Dustin Hoffman Movie:

Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations



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Dustin Hoffman Movie:
Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations



Movie
Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations
Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations
List Price: $24.99Label: Image Entertainment

Salesrank: 17110

Released: January 28, 2003
Our Price: $12.40
Used Price: $12.00
MPAA Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • DVD
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Dustin Hoffman
  • Kate Reid
  • John Malkovich
  • Stephen Lang
  • Charles Durning
  • Editorial Review:
    Willy Loman has spent his entire life believing he and his family are bound for greatness. Struggling day to day as a traveling salesman, Willy begins to lose touch with reality and drifts away into the past. Meanwhile his family, including wife Linda and sons Biff and Happy, attempts to cope with Willy's self-destruction and the still-lingering ghosts of the past. Arthur Miller's timeless Pulitzer Prize-winning play is brought to the screen with a powerhouse performance by Academy Award-winner Dustin Hoffman, who earned Emmy and Golden Globe Awards for this role. The stellar supporting cast features Kate Reid, Charles Durning, Stephen Lang, and in his first breakout role, John Malkovich as Biff, all guided by internationally-acclaimed director Volker Schlondorff (The Tin Drum) and a haunting score by legendary composer Alex North (Spartacus).

    Description of Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations:
    German filmmaker Volker Schlöndorff's 1985 production of Arthur Miller's most famous play appeared squarely and quite hauntingly in the middle of the go-go economy of the Reagan-Bush years. Miller's story, set during the post-war boom period of the late '40s, concerns an aging, traveling salesman named Willy Loman (Dustin Hoffman), who despairs that his life his been lived in vain. Facing dispensability and insignificance in a heated, youthful economy, Willy is not ready to part with his cherished fantasies of an America that loves and admires him for personable triumphs in the marketplace. But the reality is far more pitiable than that, and the measure of Willy's self-delusion and contradictions is found in his two sons, one (Stephen Lang) a ne'er-do-well gliding on inherited hot air and repressed feelings, and the other (John Malkovich) a mousy, retiring sort unable to reconcile--or forgive--the difference between his father's desperate impersonation of success and the truth. Schlondorff's remarkable cast explores Miller's rich subtext to great effect, though Hoffman--despite giving us a new model of Willy to contrast with Lee J. Cobb's definitive portrayal a generation before--is a bit insect-like and shrill in his approach. Malkovich, Lang, and Kate Reid (as Willy's long-suffering wife) are perfect, however, and the production is atmospheric and strong. --Tom Keogh

    Death of a Salesman/ Private Conversations Reviews:
    3 stars out of 4 4 Star Review
    2009-02-05 - The Bottom Line:

    Though John Malkovich looks a little too old, and I still maintain that Brian Dennehy made a better Willy Loman, this filmed version of the mid-80s revival of Death of a Salesman is still well-worth recommending on the strength of Miller's writing and the caliber of the acting.

    A piece of art 5 Star Review
    2007-07-03 - Death of a salesman is one of the best samples of the american drama that reflects the real life of the dream that is not even reached by american people.

    I love Dustin Huffman play but all the characters are amazingly builded which make the sense of being at the teather.

    Obviously a collective dvd. 5 Star Review
    2007-02-08 - Death of a salesman is the show, which is being put on somewhere in the world almost every day of the year. It's so multi-dynamic and close to real life that it can hurt you for real. Beside the genius playwriting, this movie is an excellent performance of that. Dusting Hoffman, John Malkovich, Kate Reid, Stephen Lang they all have done superb job portraying their characters. Although I am not into literature, capable enough to pay homage for a play like this one, I for certainly recommend this movie for everyone to collect. A must have movie.

    This is an utterly classic dramatic work 5 Star Review
    2005-10-29 - Sparse sets set-up the huge dramatic energy of this deceivingly simple story. Every actor and actress is outstanding and
    the power, range, and depth of the performance is incredible.
    Bristling with raw force, the drama digs through the layers
    of mid-america near mid-century, creating a powerful historical
    testament. The stars were aligned for Miller, Hoffman, Malkovic and the rest for this dynamic theatre. Pathos.

    Searing drama 5 Star Review
    2005-09-14 - Dustin Hoffman is Willy Loman, the salesman who's come to the end of his rope as the illusions he's always believed in come crashing down on him. This was filmed originally for TV off the stage, with no attempt to make it into a "movie." It's a very great play, done extremely well here. I think I still might like the 1951 version with Frederic March as Loman a tad better, but Hoffman adds another feather to his cap. (Neither March nor Hoffman can top Lee J. Cobb's portrayal of Willy in the original 1949 stage version.) Kate Reid plays his harried wife Linda, John Malkovich is Biff, and Stephen Lang is Hap.

    The "Private Conversations" piece, back-stage doings and interviews, is a let down after watching the movie. It completely knocks the wind out of the sails of the performance just seen.










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