Repeat Performance, Repeat Performance, Blu-Ray
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Abe Dinovitch, Alf Haugan, Alfred L. Werker, Alfred Werker, Ann Roberts, Aubrey Schenk, Benay Venuta, Bud Townsend, Dick Gordon, Drama, Flicker Alley, Gale Ronn, Ilka Gruning, Jean del Val, Jean Dutriz, Joan Leslie, John Ireland, Leland Hodgson, Lory Leeman, Louis Hayward, Mack Williams, Michael Markham, Mike Lally, Mildred Sellers, Movies, Movies & TV › Movies, Mystery / Suspense, Natalie Schafer, Patrick Hurst, Phillip Morris, Raymond Largay, Repeat Performance, Richard Basehart, Tim Murdock, Tom Conway, Valerie Traxler, Virginia FieldRepeat Performance, the most requested film in the early years of the Film Noir Foundation's restoration campaign, is finally available in digital form! An amazingly original hybrid of film noir, supernatural fantasy, and backstage melodrama, the film stars Joan Leslie as a Broadway actress who magically relives the previous year of her life, but can she alter the fateful mistakes and misjudgments that led to a New Year's Eve tragedy? Think of it as film noir's answer to It's a Wonderful Life or a full-length precursor to The Twilight Zone. Produced as a rare prestige picture by fledgling Eagle-Lion Pictures, the movie features an array of vivid performances: 21-year-old Joan Leslie as Sheila Page, her first mature role following a parade of teenage ingenues at Warner Bros.; Louis Hayward as her husband Barney, a bitter and vengeful playwright; Virginia Field as Sheila's personal and professional rival, Paula Costello; Tom Conway as suave stage producer John Friday; and Richard Basehart in his movie debut as poet William Williams, one of the era's most sensitive depictions of a gay artist. In the years after it's 1947 release, Repeat Performance seemingly vanished. For many who'd seen it, the film's startling premise and stunning set-pieces became merely a tantalizing memory. It fell so far off the cultural radar people began to think they'd only imagined the movie. But thanks to the dedication and diligence of the Film Noir Foundation, Repeat Performance was restored in collaboration with UCLA Film & Television Archive and the Packard Humanities Institute. And now, it lives again in a beautiful Blu-ray/DVD dual-format edition loaded with special features.
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