product title divider
EARN 40 SUPER POINTS! What's this?
Sorry, this selection is currently unavailable.
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
product image
25 Photo(s) See all
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
$59.92
You Save 33%
Our Price:
$40.00 + FREE SHIPPING
Total Price:
$40.00
Quantity:
Ships from/sold by Buy.com
45 day return policy
Format: DVD
Condition:  Brand New
Very few left In Stock! Order soon -- product may sell out.
See all sellers
6 New
for
$19.99

Marketplace Buying Choices

Blow It Outa Here
$45.20 + $2.99 shipping
In Stock 45 Day Returns
View My Store
MP buy button
BeachAudio
$44.32 + $6.99 shipping
In Stock 45 Day Returns
View My Store
MP buy button
See all 6 New
for $19.99 + $0.99 shipping
advertisement

Product Summary

Format: DVD
Buy.com Sku: 202125371
UPC: 012569764392
UPC 14: 00012569764392
Buy.com Sales Rank: 11735
Category Keywords: Action
Rating: Game Rating Code
Advertisement middle
 
Warner Home Video releases three of the most explosive films from the 1970's - All The President's Men, Network and Dog Day Afternoon - all in one collection.

All The President's Men: In the Watergate Building, lights go on and four burglars are caught in the act. That night triggered revelations that drive a U.S. President from office. Washington reporters Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) grabbed the story and stayed with it through doubts, denials and discouragement. All the President's Men is their story. Directed by Alan J. Pakula and based on the Woodward/Bernstein book, the film won four 1976 Academy Awards. It also explores a working newspaper, where the mission is to get the story and get it right.

Network: Newscaster Howard Beale has a message for those who package reports of cute puppies, movie premieres and fender benders as hard news: "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore." Sidney Lumet directs Paddy Chayefsky's satire (an Academy Award-winning screenplay) about the things people do for love...and ratings. Three performers won Oscars. Faye Dunaway is the TV exec guarding ratings like a tigress protecting cubs. Best Actor Peter Finch is Beale, whose airwave rants become a phenomenon. And William Holden, Robert Duvall and Best Supporting Actress Beatrice Straight add to the fierce vitality. Network later grabbed another lofty rating as an American Institute Top-100 American Films selection.

Dog Day Afternoon: On a hot Brooklyn afternoon, two optimistic losers set out to rob a bank. Sorry (Al Pacino) is the mastermind, Sid (John Cazale) is the follower, and disaster is the result. Because the cops, crowds, TV cameras, and even the pizza man have arrived. The "well-planned" heist is now a circus. Pacino and director Sidney Lumet, collaborators on Serpico, reteam for this boisterous comedy/thriller that earned six Academy Award nominations (including best Picture) and won an Oscar for Frank Pierson's steetwise screenplay. Based on a true incident, Dog Day Afternoon "is one of the big ones, swarming with energy, excitement and drama" (Gene Shalit, NBC TV).

"[Dog Day] ...modern cinema's template for the bank-robbery-gone-wrong flick is this one.  Christopher Null, Filmcritic.com
"[Network] Network is brilliant...the cast...is stellar...  James Berardinelli's ReelViews
"[President's] Best elements of newspaper pictures, detective stories, and thrillers rolled into one superb movie.  Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide
"[Dog Day] Bitingly funny and wonderfully compassionate.  New York Daily News
"[Network] A supremely well-acted, intelligent film.  Roger Ebert's Video Companion

Editor's Note
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN: With ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN, director Alan Pakula adapts the best-selling book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Pakula created a film that takes its place among such important conspiracy dramas as THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR and THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH. The focus is on the 1972 investigation of the break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters, otherwise known as the Watergate burglary. Through a complicated web of intrigue and secrecy that eventually involves the highest levels of government, hungry young journalists Woodward (Robert Redford) and Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) of the Washington Post aggressively examine the incident, uncovering information that ultimately leads to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. Exceptional performances by Redford and Hoffman are complemented by Jason Robards as the dubious but supportive executive editor at the Post, and Hal Holbrook's celebrated characterization of the mysterious informer Deep Throat. The pacing of the film is quick and exciting, drawing viewers into the action of one of the most intriguing mysteries in all of American political history.

DOG DAY AFTERNOON: Al Pacino plays a ferocious and fed-up bank robber in Lumet's classic film, DOG DAY AFTERNOON. Balancing suspense, violence, and humor, the film's depiction of a grand-scale media event craftily dives from the political to the personal, evoking a piercing portrait of a man and his devastating downward tumble as seen through the media circus that Lumet made a career of chronicling. Pacino is heartbreakingly real as Sonny, a smart yet self-destructive Brooklyn tough whose plan to rob the local bank to fund his male lover's (Chris Sarandon) sex change goes absurdly wrong. Accompanied only by his doltish accomplice, Sal (John Cazale), Sonny realizes that all the money had been removed before his arrival, and decides to kidnap a handful of bank employees instead. As the lengthy August day drags on, Sonny and hordes of local police, led by Sergeant Moretti (Charles Durning), make little progress, and eventually Sonny's wife and lover are brought to the scene. The crowd's sympathy is immediately captured by the charismatic Sonny, whose antagonism with the police is played out before an audience of millions, leading to an inevitably tragic finish.

NETWORK: With stunning prescience, Sidney Lumet's searing satire of television and the contemporary moment chronicles media corruption and the way that the public buys into the myths the media creates. The moral and spiritual turpitude delivered by the debilitating forces of television are rendered in sharp relief against a backdrop of crumbling humanity in what is regarded as one of the great satires in Hollywood history. With a visceral script from Paddy Chayefsky, NETWORK follows the doomed path of aging newsman Howard Beale (Peter Finch), who, upon learning that he is to be fired after decades as a news anchor, announces to millions of viewers that he will publicly commit suicide during his last broadcast. When the ratings consequently shoot up, hungry executive-in-training Diana Christensen (Faye Dunaway) seizes the moment to exploit Beale's Messianic nervous breakdown, turning his rage into the vehicle for the network's first Number One show and a nationwide craze. Who could have predicted that this 1976 film might someday influence an even more contagious trend in television broadcasting: the reality show?

Features
Video Features DVD, Widescreen, Aspect Ratio 1.85:1, Dolby Digital Stereo, Documentaries, Featurettes, Commentaries, Interviews, English, Spanish, French Subtitled, 6 Discs
Technical Info

Release Information
Video Mfg Name Studio: Warner
Video Release Date Release Date: 11/10/2009
Video Play Time Running Time: 480 minutes
Video Release Year Original Release Date: 1975
Video CategoryId Catalog ID: 76439
Video UPC UPC: 00012569764392
Video Number of Discs Number of Discs: 6

Audio & Video
Video Original Language Original Language: English
Video Audio Spec Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English
Video Color Spec Video: Color

Aspect Ratio
Video Aspect Ratio Widescreen  1.85:1
Cast & Crew
Video Cast Info Al Pacino
Video Cast Info Charles Cazale
Video Cast Info Charles Durning
Video Cast Info Chris Sarandon
Video Cast Info Dustin Hoffman
Video Cast Info Faye Dunaway
Video Cast Info Jane Alexander
Video Cast Info Jason Robards, Jr.
Video Cast Info Peter Finch
Video Cast Info Robert Duvall
Video Cast Info Robert Redford
Video Cast Info William Holden
Video Cast Info Alan J. Pakula - [President's] Director
Video Cast Info Sidney Lumet - [Network, Dog Day] Director

Awards


Winner (1977)
   Video Award Name Oscar, Jason Robards, Jr., [President's] Best Supporting Actor
   Video Award Name Oscar, George Jenkins, George Gaines, [President's] Best Art Direction/Set Decoration
   Video Award Name Oscar, William Goldman, [President's] Best Writing, Screenplay
   Video Award Name Oscar, Peter Finch, [Network] Best Actor
   Video Award Name Oscar, Faye Dunaway, [Network] Best Actress
   Video Award Name Oscar, Beatrice Straight, [Network] Best Supporting Actress

Winner (1976)
   Video Award Name Oscar, Frank Pierson, [Dog Day] Best Writing, Screenplay

Nominee (1976)
   Video Award Name Oscar, Al Pacino, [Dog Day] Best Actor

Professional Reviews

Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide 9 of 10
[Network] ...outrageous satire on television looks less and less like fantasy as the years pass... Entire cast explodes, particularly Dunaway as ruthless programmer, Holden as conscientious newsman, Duvall as shark-like v.p. , and Beatty as evangelistical board chairman. Well-deserved Oscars went to Finch (posthumously), Dunaway, Straight, and Chayefsky.

Chicago Sun-Times 8 of 10
[Dog Day] Lumet's film is also a study of a fascinating character: Sonny, the bank robber who takes charge, played by Al Pacino as a compulsive and most complex man. He's street-smart, he fought in Vietnam, he's running the stick-up in order to get money for his homosexual lover to have a sex-change operation. He's also married to a chubby and shrill woman with three kids, and he has a terrifically possessive mother (the Freudianism gets a little thick at times). Sonny isn't explained or analyzed -- just presented. He becomes one of the most interesting modern movie characters, ranking with Gene Hackman's eavesdropper in "The Conversation" and Jack Nicholson's Bobby Dupea in "Five Easy Pieces." - Roger Ebert

Advertisement Bottom