The Stranger

The most deceitful man a woman ever loved!
The Stranger
33K ratings
Price: $11.50
Available: Usually ships in 5-7 business days
Format:  DVD-R
item number:  6X3QV
Made-on-Demand
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The Stranger for $11.50

DVD-R Details

  • Rated: Not Rated
  • Run Time: 1 hours, 35 minutes
  • Video: Black & White
  • Encoding: Region 0 (Worldwide)
  • Released: April 18, 2012
  • Originally Released: 1946
  • Label: American Pop Classics

Performers, Cast and Crew:

Starring , &
Performer: , , , , , &
Directed by
Edited by
Screenplay by , &
Composition by
Art Direction by
Story by , &
Produced by &
Director of Photography:

Entertainment Reviews:

Fresh96%

TOMATOMETER
Total Count: 26

Upright80%

AUDIENCE SCORE
User Ratings: 5,239
Welles' third film, often described as his worst, but still a hugely enjoyable thriller. Full Review
Time Out
Feb 9, 2006
Film noir thriller, made with typical Welles creativity and visual style. Full Review
Classic Film and Television
Aug 22, 2014
Rating: 69/100 -- Welles is so technically proficient that even his second-tier works are well worth seeking out, and The Stranger belongs to this category. Full Review
Film and Felt
Feb 15, 2010
Rating: 5/5 -- Excellent post-war thriller, via Orson Welles.
Film Threat
Jul 11, 2008
Rating: 2/5 -- The whole film, produced by S. P. Eagle, comes off a bloodless, manufactured show. Full Review
New York Times
Mar 25, 2006
Orson Welles's 1946 film reproduces his personal themes of self-scrutiny and self-destruction only in outline, though it is an inventive, highly enjoyable thriller. Full Review
Chicago Reader
Apr 6, 2007
Rating: 5/5 -- The Stranger holds up incredibly well and serves as a reminder that Welles could craft a visual narrative unlike anyone else of his era, truly redefining cinema as we know it to this day. Full Review
FanboyNation.com
Oct 30, 2018

Description by OLDIES.com:

A member of the War Crimes Commission is seeking the mastermind of the Holocaust who has changed his identity. An ex-Nazi war criminal assumes a new identity and a new life in suburban America following World War II. But an agent from the U.N.'s War Crimes Commission is on his tail, threatening to expose the lurid past and true identity he keeps secret. Orson Welles directs and stars as Charles Rankin, a professor residing in a quiet Connecticut town with his new American wife, Mary (Loretta Young). Rankin has held strong to his fascist ideals but left nary a shred of evidence, not even a photograph, to identify him as the notorious Franz Kindler. Mr. Wilson (Edward G. Robinson), the man determined to find him, has a plan. But when that "plan" disappears in the woods, Wilson is left with little hope of convincing the townspeople, or Kindler's naive new wife, who this stranger in their midst really is. Inarguably one of the greatest directors of all time, Welles' made this film at a pivotal point in his storied career. Following the commercial failure of this first three films (Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons, and the partially government-funded documentary It's All true), Welles found himself without a studio willing to back his next project. He would spend the next two years acting, returning to radio drama and even tackling a weekly newspaper column, during which time his star continued to "re-ascend" until he was finally offered another shot at directing. But The Stranger was not to be a typical Welles' production. Producer Sam Spiegel, (winner of multiple Oscars for such films as On The Waterfront, Bridge Over The River Kwai and Lawrence of Arabia) gave Welles' a more modest budget than he was used to, and a directive to employ a more traditional narrative style. Welles' agreed (more or less) to work within these bounds but it didn't stop him from pushing the envelope on the creative front. His inventive approach would mark The Stranger as one of the iconic films of the classic noir era (generally considered to be the 1940s and early 1950s). This would include the use of experimental lighting, shadows, and unexpected camera angles which became trademarks of the genre. Also heavily influential was the German impressionist cinematography (e.g. "Nosferatu", Fritz Lang's "M" and "Metropolis") that preceded the period. While The Stranger's budget was indeed modest by Welles' standards, it was still considerably bigger than most other b-movie noir staples of the day. Welles' also had the advantage of a much higher-profile cast. These myriad factors all combined to make this not just one of noir's true stand-out works but the first film for Welles which was actually profitable upon its initial release. Finally, the anti-fascist theme inherent in the story is also worth noting, as this was something Welles had become quite ardent about, even taking to writing about it in his newspaper column prior to filming The Stranger. David Kehr of the New York Times went so far as to suggest it may be Welles' "most explicitly political work, made at a time when his activism was at its height." As a director, Welles will always be remembered for his 1941 masterpiece, Citizen Kane (a film that certainly contributed to noir's development, even though not generally considered a film noir itself) and subsequent masterworks like Touch of Evil and F is For Fake. But The Stranger remains the great director's most significant and important contribution to the film noir genre--right down to its legendary clock-tower climax.

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This product is made-on-demand by the manufacturer using DVD-R recordable media. Almost all DVD players can play DVD-Rs (except for some older models made before 2000) - please consult your owner's manual for formats compatible with your player. These DVD-Rs may not play on all computers or DVD player/recorders. To address this, the manufacturer recommends viewing this product on a DVD player that does not have recording capability.
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Product Info

  • Sales Rank: 73,929
  • UPC: 874757012995
  • Shipping Weight: 0.14/lbs (approx)
  • International Shipping: 1 item

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