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DVD : M*A*S*H [1970]



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M*A*S*H [1970]

starring: Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, Tom Skerritt, Sally Kellerman, Robert Duvall
directed by: Robert Altman

List Price: £22.99
Off The Bookshelf's Price: £3.98
You Save: £19.01 (83%)
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5039036008679
Format: Anamorphic, Box set, PAL, Special Edition, Widescreen
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Number Of Discs: 2
Number Of Items: 2
Publisher: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Region Code: 2
Release Date: April 29, 2002
Running Time: 111 minutes
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: August 12, 1970
Sales Rank: 3140




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Catch - 22 [1970] M*A*S*H - The Martinis and Medicine Collection M*A*S*H - Season One (Collector's Edition) [1972] Doctor Strangelove (Collectors Edition) [1963] All The President's Men (2 Disc Special Edition) [1976] see more


Editorial Review:

Amazon.co.uk Review:
It's set during the Korean War, in a mobile army surgical hospital. But no one seeing MASH in 1970 confused the film for anything but a caustic comment on the Vietnam War; this is one of the counterculture movies that exploded into the mainstream at the end of the 1960s. Director Robert Altman had laboured for years in television and sporadic feature work when this smash-hit comedy made his name (and allowed him to create an astonishing string of offbeat pictures, culminating in the masterpiece Nashville). Altman's style of cruel humour, overlapping dialogue, and densely textured visuals brought the material to life in an all-new kind of war movie (or, more precisely, antiwar movie). Audiences had never seen anything like it: vaudeville routines played against spurting blood, fuelled with open ridicule of authority. The cast is led by Elliott Gould and Donald Sutherland, as the outrageous surgeons Hawkeye Pierce and Trapper John McIntyre, with Robert Duvall as the uptight Major Burns and Sally Kellerman in an Oscar-nominated role as nurse "Hot Lips" Houlihan. The film's huge success spawned the long-running TV series, a considerably softer take on the material; of the film's cast, only Gary Burghoff repeated his role on the small screen, as the slightly clairvoyant Radar O'Reilly. --Robert Horton

Amazon.co.uk Review:
MASH--a 1970 comedy-drama set among surgeons drafted into the Korean war--was a breakthrough not just for director Robert Altman but for movie-making in general. Although set in the 50s, there are few who did not realise that the film's anti-war messages were directed at the US involvement in Vietnam. Indeed, the Pentagon banned US servicemen from seeing the film.

Starring Donald Sutherland as Hawkeye Pierce and Elliot Gould as Trapper John McIntyre, two hip young surgeons drafted against their will. Their general attitude--while never corroding either their humanity or their professionalism as surgeons--is one of insolence towards military authority and the arbitrary structures and regulations continually droning from the tannoy system. The film, too, thrives on a lack of attention to conventional order, with its cross-dialogue and random, episodic style reflecting the vivacious and unbuttoned feel of the content.

However, MASH has dated and much of what seemed like "liberating" high jinks, today smacks of sexist, frathouse boorishness and harassment, especially at the expense of Major "Hotlips" Hoolihan (Sally Kellerman), while the episode in which "Painless" plans a suicide out of a fear of being gay reflects the persistence of homophobia even in 60s counterculture. Despite this MASH feels ahead of its time and certainly sharper and blacker than the too-cute sitcom it spawned.

On the DVD: this is an excellent restoration, overseen by Altman himself, in which any obfuscation from the original have been cleaned up, especially the sound quality. As well as a commentary from Altman, there are three separate documentaries, featuring interviews with Altman, the cast and screenwriter Ring Lardner Jr, who had been blacklisted during the anti-Communist witch-hunt which swept through Hollywood in the 1950s. We learn he was initially appalled at how little of his script Altman actually used but was mollified by the Academy Award he received. Altman is candid about the making of the movie ("It wasn't released by Fox, it escaped from Fox"). There's an abundance of similarly rich, anecdotal material here. --David Stubbs



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - If this is hilarious then I must have lost my humour chip
After reading the reviews and watching the trailer to this film I decided that it was worth picking up, I could only watch the first 62 minutes.

I found this slow, low on humour and knew that I could not out up with another 50 minutes so decided to cut my losses and eject it from my DVD player forever.

It does have some good bits in the film, the best characters for me were Radar and Donald Sutherland's character too, they were the only people to really stand out for me, I thought that this would be at least a good solid comedy and with the cast it should have been, but there was simply not enough going on between the few laughs to keep me interested, hence the reason why it only lasted 62 minutes.

If you're ... Read More:



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Mash stands the test of time
This film came out around the year I got married 1970 and after all the years still is fantastic to watch and enjoy just like my wife.
Picture quality is very good compared to the VHS video that I have had for some years. The extra disc on the two disc version is well worth the little bit extra that it costs as there are some good features on it.
Great value for money for so much fun. If I am around in another thirty years I am sure I will still be watching it.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Timeless
It was wonderful seeing this film again after 37 years; a break from the mindless tedium of gratuitous blood and violence, brain-splitting noise, and endless shots of the poor man's opiate - political correctness that so often passes for entertainment today. Modern audiences will not likely identify as strongly as they did then. Today, the US has an all volunteer Army and not the same feelings related to going to war because you're told to. But it has the timeless quality of the human spirit in interesting yet realistic characters surviving in those difficult and uninvited circumstances. And no matter how many times I hear the theme music - Suicide is Painless - I still enjoy it.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Brilliant black comedy
If you are only familiar with the TV version of M.A.S.H., you will find the film very different but very funny. Donald Sutherland (Hawkeye) and Elliott Gould (Trapper)are both brilliant as the crazy surgeons trying to keep sane amidst the chaos of war. The humour of the film is much blacker than the Tv series, of the movie cast only Gary Burghoff (Radar O'Reilly) went on to star in the TV version. These days I find I prefer Donald Sutherland's Hawkeye, Alan Alda's relentless niceness gets on my nerves a bit. In the movie (as in the original novel) there are two other surgeons joining in Hawkeye and Trapper's antics, Duke Forrest and Spearchucker Jones (you may recall there was a halfhearted attempt to include Spearchucker in the first TV series, ... Read More:



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - War - what is it good for?
I usually confine my comments to the standard of the film, but in this case the quality of restoration deserves a mention, as do the extras provided on the DVD. Unusually, these are well worth having and add to the enjoyment of the main feature.

M.A.S.H. is probably best known nowadays for having spawned the classic TV sitcom starring Alan Alda but more an ensemble creation of well-loved characters. A number of these appear in the original film, though it was originally intended as a star vehicle for Messrs. Sutherland and Gould. Where the TV series took much longer to explore the nuances of relationship and unpeel the subtle layers of about war, the film uses the limitations of a 2-hour format to create a dark satire with the essential ... Read More:


 



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