The Big Parade
The epic of the American doughboy!
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Also released as:
The Big Parade (Blu-ray)
for $19.20
DVD Details
- Rated: Not Rated
- Run Time: 2 hours, 31 minutes
- Video: Black & White
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: October 1, 2013
- Originally Released: 1925
- Label: Warner Home Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | John Gilbert & Renée Adorée | |
Performer: | Claire McDowell, Hobart Bosworth, Karl Dane, George K. Arthur, Claire Adams & Tom O'Brien | |
Directed by | King Vidor | |
Edited by | Hugh Wynn | |
Screenwriting by | Harry Behn | |
Composition by | William Axt | |
Story by | Laurence Stallings | |
Produced by | Irving Thalberg & King Vidor | |
Director of Photography: | John Arnold |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 4/4 --
Masterfully directed by King Vidor, this swings easily between comedy, romance and tragedy without missing a beat, and there are numerous set-pieces of enormous power -- even today, the harrowing battle scenes would rank among the best ever put on film.
Full Review
Creative Loafing
Rating: B+ --
King Vidor's popular moving antiwar WWI drama set the tone for how to shoot a war film.
Full Review
Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Rating: 4/5 --
Like All Quiet on the Western Front, The Big Parade gives a comprehensive look at then-modern warfare.
Full Review
7M Pictures
Today, the film remains a heartfelt but shrewdly judged blend of comedy, romance, action and tragedy...
New York Times
Rating: 4.5/5 --
The Big Parade wasn't just an international hit; it immediately set the standard for Hollywood war movies.
Full Review
The Dissolve
Rating: 4.5/5 --
It was strong stuff in 1925 and it remains strong today.
Full Review
Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
There is a peculiar delight in sitting through a play in which every dialectic skill is used -- where the aptness of language to express character, emotion, the interplay of thoughts gives one a pure joy.
Full Review
The Spectator
Product Description:
King Vidor's harrowing WWI drama was the first realistic war film ever made, and for many years it would be the paradigm for the genre. It stars John Gilbert as Jim Apperson, a charming idler from a wealthy background. When war is declared in 1917, even the phlegmatic layabout is caught up in the public excitement and impulsively enlists in the army, surprising his stern father (Hobart Bosworth). After a whirlwind of basic training, he's off to France with fellow conscripts Bull (Tom O'Brien), a bartender, and Slim (Karl Dane), a riveter. While waiting to be sent to the front, the three kill time with horseplay and practical jokes. One of the jokes leads to a meeting with peasant girl Melisande (Renee Adoree), and she and Jim begin to see each other, but just as they've overcome the language barrier, he's called to the front. The nightmarish reality of trench warfare will permanently alter the young man's life. Adapted from the story WHAT PRICE GLORY by Laurence Stallings, the film that MGM feared would alienate audiences proved to be its most successful until the release of GONE WITH THE WIND. Apart from the scenes of low comedy, the film is as fresh as ever, and in sequences such as Jim's return home, it remains just as devastating as it must have been in 1925.