Divorce American Style
Cast :Dick Van Dyke, Debbie Reynolds
Director :Bud Yorkin
Studio :Columbia Tristar Hom
Format :Color, Closed-captioned
Released Date :June 21, 1967
DVD Released Date :January 06, 2004
Language :English (Dubbed), English (Subtitled)
Audience Rating :NR (Not Rated)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateDecember 24, 2004
SummaryAnother modern classic chopped up in stupid standard screen!
Content
Thank goodness Dick Van Dyke's brilliant Never A Dull Moment recently got the classy widescreen treatment it so richly deserved, but Divorce American Style? Nope! They threw it into the crummy standard screen bin, like it was a piece of trash!

I mean it only starred Van Dyke and Debbie Reynolds, was directed by Bud Yorkin, with Conrad Hall as the Director of Photography. So I guess the studio (Columbia/Tristar) just didn't think these people were GOOD enough to deserve a widescreen release!

I will gladly buy this DVD, because the theatrical version was GREAT, but only IF it ever comes out in its original widescreen aspect ratio. Continue to boycott all standard screen butcher jobs, everyone!



Rating
DateMarch 14, 2004
SummaryAVOID FULL FRAME BUTCHER JOB
Content
yet again...a studio "dumbs down" a release by not giving us the full image. Teach them a lesson by boycotting these "butchered" releases...Conrad Hall (the cinematographer) deserves better.

Rating
DateApril 20, 2002
SummaryDivorce as business
Content
That si nothing but a comedy, but a very good one. No real depth about life but a very clear vision of divorce as nothing but business for both sexes. A man can be nearly destroyed by a divorce, but he can be regenerated by the remarrying of his ex-wife. So everything is organized by everyone so that ex-wives remarry and ex-husbands remarry too. It means no real love but only some business agreements here and there along the way. The twist comes through some hypnosis that completely meddles with the cards of the game and everything can start from the very same point the whole film had started from. Divorcing is some kind of artistic game in the middle-class suburbs.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

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