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Chariots of Fire | 
enlarge | Director: Hugh Hudson Actors: Ben Cross, Ian Charleson, Nigel Havers, Nicholas Farrell, Ian Holm Studio: Warner Category: Video
List Price: CDN$ 14.99 Buy Used: CDN$ 1.39 You Save: CDN$ 13.60 (91%)
Used (3) from CDN$ 1.39
Rating: 129 reviews Sales Rank: 661
Format: Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language) Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Media: VHS Tape Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 6300271498 UPC: 085392000432 EAN: 9786300271494
Theatrical Release Date: October 9, 1981 Release Date: March 13, 2001 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: SHIPS FROM UNITED STATES. Avg Delivery Times are 7-24 business days (may take 6-8 weeks due to customs delays). Visit Got Books for all your media needs.
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From Amazon.co.uk The come-from-behind winner of the 1981 Oscar for Best Picture, Chariots of Fire either strikes you as either a cold exercise in mechanical manipulation or as a tale of true determination and inspiration. The heroes are an unlikely pair of young athletes who ran for Great Britain in the 1924 Paris Olympics: devout Protestant Eric Liddell (Ian Charleson), a divinity student whose running makes him feel closer to God, and Jewish Harold Abrahams (Ben Cross), a highly competitive Cambridge student who has to surmount the institutional hurdles of class prejudice and anti-Semitism. There's delicious support from Ian Holm (as Abrahams's coach) and John Gielgud and Lindsay Anderson as a couple of Cambridge fogies. Vangelis's soaring synthesised score, which seemed to be everywhere in the early 1980s, also won an Oscar. Chariots of Fire was the debut film of British television commercial director Hugh Hudson (Greystoke) and was produced by David Puttnam. --Jim Emerson
Amazon.com Essential Video The come-from-behind winner of the 1981 Oscar for best picture, Chariots of Fire either strikes you as either a cold exercise in mechanical manipulation or as a tale of true determination and inspiration. The heroes are an unlikely pair of young athletes who ran for Great Britain in the 1924 Paris Olympics: devout Protestant Eric Liddell (Ian Charleson), a divinity student whose running makes him feel closer to God, and Jewish Harold Abrahams (Ben Cross), a highly competitive Cambridge student who has to surmount the institutional hurdles of class prejudice and anti-Semitism. There's delicious support from Ian Holm (as Abrahams's coach) and John Gielgud and Lindsay Anderson as a couple of Cambridge fogies. Vangelis's soaring synthesized score, which seemed to be everywhere in the early 1980s, also won an Oscar. Chariots of Fire was the debut film of British television commercial director Hugh Hudson (Greystoke) and was produced by David Puttnam. --Jim Emerson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 124 more reviews...
Not very inspiring, too much religious talk, simply boring! February 2, 2008 Remi Parent (New-Brunswick, Canada) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I was expecting a lot out of this movie based on reviews, I bought a bunch of movies for those long winter days on the trainer (indoor cycling). I thought I was going to enjoy a good sports movie to keep me motivated while spinning on my indoor trainer. After roughly 20 minutes I felt like stoping it and changing the movie but I figured I paid for the movie might as well watch it. I watched a few movies that were absolutely worth watching such as Steve Pre fontaine "Without Limits". Some movies really get to you, they reach out to you and simply inspires you so much or gives you energy and just makes you feel like you want to race or beat the hell out of someone (in a boxing ring) such as Rocky movies.. This one certainly didn't have that effect. Another English movie I watched lately "4 Minutes" also wasn't that good, I also expected more. My girlfriend watched a part of it with me, she intended to watch it all but ran upstairs after 15 min saying it was boring. I honestly don't understand how it got such good reviews..
Competition and Character July 14, 2004 Trial Critic (San Francisco, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Chariots of Fire is an outstanding epic based on the lives of two men (among others), Eric Liddel and Harold Abrahams. Eric Liddel, a Scotsman and a missionary believes he can succeed as a testament to his undying faith. Harold Abrahams, a Jew wishes to succeed to prove that Jews are no inferior to others in post WWI England. This movie is one of refinement, ambition, commitment and integrity. In that era, there are tempers when the Masters of Cambridge do not take lightly to Harold being trained by a professional as they pride in the amateur aspect of the sport and the esprit de corps. His interaction with his girl friend when he loses a race is a special point. She says, "He won fair and square. There is nothing you can do about it." Then he retorts, "I do not run to compete, I run to win, if I cannot win, I should not run." She replies, "If you do not run, you cannot win." It ends with her frustration and saying, "Grow up". As compelling as the racing scenes are, it's really the depth of the two main characters that touches the viewer, as they forcefully drive home the theme that victory attained through devotion and sacrifice is the most admirable feat that one can achieve.I am glad that I have a wide screen edition of this DVD, however this is a region 3 and cannot play in a regular DVD player, as they play only the region 1 version. It is similar to the version released in UK. Even this version does not have a good audio and video transfer. There are dots in the video and the audio should be better considering the outstanding score by Vangelis. The widescreen edition is farbetter than the one released in US though. I am sad that they are not releasing this one here. I got this one in US through another website, thanks to my enhanced DVD player. So, I would give 5 stars for the movie and 4 stars for the transfer (I am being very generous here).
A good drama and sports movie - possible? YES! July 8, 2004 Maggie (Winnipeg, Manitoba - Canada) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It being my father's favourite film, I decided to give it a go. Although at first I thought it to be a quaint little story about British Olympic glory in 1924, after watching it the first time (and many times since) and listening to the superb musical score, I realised it is much more. One of those rare films, with superb acting and a believable and intelligent storyline and screenplay, that has an intangable extra. That extra drives you to view the movie again - and again and again, tirelessly -- only to discover new dimensions to characters, new meanings to the seemingly simple storyline, and of course a little bit about fascinating British history. (Not to mention movie making and acting -- real acting, an alternative to Hollywood -- and a very refreshing one! The characters are well developed -- the movie is only slow moving if you value slap-dash, one dimensional, superficial development. I thought the movie was well-paced and believable. There's a quality to it rarely seen in the mainstream Hollywood movie, and that's precisely what made it special. The cinematography is still breathtaking, the beach scene with complimentary soundtrack being one of those unforgettable moments in movie history. And quite frankly I *liked* the characters' plight, their passions, their individual means and ends, and how each tackles difficulties in his own way while at the same time acting in the name of British sportspersonship, national pride, etc.
With hope in our hearts and wings in our heels! July 8, 2004 Daniel J. Hamlow (Utsunomiya City, Japan) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
The athletes of the British running team who went with hope in their hearts and wings in their heels in the VIII Olympiad in Paris in 1924 is the focus of this movie, but there's also the dynamics of what it means to be English, and the reconciliation of one's soul and religious convictions in the Modern Age. Three of them are students from Cambridge. There is the quiet and soft-spoken Aubrey Montague, Lord Andrew Lindsey, and Harold Abrahams. As the head of Caius (pronounced Keys) College tells them when they first attend in 1919, they are the first post-war generation who have inherited the dreams of a generation that perished on the fields of France, a generation embodying "goodness, zeal,...and intellectual promise."The two main athletes here are a contrast from one another. One is Harold Abrahams, a Jew who wants to be seen as English as the fellow next to him. Hence his enrolling in all these clubs and fraternities in Caius College, from track, tennis, and even the Gilbert and Sullivan glee club-he wants to enter the Christian, Anglo-Saxon corridors of power, i.e. the old school tie. He succeeds in getting to an English girl in the form of Sybil Gordon, who doesn't mind he's Jewish. He can run like the wind, and nothing would fulfill his dream of being English more than winning so he'll be accepted, but he's so driven, hinging so much of his success on his winning, that he acts like its his own funeral when he loses in a race. He engages Sam Mussabini, a private and professional coach, which is contrary to the implied rules of Cambridge. When the heads of Trinity House and Caius House, (Sir John Gielgud and Lindsay Anderson) use their prep-school mentality to chastise him, saying Cambridge prided itself on the amateur attitude as opposed to the professional, and an esprit de Corps as opposed to individual glory, Abrahams tells them off. Scottish Eric Liddle, on the other hand, is a missionary born in China, who plans to return there to continue God's work, but the "muscular Christian" runs like a wild animal. With religion as a metaphor, he compares faith to running a race, describing the energy of the soul, the elation of breaking that tape, but he says that the power comes from within. "If you commit yourself to the love of Jesus Christ-that is how you win a straight race." To win is to honour God, and the gift he was given. His faith is tested twice, between the missionary work and running, and his respect for God and running on the Sabbath. He's clearly more Victorian, but also a Scot, choosing God over country instead of the more secular British. But will his faith help him triumph over favoured Americans Jackson Scholz and Charles Paddock? The slow-mo shots of the running athletes, the looks of elation, the disappointment of those who didn't qualify shows the various reactions of the soul. And New Age composer Vangelis Pathaniossou made his mark with his score, during the races and the scenes of Americans training, but especially the moving main theme that opens and closes the movie as the athletes are running along the ocean shore. This sequence itself is repeated twice, once where we know nothing about these athletes on who the cameras pan in on, but by the end, when the camera does its work, we know these people better, and they have names, as the credits identify actor and role. This was an early role for Nicholas Farrell (Montague), who was Horatio in Branagh's Hamlet. But Ben Cross as the driven Abrahams, Ian Charleson as the debonair blond Christian Liddell, Nigel Havers as Lindsay, Ian Holm (Mussabini), and Alice Krige (Sybil) do well. And yes, the Head Porter at Caius College is Richard Griffiths, best known as Harry Potter's Uncle Vernon, and quite thinner too. As the winner of four Oscars including Best Picture, Chariots Of Fire remains an unpretentious film where the finish line is a moral, spiritual, and of course a physical goal, and how one must be true to oneself to reach that goal.
Refined, inspiring, intelligent July 6, 2004 Luis M. Luque (Crofton, Maryland, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Even though this has an air of Merchant-Ivory crossed with Masterpiece Theater, and no genuine movie stars (at least at the time, except Sir John Gielgud), the movie shines from beginning to end. I saw this in the theater when it first came out and was very pleasantly surprised. It's a true story with a great message that still plays like Rocky with a brain -- exciting, funny, dramatic, well-acted, beautifully photographed. Unfortunately, not everyone will like it, though, because it brings back the days when drama meant dialogue, subtlety and intelligence, not explosions, predictable plots and computer-generated imagery. You have to watch and listen and have an appreciation of history. You can't watch this one and be distracted. Best to watch when you have time and can savor the moments, not when you have a room full of children, for instance.
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