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| The Great Mr. Handel | 
| Studio: Vision Video Category: DVD
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $12.95 You Save: $2.04 (14%)
Buy New/Used from $11.99
Avg. Customer Rating:   (2 reviews) Sales Rank: 36153
Format: Color, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Media: DVD Running Time: 110 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 727985007045 EAN: 0727985007045 ASIN: B0002SQ072
Release Date: July 26, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Description THIS DVD IS PLAYABLE IN ALL REGIONS. His gifts were extraordinary. His life an adventure. His legacy priceless. A lavish period drama produced in 1942 by Lord Rank?s G.H.W. Productions Ltd. This was the first color film shot with "character lighting" instead of the flat overall lighting hitherto demanded by Technicolor. This story deals with the later stages of Handel?s life, leading up to the composing of his masterpiece "Messiah." During his early years in London, Handel had enjoyed the King?s patronage and people flocked to the theatres to see his operas. But soon fashionable society turned against him. Plagued by financial worries and ill health and abandoned by almost everyone except those closest to him, Handel shut himself away and worked day and night on "Messiah." Its performance at the Royal Opera House in 1743 resulted in a standing ovation led by the King. It began a tradition and fitting honor for the incomparable Handel, composer of one of the finest oratories in the English Language.
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| Customer Reviews:
  The Story of the Man and His Famous Work August 26, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Handel's Messiah has been a favorite of millions of people for centuries. It has been sung and performed all over the globe, especially during the Christmas and Easter seasons.
This movie tells the story behind the writing of that masterpiece. The first two thirds sets the context of the man and his struggles. Then most of last third is spent showing what it may have been like to compose that immortal work of art.
At the end there was a short segment of the grand performance of the Hallelujah Chorus.
Out of personal hardships and illness came this amazing work that has endured. A few other people played a huge role in bringing this to past.
There is an indication of how his personal fellowship with God influenced him during this creative process.
Plus the period costumes and antique like sets give a beautiful visual history lesson.
  Handel: Secular and Sacred January 30, 2005 15 out of 18 found this review helpful
I never knew this 1942 British film existed and while it simplifies Handel's life and implies that the Composer and The Deity co-authored The Messiah, it is an enjoyable curiosity on several points .
The liner notes indicate it was the first Technicolor feature done under natural lighting conditions. The colors in the well preserved DVD transfer print were indeed more "natural" than the hyper-realism you get from Hollywood Technicolor of the same period. The biggest shock came right away in hearing the music performed by a huge orchestra (The London Philharmonic) with a monolithic Mahlerian sound that makes the MET's recent production of his opera Rodelinda seem like the last word in period performance practice.
There is not much music for a film honoring a composer the title itself proclaims as "Great" - mainly because at the time it was made Handel = Messiah and not much else. You get a snippet or two from Faramondo (I think...), Acis and Galatea, and "Ombra mai fu" from Serse - all of it performed as if it were Puccini. Elizabeth Allen is Susannah Cibber, though I couldn't tell who dubbed her singing voice. During Serse the various permutations and extendings of her arms made me think she was going to launch into "Stormy Weather" or "The man (Tree, I suppose in this case...) that got away."
The first half of the movie held the most interest for me - an amusing summary of the various political machinations Handel, Heidegger, and their opera company got mixed up with, ultimately leading to Handel's fall from fashion and near bankruptcy. The character of Mrs. Cibber becomes the repository for all the Cuzzoni / Bordoni type of Prima Donna Handel had to contend with and therefore it is Mrs. Cibber he threatens to throw out the window while referring to himself as the Devil. She also functions as a sort of protective Muse, looking out for the reclusive, crotchety genius when he is unable to take care of himself.
The movie turns sanctimonious after the bankrupt, now passe Handel suffers a serious illness. Largely through orchestral transcriptions, Messiah begins to take shape in his mind, aided by a series of religious tableaux he imagines while looking through a big picture window . Mrs. Cibber comes back into his life, sings a bit of "He was Despised," we get the Hallelujah chorus, George II stands, and the movie abruptly ends.
Even though he lacked Handel's imposing bulk as seen in many of the contemporary paintings, Wilfrid Lawson maintains a convincing balance between the eccentric and the comedic. It would have been easy to play him with lots of rolled "r's" in Sig Ruman / S.Z. Sakall / Hermann Bing mode, but Lawson never looses sight of Handel's dignity and genius.
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