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Pretty Baby [DVD] [1978]

Pretty Baby [DVD] [1978]Director: Louis Malle
Actors: Keith Carradine, Brooke Shields, Susan Sarandon
Studio: Paramount Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £9.99
Buy New: £2.98
as of 21/11/2009 23:49 GMT details
You Save: £7.01 (70%)



New (14) Used (3) from £2.76

Seller: Amazon.co.uk
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 6861

Format: PAL
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
Region: 2
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 105 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5014437919434
ASIN: B000KQGX46

Theatrical Release Date: 1978
Release Date: February 19, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

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Customer Reviews:
4 out of 5 stars A Film Everyone Should See At Least Once.   October 13, 2007
Andrew Kerr (Scotland)
14 out of 15 found this review helpful

Produced and directed by Louis Malle in the late seventies, Pretty Baby portrays the taboo subject of child prostitution in the early twentieth century. The film became very controversial for obvious reasons. It shows Brooke Shields (who plays Violet) at the age of twelfth often completely naked and in a sexual role unsuitable for a minor. The film is based mainly in a house set in the red light district of New Orleans and follows the character of E.J Bellocq (Keith Carradine) a photographer who becomes involved with Violet. There are some powerful and 'disturbing' scenes throughout the film. One that comes to mind is when they start to auction her to a room of gentleman selling her as a virgin and refering to her as "The finest delicacy New Orleans has to offer" and selling her like a piece of meat to the highest bidder. However if you can see past certain things then you will see that Pretty Baby is a film of humanity and beauty. Is an original one of a kind film that shows how life was and how life changed. The acting throughout the film and from everyone is just amazing. However I feel as a serious film fan that I should point out that the British release of the DVD has been cut. Its running time is only 105 minutes while the running time of the American release is 109 minutes which is slightly longer (you can check by searching for Pretty Baby region 1 on Amazon and scrolling down to its running time.) I couldn't tell you what exactly has been cut out and why. Also I would have liked to have seen some special features on the DVD that are worth watching. Currently there are none. But all things considered I think that Pretty Baby is a film that everyone should see at least once.


4 out of 5 stars I love you once. I love you twice. I love you more than beans and rice!,   April 25, 2008
Jenny J.J.I. (That Lives in Northern Nevada)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I like this movie and I have seen this countless of times. 'Pretty Baby' is a testament to the fact that the 70's were vastly more liberated than our times, at least when it comes to sexuality. In here pretty baby is twelve-year-old Violet, played by Brooke Shields. Violet has grown in the environment of a circa World War I whorehouse in New Orleans, where her mother Hattie (Susan Sarandon) practices the oldest of professions. She still acts like a child, one who likes to chase lizards in the underbrush and who throws tantrums when she doesn't get her way. When her mother leaves the brothel to start a respectable life, Violet remains and allows her virginity to be auctioned off to the highest bidder. She finds herself drawn to a photographer, Bellocq, who is taking portraits of Storyville prostitutes. Realizing that she is love, the young Violet declares her intention to marry Bellocq... br / br /Brook performance literally carries this movie. Yes, the movie is quite explicit about the business of prostitution during that time, but it is never exploited and gives one the sense of how it really was, and what might happen to children born into prostitution. Malle's dispassionate take on all of this outraged viewers a quarter-century ago, but it all seems rather tame today. Perhaps too tame......... br / br /Malle's restraint is so great at times that one wishes he'd pushed the envelope even more. But he got an amazing performance out of Shields, one that she never topped in her career as an actress -- Violet is a mesmerizing combination of innocent child and sly young woman, and that we never see her as a victim is to both her credit and Malle's. Some of the other acting in the film is less impressive, especially Frances Faye as the brothel's elderly owner, Nell -- she's simply horrible, turning in one of the worst performances seen outside of early John Waters' movies. Still, it's a beautiful movie. Its slow pace may frustrate some viewers, but 'Pretty Baby' is a gorgeous, emotionally stunning experience.


3 out of 5 stars A Whore with Heart?   October 9, 2007
nmollo (London)
8 out of 10 found this review helpful

Pretty Baby is certainly not a boring movie but it is not a great one either. My first jolt out of the world it wanted to convey was the appalling miming at the piano by Antonio Fargas. This really is the Directors fault as the camera angel chosen showed too much of his aimless finger work. That aside the atmosphere of the Whore House was convincingly portrayed. br / br /The main problem with the film has to be the performance of Keith Carradine. In both film versions of "Lolita" the Humberts played respectively by James Mason and Jeremy Irons convincingly portray their desperate love for their nymphet. Keith Carradine does not. br / br /Brook Shields and Susan Sarandon are excellent but the material they are asked to work with never rises above simple observation. No ones heart is ever truly exposed and so a coldness pervades the picture. br / br /The DVD transfer is good. The sound could be better. There are no Extras.


3 out of 5 stars A look inside the Red Light District   May 18, 2008
M. A. Ramos (Florida USA)
3 out of 5 found this review helpful

This story takes place at the turn of the century in New Orleans'. A prostitute becomes pregnant decides to keep her baby and gives birth to a daughter named Violet. They live in the brothel where she continues to work. Twelve years later, Violet is old enough to attract the attentions of the brothel's customers. Her mother agrees to have her virginity auctioned off to the customers of the house. The story really starts when Violet draws the affections of Bellocq, a photographer who has been working on a photo series about prostitutes. Violet's blend of childlike innocence and adult sensuality is profoundly attractive to him, but their relationship quickly becomes a problem. Which is enhanced when her mother leaves Violet behind to get married. The film's sexual content is sensual without being especially graphic. This is really a film about desire and attraction.

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