Gary Cooper - The Signature Collection (Sergeant York / The Fountainhead / Dallas / Springfield Rifle / The Wreck of the Mary Deare)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Collection of 5 of the stoic one's best films from the Warner Bros. library.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA UPC: 012569829930 Manufacturer No: 82993
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #16417 in DVD
- Brand: Warner Brothers
- Released on: 2006-11-07
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Box set, Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD-Video, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
- Number of discs: 5
- Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
- Running time: 538 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Springfield Rifle, one of five films included in this set, may miss the bullseye as a true Gary Cooper classic, but there's a line that speaks to his enduring status as a screen icon and "American Legend." In this 1952 Western, his follow-up film to High Noon, Cooper's character has been drummed out of the army and branded a coward. Suffice to say that all is not what it seems, and an observer is asked how Coop will handle the pressure. The response: "He'll stand up." That is quintessential Cooper. He's a stand-up guy, and the "dang swangest hero," as he is hailed in Sergeant York, this collection's calling card. Directed by Howard Hawks and co-written by John Huston, Sergeant York earned Cooper an Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Alvin York, a Tennessee mountain hellraiser who finds religion after surviving a lightning strike. His newfound pacifist beliefs are put to the supreme test when he is forced to enlist in WWI. Cooper also displays the (Frank Lloyd) Wright stuff as architect Harold Roark in The Fountainhead (1949), adapted for the screen by Ayn Rand from her towering and controversial bestselling novel about a "fool visionary" who refuses to compromise his principles or conform his work to popular taste. The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959), his penultimate film, finds Cooper desperately trying to clear his name before an inquiry determines what really happened aboard the mysteriously abandoned eponymous ship. Costar Charlton Heston gives him a run for Most Piercing Blue Eyes honors. Last, and least, but still entertaining, is Dallas (1950), in which Cooper stars as a Confederate outlaw who impersonates a sheriff to settle an old score. Cooper is not the most chameleon-esque of actors, but in these representative films, he displays intriguing shadings to his heroic persona. Roark in The Fountainhead has a definite dark side, while his "Reb" Hollister in Dallas is something of a rascal.
Of the DVD presentations, Sergeant York gets the two-disc "Special Edition" treatment, with dry, but informative commentary by film historian Jeanne Basinger, a made-for-cable TV special about Cooper hosted by Clint Eastwood, and a welcome Warner Bros. cartoon, Tex Avery's "Porky's Preview" and short subject, "Lions for Sale," that replicate an old fashioned night out at the movies. The Fountainhead DVD includes a featurette about the making of the film. Cooper stands alone among Hollywood's leading men, but beyond his formidable presence, classic film buffs will bask in the nostalgic pleasures of Max Steiner's music in four of the five films, and appearances by great character actors (Walter Brennan and George Tobias in Sergeant York, a young Richard Harris in Mary Deare). --Donald Liebenson
Customer Reviews
"A Package of Rugged Individualism"
Here you have them--Five Gary Cooper Classics in one package. Of this group, I like Sergeant York and the Wreck of the Mary Deare the best. They are all great movies, that you may think you have not seen, but when you get into them, you may realize you have. They are part of being an American. Sergeant York--the biography of a WWI soldier and his heroism. Dallas--not so much about the city, at this point in time a hitching post and a watering hole, but about by products of the Civil War, The Fountainhead--a story about a great American architect, artistically incorruptable, based loosely on Frank Lloyd Wright, The Wreck of the Mary Deare--Gary finds himeself in the abandoned hulk of a ship, and is drawn into mystery and intrigue, and The Springfield Rifle--Gary goes through the humiliation of having a yellow streak painted down his back for cowardice by the Cavalry. What great acting he does in this one as we feel his humiliation but we also feel the foreshadowing of a little more to the story than meets the eye. You can see it on his face. He projects it. What great films. These are part of most Americans of a certain age's viewing history. And you can enjoy them again and again, as you ponder what makes up a real American. No one can show us on film like Gary Cooper.
Cooper Collection
We were happy to find this collection available through Amazon. Gary Cooper is a favorite of ours and we had been looking for a copy of The Fountainhead and could not find it in the stores here. To find it in this collection with other shows that we have enjoyed was an extra plus.
Gary Cooper--Fantastic
This a wonderful collection of Coop's best movies. Our personal favorite is Sgt. York.
This is a wonderful collection of Coop's best. Sgt York is our personal favorite.




