This Joel McCrea double feature DVD begins with Bird of Paradise. In this south sea island adventure a man aboard a yacht rescues a beautiful native girl from a volcano. He falls in love with her, wishing he could stay,... more » but he has to overcome many obstacles. The second feature, The Most Dangerous Game, is one of the tightest, action-filled 62 minutes in movie history! A crazed Russian expatriate hunts people who shipwreck on his deserted island for sport... but McCrea and Wray are tougher prey than he expects. Note: The Most Dangerous Game was filmed almost simultaneously with another RKO classic King Kong and shared many of the same sets and personnel. Bonus Features: Scene Selection| Bonus: "King Kong" Trailer and Betty Boop Cartoon "Bamboo Isle" Specs: DVD9; Dolby Digital Mono; 142 minutes; B&W; 1.33:1 Aspect Ratio; MPAA - NR; Year - 1932; SRP - $4.99.« less
Actor:Joel McCrea Genres:Action & Adventure, Drama Sub-Genres:Action & Adventure, Drama Studio:Vci Video Format:DVD - Black and White,Full Screen DVD Release Date: 11/16/2004 Release Year: 2004 Run Time: 2hr 5min Screens: Black and White,Full Screen Number of Discs: 1 SwapaDVD Credits: 1 Total Copies: 0 Members Wishing: 2 MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Languages:English
"To be honest, the only reason I got this dvd was because of the 1932 classic "The Most Dangerous Game", which I've desperately wanted to see ever since I read the story by Richard Connell in high school. But surprisingly enough I enjoyed both movies, as well as the bonus features.
The first movie, 1932's "Bird of Paradise", is honestly a very ridiculous movie, but I found it entertaining. Joel McCrea and his comrades are traveling on a yacht in the South Seas when they find a beautiful island inhabited by natives who worship a volcano. McCrea nearly drowns while fishing one day, but he is saved by a beautiful native-girl (played by the ultra-hot Dolores Del Rio). It's love at first sight, but when her chief comes between their happy romance, they flee to a deserted island nearby. Will she choose McCrea over her loyalty to her people? Watch and find out!
Next, we have the 1932 classic, "The Most Dangerous Game", where a lunatic hunter, Count Zaroff (played to creepy perfection by Leslie Banks), has his own mysterious island where his prey are shipwreck victims. But, his latest shipwreck victims, Joel McCrea and Fay Wray, prove to be more than a match for the crazed Zaroff. This very entertaining classic was filmed at the same time that "King Kong" was filmed, using many of the same sets and crew.
The picture quality is pretty good considering the movies are over 70 years old (and the dvd is so inexpensive!). The bonus features are a fun 1932 Betty Boop cartoon and the original theatrical trailer of "King Kong". I'm very glad I bought this dvd and I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys an old-fashioned island adventure!"
INTERESTING VERSIONS
Felipe N. Gajate | Miami, FL | 12/23/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The double DVD is an interesing program. Quality wise is not the greatest of transfers. The image is soft as if transfered from 16mm. prints."
WATCH THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME!
John Hargraves | 11/05/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Haven't seen the other one yet, but The Most Dangerous Game was VERY good considering it was made back around the time I was born! :)"
Dangerous Game
Agatha | Australia | 05/21/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I bought this disc for The Most Dangerous Game and its amusing play on words, and got Bird of Paradise as a bonus. The transfer is disappointing of course, but the price is so modest one can't complain. One of the fascinating things about these early sound pictures is watching the directors struggle with recorded sound, the endless music scores concealing the lack of any ambient sound. It's a pity David O. Selznic got cold feet over The Most Dangerous Game and chopped the spooky bits, because it throws the story out of balance but it's a great yarn and Joel McCrea (always filne) and Fay Wray are terrific. Bird of Paradise is really silly for much of the time, with some charming innuendo. Johnny telling Luana that a house is for sleeping in - O and that too. McCrea delivers the line with enjoyable insouciance. The last moments are unexpectedly moving. I'm glad to add these to my collection, as they are both better than the almost unwatchable Silver Cord made a year later, even with the presence of Irene Dunn and the future Mrs. McCrea and the disappointing Richest Girl in the World in which the exterior shots seem to barely record what sound there is .
"
McCrea Double feature
Professor Emeritus P. Bagnolo | DOWNTOWN NYC/Chic. NM USA | 07/15/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)
"BIRD OF PARADISE
The plot is that of a young and apparently naïve' adventurer played by Joel McCrea meeting and falling head-over-heels for a tantalizing native girl, Dolores Del Rio who, it seems has a fate which precludes losing virginity, but may include her being BBQ'd .
While McCrea lustfully leaps into the relationship with all abandon, his pals discuss whether he and the head-turning beauty, of the primitive native Del Rio can find happiness as a couple back on US soil. Add to that the predilection Island natives in films seem to have had for sacrificing young and beautiful virgins to the god's of the volcano's. One could within the first few moments see that the romance of McCrea and Del Rio's characters was ill fated, unless he stays alert, out-thinks the enemy and is able to indoctrinate Del Rio away from her primitive superstitions.
While one reviewer called the film "heavy," I saw its plot as frail and silly. What was plodding and heavy, was its desire to destroy the sexual relationship of the young couple, as some sort of sin, which must be somehow punished. However, despite its flaws I found it to be naively charming, but never the less, burdened by silly, trite, and badly constructed plot.
Another reviewer stated, "After initial resistance, the heroine nobly resigns herself to her fate, realizing that there is no place for her in her white lover's civilization." I saw nothing noble about the impending and wasteful self-sacrifice of the life of Del Rio's character. It was not hard to ascertain the future of this romance, and in watching it one constantly and with great frustration, asks why after a bold and semi-climatic rescue of the lovers three quarters of the way into the film, their rescuers did not immediately set sail for the good old USA which, despite the raging Depression, back then, was certainly a kinder gentler place than an Island which served up gorgeous virgins to a volcano for breakfast. I wasn't around in 1932, but I certainly do not recall many American virgins being tossed into volcano's, here. Of course, we have none, but still... (I meant we are lacking volcano's, not virgins... I think.)
In this film there was a rush to a "romantic," melodramatic, martyrdom, for no noble cause, and with much theological error. Consider the following points that an intelligent screenplay would not have overlooked, but which Bird of Paradise ignored. But the greatest flaw, which the director and producers seemed have thought would be forgotten 30 minutes later, was that Del Rio's character was no longer a viable candidate for being thrown into the volcano, here is why:
In the swimming scene of Del Rio and McCrea, it was obvious that Del Rio was nude, ala Maureen O'Sullivan in Tarzan of the Apes. It was also obvious that after such a nude swim and their living together on a nearby Island for an undetermined period, embracing and necking atop one another in almost every scene, the lustful look in the eyes of both of them, that unless they were both gay, she was no longer a "virgin." That being considered, the natives of that island specifically liked to toss virgins into volcano's as "pure" sacrificial lambs-Del Rio's Character was, by then, surely not virgin. The volcano seemed to be a perverted one, preferring to BBQ and gobble up virgins, rather than experienced women. But still, most mature minded men prefer non-virgins as sexual partners. Further complicating the ridiculous plot was that the volcano was already spewing lava, so how would the natives, without getting scorched, navigate the lava flow and get anywhere near the apex of the volcano into which they would toss their no-longer virginal sacrificial lamb? Nevertheless, the film had a certain innocent, archaic charm.
If one watches closely and has seen King Kong (made the following year-1933) and The Most Dangerous Game (made in 1932) which is partnered here with Bird of Paradise, there were some jungle and shark attack scenes which appeared to be repeated stock inventory shared in the three films (The third of which was King Kong, which is NOT included in the double feature), two of which starred McCrea and two of which starred Fay Wray.
Despite the silliness of the plot, Del Rio's exotic dance scenes, though a bit weak, were still alluring and nude swimming scene was worth the effort of suffering through the corn-pone lines of a poorly conceived and written screenplay. Also, notable; Dolores Del Rio was well known as perfect in every way from head to toe (thus scarcely needing the heavy make-up they slavered on her beautiful face). Even as she aged her perfect skin maintained a freshness, smoothness, and line free beauty of a much younger college girl. The heavy make up was probably a residue of the weaker lighting of even older films and the habit carried over because they knew that poor lighting could fade features, but the lighting in this film appeared to be adequate, presumably eliminating the need for the emphatic make-up.
Perhaps many moviegoers in 1932 were not as sophisticated as today's viewers, but after watching the sort of silly films, which are hits lately, one has to consider that either today's audiences are made up of primarily lower primate viewers or a multitude of adolescents. I give this 3 stars, era considered.
THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME
This film, also produced in 1932, was only 62 minutes long, but was one of the most furiously, fast moving and action packed films ever. It was on par in its action sequences which were almost non-stop, to an Indiana Jones movie, though admittedly not up to the present day, technical perfection of such modern films. The fight scenes were, however, archaically staged/choreographed, but for its era, were not bad.
Story Line
As his ship approaches an uncharted island, traveler McCrea suspects that the harbor warning lights of the island are ill-placed, but his warnings fall on deaf ears and the boat goes down in record time, as some of the same shark's which devoured a few natives in BIRD OF PARADISE, appear to still be hungry and make a fast-food meal of all but McCrea and Wray. Thus the couple was the sole survivors of the mysterious shipwreck on what at first blush appeared to be a deserted jungle island. Soon, however, the couple find that is, indeed, not the case. They quickly discover the castle-like mansion of one, Count Zaroff (Leslie Banks), whose fascination with hunting has reached the ultimate goal of tracking and killing the "most dangerous prey," Humans.
Zaroff, has read books by McCrea's character, who is a Big Game Hunter extraordinaire, and Zaroff, appears to be one of the McCrea character's greatest fans. That hero worship, however, turns rapidly to a competitive brainstorm, spurred on by lust after Wray's character, he seeks to hunt McCrea, a sport that apparently enhances his sexual appetite.
It is no surprise that the film, made a year before King Kong, shared sets, crew, and Wray with it. The quality of this film, considering its age, 77 years old, is very good. The set moves along beautifully and Banks chews up the scenery as the sophisticated, yet decadent and villainous mad-hunter, with a large pack of bloodthirsty, man sized, Mastiffs as his hunting dogs. Suspense is high, as McCrea with Wray in tow, promised freedom by Zaroff, if they survive the hunt until the 5:00 AM dawn Deadline, uses every wile and hunting skill in his experience, to not only survive, but to emerge victorious.
Outnumbered and out gunned, (they begin with only a knife as a weapon, to Zarf's long bow and later high powered rifle), they fight valiantly and desperately to beat the clock, the sunrise, Zaroff, his wild dogs and henchmen. Will they succeed? Don't touch that dial and hang on, for it is a short, but fast moving and sweet 62 minutes, and just when things look hopeless, surprise! They then take a turn for an even worse fate for the lovers. You will not be bored. I give this one 4.5 stars, era considered.
Bonus Features of the two film set are,: Scene Selection, A "King Kong" Trailer, a Betty Boop Cartoon ("Bamboo Isle") Specs: DVD9; Dolby Digital Mono; 142 minutes; B&W; 1.33:1 Aspect Ratio; MPAA - NR; Year - 1932;