Catch-22 |  | Director: Mike Nichols Actors: Alan Arkin, Martin Balsam, Richard Benjamin, Art Garfunkel, Jack Gilford Studio: Paramount Category: DVD
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Seller: goHastings Rating: 78 reviews Sales Rank: 6856
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 122 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: PARD069244D ISBN: 079217254X UPC: 097360692440 EAN: 9780792172543 ASIN: B00005ASGC
Theatrical Release Date: June 24, 1970 Release Date: May 22, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Joseph Heller's novel was one of the seminal literary events of the 1960s, but Mike Nichols's film ultimately proved too literal in its attempt to bring Heller's fragmented fiction to the screen. Still, Nichols, who made this on the heels of The Graduate, seemed the ideal candidate to tackle this Buck Henry adaptation. The story deals with bomber pilot Yossarian (Alan Arkin), who has flown enough missions to get out of World War II but can't because the number of missions needed for discharge keeps getting raised. The satire and absurdity of Heller's book get lost in Nichols's effort to give screen time to the members of his all-star cast, which includes Orson Welles, Jon Voight, Bob Newhart, Anthony Perkins, Richard Benjamin, and Martin Sheen, among others. --Marshall Fine
Product Description The cinematic adaptation of Joseph Heller's scathing black comedy about a small group of flyers in the Mediterranean in 1944. Genre: Feature Film-Drama Rating: R Release Date: 13-AUG-2002 Media Type: DVD
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 78
Even worse than the book December 15, 2009 Mike Crestwood (New York) 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
The book stunk; it was a lousy collection of half-baked ideas that didn't catch on with young people until the late 1960s when the Vietnam War became immensely unpopular in America. Hollywood got a hold of it and tried to make Heller's send up of World War II "relevant" to the war in South East Asia. The studio missed by a mile. Mike Nichols' direction is so disjointed, the dialogue so poorly delivered, and the characters so stupifyingly idiotic/bizarre that you cringe just looking at it. In the end you'd wished Yossarian had died.
Crapstock Revisited November 22, 2009 Marc Stewart (Newnan, GA USA) 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is what happened when the Hippies took over Hollywood in the 70s......Crapstock! This movie is a great example of the attempted woosification of America and has war protestor stank all over it. All the stars in this movie were popular for about 15 minutes, about the time it took to make this snoozefest. Pretty cool mass B-25 take-off, though.
Catch 22 September 14, 2009 Warbird Watcher (Seattle, WA USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Read Heller's book and watched the movie ages ago. I thought both were great then. Catch-22 has stood the test of time. The all-star lineup would have cost a large fortune in a remake today. All those B-25 bombers - real flying aircraft and not computer generated - there are but a handful of restored versions today. The US Air Force sold a number of surplus to the Brazilian and Mexican air forces after the war. I understand that's where the producers found them for the movie. As an anti-war statement (during the Vietnam era) Catch-22 is one running joke after another. "The Never Ending Mission" should have been its subtitle. Unlike Dr. Strangelove, (another of my favorites) it ends with Yossarian (Alan Arkin) riding a rubber boat unlike Slim Pickens riding a nuclear bomb. One interesting footnote, during a pre-mission briefing, one of the targets over Italy was Perugia. Today, it is the unlikely setting of a murder trial that's ongoing for more than a year now in which an American coed, Amanda Knox from Seattle along with her Italian boy friend allegedly murdered a British coed in a house all three were sharing.
Strange movie............ July 13, 2009 R. ASTRID 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
But the location where it has been made is great, I live there !
San Carlos Sonora Mexico and there is still remains of the old movie set where I went horseback riding in the desert with view on the sea of Cortez, great memories !
Yossarian: "That's some catch, that Catch-22!" June 17, 2009 Annie Van Auken (Planet Earth) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
On its release in 1970, CATCH-22 was rated 'X' due to graphic images of bodily injury and simulated fellating.
Based on Joseph Heller's novel, Mike Nichols' anti-war film is perhaps the greatest of its kind. An all-star cast make this an unforgettable experience. Very highest recommendation!
WHO'S WHO in "22"--
Capt. John Yossarian (Arkin) is a bombardier stationed in Italy. He's flown too many missions, seen too much tragedy and now just wants OUT.
Col. Cathcart (Balsam) and Lt. Col. Corn (Henry) are stonewalling masters who keep raising the number of missions needed for rotation home.
Maj. Danby (Benjamin), the squadron's mission briefer is an eternally optimistic airhead and the exemplification of "no brain, no pain."
Doc Daneeka (Gilford) gets flight pay even though he's never been in a plane, as Yossarian's pilot, McWatt (Bonerz) falsely lists Doc on his mission manifests.
Maj. Major Major Major (Newhart) is a do-nothing laundry captain who's promoted to squadron commander solely because of his newly created name. He's literally "the man who wasn't there."
Capt. Aardvark (Grodin), Yossarian's new pilot is a deviant with a penchant for forcing himself on scarlet women.
Chaplain Tappman (aka "Padre") (Perkins) is a kindly man who's in way over his head. He wants to help Yossarian, but doesn't know how.
Lt. Nately (Garfunkel) will be 20 on his next birthday-- if he lives. He naively falls in love with one of Rome's streetwalkers.
1st Lt. Dobbs (Sheen) is much like Yossarian-- he just wants to survive, to go home.
Orr (Balaban), Yossarian's bunkmate is an eccentric pilot that constantly gets shot down. His Mediterranean splash landings are "good practice."
Gen. Dreedle (Welles), overall air base commander, has a goofy son-in-law aide (Pendleton) and an hourglass-shaped WAC secretary/girlfriend (Benton).
Milo Minderbinder (Voight), through connivance and pure gall manipulates his way from mess officer to CEO of MM Enterprises. Milo sells unwanted cotton to the Germans in exchange for having his own airbase bombed by our planes!
Snowden (Korkes) is a new man who's mortally wounded by in-flight flak. Yossarian's inability to help Snowden is the catalyst that steels him to escape this war's insanity.
Parenthetical number preceding title is a 1 to 10 viewer poll rating found at a film research website.
(7.1) Catch-22 (1970) - Alan Arkin/Martin Balsam/Richard Benjamin/Art Gafunkel/Jack Gilford/Buck Henry/Bob Newhart/Anthony Perkins/Paula Prentiss/Martin Sheen/Jon Voight/Orson Welles/Bob Balaban/Susanne Benton/Norman Fell/Charles Grodin/Austin Pendleton/Peter Bonerz/Jon Korkes/Jack Riley/Richard Libertini
Showing reviews 1-5 of 78
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