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Tony Rome
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List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $23.98
You Save: $6.00 (20%)
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Product Details
- Starring: Frank Sinatra, Jill St. John, Richard Conte, Gena Rowlands, Simon Oakland
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- Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: Gordon Douglas
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- EAN: 9786301720540
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- Format: Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6301720547
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- Label: 20th Century Fox
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- Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: 20th Century Fox
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- Release Date: 1990-07-26
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- Studio: 20th Century Fox
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1967-11-10
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- Title: Tony Rome
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- UPC: 086162133831
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Avg Customer Rating: 
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Customer Reviews
Tony Rome 1967
When the beautiful daughter of a prominent businessman is found drunk and unconscious in a hotel room , private detective Tony Rome (Frank Sinata 1915-1998) , is hired to avert scandal by escorting her home . The next day , however , the girl's diamond pin is mysteriously missing , and thugs ransack Rome's houseboat in hopes of locating it. To top it all , Rome discovers his ex-partner dead in his office . One of Sinatra's most exiciting screen roles , TONY ROME also features Richard Conte (1910-1975) , Jill St.John (1940 - ) , Sue Lyon (1946 - ) and Gena Rowlands (1930 - ) . High Quality Transfer .
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Deanna Lund makes this a five star item.
This is one of Frank Sinatra's better films, though it is about average plot wise for an outing like this. A PI single handedly breaks a case while smoking, drinking and making wise cracks. Frank himself is always a joy. However, what makes this a five star film is Deanna Lund. It was one of her biggest roles as a beautiful young starlet and was actually to be her last hurrah before returning to Florida as a businesswoman. However, Irwin Allen saw the rushes and knew that Deanna was the perfect Valerie for Land of the Giants and the rest is history. Her one scene steals the film and Frank was definitely impressed, but that's another story.
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Great retro film
This is a great retro film. A detective story set in Miami in 1967 with classic cars and boats and beautiful women.
The plot and characters are quite interesting and it benefits from a clever dialogue and good retro pictures of Miami Beach. Enjoy it.
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better than pro wraslin
This is a really entertaining movie. Now, you have to understand that I dislike Sinatra's music,manner, appearance, habits etc etc. Not my generation-my dad's generation with their cigarettes and hats and sexist banter ( oh, they believed it too ).
This movie is a GREAT time capsule of the year 1967 or thereabouts....a year in which I was a teenager. There's a super shot of a brand new '67 Camaro ( I was to get a new '68 a year later those were the days ).
The movies is, to me, a comedy and timecapsule. Attractive women abound who mostly act like incompetent children ( of course ). At least, as in elvis movies, it's not a musical with the star singing his way to glory. I'd have to mute that.
a good buy if you like really silly snapshots of what passed for serious during one of the most serious and tragic periods in our nations history. I give it five stars for humor that's all and the cars.
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Mothers, Keep Your Daughters In
By the time the late sixties rolled around, Frank Sinatra was finishing up perhaps the third incarnation of his lengthy career---That of the Rat Pack leader. He'd already distinguished himself as a singer and won an academy award, having bounced back from the rough times of the early fifties. Tony Rome was made during the heyday of the James Bond craze, and I for one was glad to see the American Private Detective represented with such style and panache. This movie, as well as Paul Newman's Harper, mark a singular time in American cinema. Both protrayed the hardboiled dick the way he supposed to be portrayed: a tough guy with honor. Sinatra is totally believable in the role, which has some great lines for him say. And his delivery was flawless. The plot, while a bit convoluted at times, is still interesting. Anyway, plot was never the main thing in this movie. It was all about ambience and character. Whether Frank grabs a frying pan to fend off an attacker, uses his fists, or has a gun you can see the menace in his eyes every time. And the final fade-away shot of gorgeous Jill St. John makes the whole movie unforgettable. This one is definitely worth a look-see.
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