Product Details
A Song Is Born

A Song Is Born
From MGM (Video & DVD)

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Product Description

Studio: Tcfhe/mgm Release Date: 04/07/2009 Rating: Nr


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7777 in DVD
  • Brand: MGM HOME VIDEO (UNDER FOX)
  • Released on: 2009-04-07
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, Dubbed, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Dubbed in: French, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 113 minutes

Features

  • A Song is Born is a musical remake of the 1941 comedy Ball of Fire, with the same producer (Sam Goldwyn) and director (Howard Hawks) at the helm. It will be recalled that the original film, co-scripted by Billy Wilder, was an amusing spin on "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," wherein seven pedantic professors, working on a dictionary of slang, "adopted" an authority on the subject, breezy burlesqu

Customer Reviews

Great Musical Remake of "Ball of Fire"!5
This is a great movie. It is a re-make of the classic Cooper/Stanwyck movie "Ball of Fire" with Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo in the lead roles. Before you ask why a re-make was needed, let me say that this is a remake with a twist. The encyclopedia of "Ball of Fire" is now a musical encylclopedia. In addition to getting the expected comedy from Kaye and chemistry between Kaye and Mayo, you also get Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman and others performing some great music. If you like the first version or if you like Danny Kaye or both, don't pass this one up.

Second time's a charm (too)5
"A Song Is Born"
(MGM, 1948)
--------------------------------------------
An excellent 1948 remake, by director Howard Hawks, of Howard Hawks' excellent 1941 comedy, "Ball of Fire," in which a group of fusty, out-of-touch professors are taken in by a tough-talking, vivacious modern gal who shows them a thing or two about the fast-talking modern world.

Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck starred in the original; here, their parts are played by Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo, and instead of the gal being a burlesque girl, here she's a nightclub singer. This is handy because in 1948, the perfessers are interested in jazz music, and through diligent work they pull in an amazing all-star band of some of the hottest musicians of the big band era: Louis Armstrong, Charlie Barnett, Tommy Dorsey, Lionel Hampton, Mel Powell, The Golden Gate Quartet and a slew of others. Benny Goodman is doubly delicious in his role as a clarinet-toting fuddy-duddy professor who cuts loose when he's exposed to swing.

As remakes go, this is a remarkably durable film. The original is one of my favorite screwball comedies, but this version is also pretty fun, and the musical numbers are not to be missed. Danny Kaye is more believable as a nervous, repressed ivory tower academic, although a great deal of the charm of the original was the casting against type of the virile he-man movie idol Gary Cooper. It's Stanwyck who is really missed here, but Mayo does fine. (Besides, if I want to see Stanwyck, I'll just go back to the original...) All in all, this is a funny, funky film, with some great, hot musical interludes. Definitely worth checking out! (Joe Sixpack, Slipcue film review blog)

one of the best5
im blown away that this film took so long to get a good dvd treatment. one of the best musicals ive ever seen.