Irma La Douce (1963) (Blu-ray) (UK Import)
Irma La Douce (1963) (Blu-ray) (UK Import)
The Blu-Ray was developed as a high-definition successor to the DVD and offers a significantly increased data rate and storage capacity compared to its predecessor. Blu-Rays can therefore store movies with significantly better resolution and offer enormously high picture quality on corresponding screens. Blu-Ray players are usually backward compatible with DVDs, so that they can also be played.
(if available from our supplier)
- Country of origin:
- USA, 1963
- Age release:
- Dieser Titel ist nicht FSK-geprüft.
Delivery to minors is not possible.
Infos zu Titeln ohne Jugendfreigabe - Item number:
- 8929210
- UPC/EAN:
- 5060000703184
- Release date:
- 18.3.2019
- Series:
- Masters of Cinema
- Genre:
- Drama, Komödie
- Playing time ca.:
- 143 Min.
- Director:
- Billy Wilder
- Actor:
- Shirley MacLaine, Lou Jacobi, Jack Lemmon, Herschel Bernardi
- Original title:
- Irma la Douce
- Language:
- Englisch
- Picture:
- Widescreen
- Subtitles:
- Englisch
Other releases of Irma La Douce |
Price |
---|---|
DVD | EUR 9.99* |
One of director Billy Wilder's biggest box office hits following his landmark comedies Some Like It Hot and The Apartment, the spectacular Irma La Douce -- adapted from the 1956 musical for the French theatre -- reunites Wilder with his Apartment stars Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine, providing the latter with one of her most fondly remembered (and Oscar®-nominated) early roles.
MacLaine is Irma, a popular Parisian prostitute whose new pimp is an unlikely procurer: Nestor (Lemmon) is a former honest cop who was just fired and framed by his boss after Nestor inadvertently had him arrested in a raid. However, Nestor's love for Irma is making his newfound vocation impossible, so he poses as a phoney British lord who insists on being Irma's one and only "client." But when "Lord X" appears to have become the victim of foul play...further comedic complications ensue!
Irma La Douce offers many of the same sardonic observations on human nature as Wilder's earlier comedies -- in addition to the same riotous humour and touching romance -- but on an even broader, more colourful canvas. Collaborating again with his regular screenwriter I. A.L. Diamond, Wilder delivers one of his most purely entertaining crowd-pleasers of the 1960s.
Specials
1080p presentation on Blu-ray
LPCM Mono Audio
Optional English SDH subtitles
Feature Length Audio Commentary by critic and film historian Kat Ellinger
Feature Length Audio Commentary by film historian Joseph McBride
Brand New and Exclusive Interview with film scholar Neil Sinyard
PLUS: A collector’s booklet featuring a new essay by Richard Combs, alongside a wide selection of rare archival imagery.
