Musicals & Performing Arts
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Carefree
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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $7.47
You Save: $7.51 (50%)
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Product Details
- Starring: Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Ralph Bellamy, Luella Gear, Jack Carson
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- Audience Rating: Unrated
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: Mark Sandrich
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- EAN: 9786302010497
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- Format: Black & White, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6302010497
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- Label: Turner Home Ent
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- Manufacturer: Turner Home Ent
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Turner Home Ent
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- Release Date: 1999-05-04
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- Studio: Turner Home Ent
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1938-09-02
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- Title: Carefree
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- UPC: 053939203936
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: Perhaps because it was Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers's penultimate picture together for RKO, or perhaps because it is more romantic comedy than musical, Carefree tends to be a neglected entry in the series. This is unfortunate, because it retains many of the elements that made the duo so popular while also breaking new ground. Fred plays Tony Flagg, a psychoanalyst who is asked by his friend Steve (Ralph Bellamy) to try to figure out why his fiancée, Amanda Cooper (Ginger), keeps breaking off their engagement. During the course of treatment, and in a reversal of the usual pattern, Ginger falls for Fred and begins to pursue him. The emotionally repressed doctor resists, leading to a number of comic encounters, as well as a moment of genuine heartbreak. Other innovations include Fred's dance on a driving range, a slow-motion dream sequence (which was going to be shot in color until budget concerns won out), Fred and Ginger's first screen kiss, and some of Ginger's best turns as a comic actress. More familiar elements include Ginger fronting the band at the start of a large company dance number ("The Yam," which failed to catch on as a dance craze), an expert if skimpy Irving Berlin score including the lovely ballad "Change Partners," and of course fabulous, high-flying dancing. Fred and Ginger fans can't afford to miss Carefree. --David Horiuchi
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Customer Reviews
Neglected gem
With so many outstanding Astaire/Rogers musical comedies, it is easy to overlook this very entertaining film, the duo's 8th outing. This one showcases Rogers because she had proven by this time to be a very big box office star in her own right, mainly due to some very good comedies made without Astaire. The film's merits include:
- a stunning golf solo by Astaire
- Irving Berlin's charming "Change Partners", as good a courting song as the stars ever performed
- Rogers herself, looking much more attractive by now with much better makeup and hair and giving a relaxed and natural comedy performance
- an original story which makes a good premise for light comedy and a welcome departure from the usual formula.
The print is very good. The extras include a musical short featuring Betty Hutton in her celluloid debut with talented gangly dancer Hal Le Roy. Hutton has obvious star quality in spite of the poor print of the short so it is not surprising she turned up soon in feature films. The cartoon is set in a grocery store with the product labels coming to life. Astaire and Rogers appear.
The DVD is good value but best if purchased as part of one of the Astaire/Rogers collections.
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I'm in Heaven
The movie Carefree stars Ginger Rogers in a very richly-textured and subtly-nuanced portrayal of Amanda Cooper, a well-to-do but soon-to-be unhappily married young woman. However, in a charming plot twist, she apparently falls in love with someone else... or something like that. There also seems to be some willowy tap-dancing sort of chap in the picture. I couldn't tell you who, however, as I couldn't take my eyes off of Ginger Rogers.
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Heartbreaking
Weep for what the world has lost in Fred and Ginger. They were a miraculous combination of skill and beauty which only happens once, and which will never come again. Compared with these magical performances, and these delightful personalities, modern society, and modern movies, just seem endlessly ugly, brutal, crude and clumsy. The thirties were a schizophrenic decade which also had its horrific downside, but to experience this kind of entertainment was to live, for a short hour or two, in an atmosphere which will never be matched for its lightness, charm, good-humour and quintessence of excellence.
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The driving range sequence is fantastic.
"Carefree" is a fun movie with a decent story line.
The thing is, the driving range dance sequence is one of my favorite scenes of any movie and is relatively unknown. For anyone that golfs, this is an amazing dance scene where Astaire integrates a dance with the launching of multiple golf balls lined up down the range. For anyone that's spent hours trying to hit well struck shots standing still, this is a remarkable feat.
Why this dance isn't used in tournament coverage is beyond me. It's entertaining and amazing...
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Still my favorite
This was the first movie of Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers I remember seeing. I still love it & would still LOVE to wear a dress like Ginger wore during the most awesome dances she & Fred shared (the hypnotizing I call it)
Why can't we have glamor like that anymore?
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