine capacity to entertain
with a rather poignant rumination on the futility of dreams.
Far From The Madding Crowd (1967): Based on the novel by Thomas Hardy, Far
From The Madding Crowd was the third film (after Billy Liar and Darling) that
paired Julie Christie and director John Schlesinger, and sees Christie as
Bathsheba, a headstrong young woman living in Dorset in late rural Victorian times
who finds herself being courted by three very different suitors: dashing
soldier Sgt Troy (Terence Stamp), stuffy landowner Willian Boldwood (Peter Finch)
and poor farmer Gabriel Oaks (Alan Bates).
The Go-Between (1970): Christie stars as Marian, sister to Marcus and about
to be engaged to Hugh (Edward Fox), a good-natured Viscount and her perfect
match. During the course of Summer, 1900, 13-year-old Leo comes to stay at the
Norfolk stately home of his classmate Marcus, and is soon befriended by Marian.
Initially ignorant of the implications, Leo agrees to carry messages between
Marian and her neighbour, the eminently unsuitable local farmer Ted Burgess
(Alan Bates). As the oppressive heat intensifies, so do Leo's questions about the
laws of attraction and love - and as his childhood innocence is threatened,
so is the fragile web of relationships so recently forged over the course of
this summer's passions, deceptions and revelations...
Don't Look Now (1973): John and Laura Baxter are living in Venice when they
meet a pair of elderly sisters, one of whom claims to be psychic. She insists
that she sees the spirit of the Baxters' daughter, who recently drowned. Laura
is intrigued, but John resists the idea. He, however, seems to have his own
psychic flashes, seeing their daughter walk the streets in her red cloak, as
well as Laura and the sisters on a funeral gondola.
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