Newsies (Collector's Edition) |  | Director: Kenny Ortega Actors: Christian Bale, Bill Pullman, Robert Duvall, Ann-Margret, David Moscow Studio: Walt Disney Video Category: DVD
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $6.61 as of 9/10/2010 01:00 EDT details You Save: $8.38 (56%)
New (29) Used (21) from $4.95
Seller: moviemars Rating: 623 reviews Sales Rank: 708
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language) Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Running Time: 121 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 02368800 ISBN: 0788831003 UPC: 786936162783 EAN: 9780788831003 ASIN: B00005OCMS
Theatrical Release Date: April 10, 1992 Release Date: January 15, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description NEWSIES
Amazon.com Except for feature-length animation, the musical has gone the way of the dinosaur. The Walt Disney company took a stab at reviving the live-action musical in 1992 with Newsies, a throwback picture with a curious subject. In 1899, the pint-sized newsboys delivering the New York papers go on strike against the unfair practices of news magnates Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst. The production is heavy on kiddie humor, although Christian Bale (the child star of Spielberg's Empire of the Sun) is charismatic as one of the older leaders of the revolt. The adult stars don't fare as well, with Robert Duvall doddering around as Pulitzer and Ann-Margret and Bill Pullman doing decorative duty. The film was not well received when first released, but hindsight reveals its charm (and allowed the young target audience to catch up with the picture on video). The first-time director is Kenny Ortega, the choreographer of Dirty Dancing, who brings plenty of energy to the action. --Robert Horton
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 623
Thanks! July 8, 2010 B. Poulson (UT USA) The movie was great. Played all the way through with no problems. Packaging was good and received fast.
Newsies perfection July 2, 2010 Jennifer Weir (MILWAUKEE, WI, US) Newsies is the greatest - the movie arrived within days of my ordering it. This movie has a high amount of energy between all the singing and the dancing. It is also a movie many can relate to with job frustration and the overwhelming desire to be successful.
Newsies film May 21, 2010 Alba Rico Cano (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Palmas, ES) A great product. You can view it in english or spanish, and it got subtitles.
Fun! Lots of music at its best! Great storyline too. March 28, 2010 Melody (Missionaries in Mexico from OR. WA.) This was well worth the money. Fun! Lots of music at its best! Great storyline too. Highly recommend it if you love musicals.
When the boys stopped the World March 12, 2010 Chrijeff (Scranton, PA) Based upon actual events (the bonus material includes a short featurette about the newsies' strike), this is a story about how the powerless find power and the voiceless a voice. In 1899, the streets of New York City swarm with "newsies"--boys aged about 10 up who serve as the distribution network for the city's half-dozen or so major newspapers in a day before home delivery and newsstands. Some are orphans, some runaways, some from poor or working-class, often immigrant, families where everybody needs to help out or where a breadwinner has been disabled. When Joseph Pulitzer (Robert Duvall), publisher of the New York World, decides to raise the wholesale price of the paper from 50c. per hundred to 60c., they're outraged; as one of them, Kid Blink (Trey Parker), complains, "Bad enough we gotta eat the ones we don't sell, now they up the price on us?!" But the newsies are lucky: they find a leader--17-year-old Jack Kelly (Christian Bale), who's known as "Cowboy" because he dreams of going to live in Santa Fe someday. With the advice of David Jacobs (David Moscow) and the "cute appeal" of his little brother Les (Luke Edwards), Jack soon welds the newsies into an impromptu union and calls a strike. A sympathetic reporter from a rival paper, Bryan Denton (Bill Pullman), becomes their advocate, and a vaudeville performer (Ann-Margret) offers the hall she owns for a rally. But Pulitzer and his powerful counterpart William Randolph Hearst have money, political power (like Judge "Movealong" Monahan (William Boyett) and Snyder (Kevin Tighe), the warden of the juvenile prison known as "The Refuge"), and muscle (like the Delancey brothers, Oscar (Shon Greenblatt) and Morris (David Sheinkopf), who serve as enforcers). The newsies are just kids; they don't even have the vote. Can Jack hold them together long enough to force acceptance of their demands?
With a wonderful cast of sympathetic individual boys including the cripple Crutchy (Marty Belafsky), cigar-smoking Racetrack Higgins (Max Casella), black Boots (Arvie Lowe, Jr.), Mush (Aaron Lohr), Snipeshooter (Matthew Fields), Specs (Mark David), and Pie Eater (David Sidoni), several lively dance numbers, and a great feel for the recreation of turn-of-the-century New York life, this musical drama deserved much better press than it got. Jack, turned cynical by a rough childhood, learns about the potential of "what they call a family" and even finds romance with the Jacobs's sister Sarah (Ele Keats), and there are moments of suspense and even high action, such as when Spot Conlon (Gabriel Damon), the boss of the Brooklyn newsies, brings his tribe into the fray in the very nick of time. The soundtrack Newsies is worth your time too.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 623
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