Average Rating: 
Rating: - "You must remember this"....
It's hard to believe that when Casablanca was filmed at Warner Bros. Studios in 1942 it was "just another" of the 50 or so films that the studio was producing every year, as Lauren Bacall points out in the documentary about the film included in the special features. The movie was an instant success with audiences everywhere, and won three Academy Awards including Best Picture. Called "America's most popular and beloved movie- and rightly so" by The Motion Picture Guide, and "The best Hollywood movie of all time" by Leonard Maltin, Casablanca was voted the #2 film in a list of the top 100 films of this century by the American Film Institute. Set in refugee strewn French North Africa in 1942, Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart), a night club owner, and his friend Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Prefect of Police, enter into a wager as to whether or not Resistance Leader Victor Laslo (Paul Henreid) will be able to escape Casablanca and reach the Free World. When Laslo arrives in Casablanca, Rick is stunned to find him accompanied by his ex-lover, Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman). Filled with mystery, suspense, intrigue and romance, Casablanca will remain a favorite of classic movie lovers for years to come. The supporting cast include Conrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre and Dooley Wilson as Rick's piano playing confidant, Sam. The entire cast are superb, the settings are excellent, and the cinematogrophy is wonderful. The song "As Time Goes By" was made famous by Casablanca, as it's melody is entwined throughout the film, and it too is now a classic, filled with romance and nostalgia. This is one film that absolutely MUST be in your DVD library!
Rating: - AFI Voted Casablanca #2 ALL TIME CLASSIC !!!!
Casablanca is the 2nd greatest movie of the 100 top in the last 100 years according to the American Film Institute (AFI) poll of 1998.Warner Brothers Studios produce an abundance of hit patriotic romance features during the War Years (1940's). They had a stable of the greatest stars (Bogart, Bergman, Rains, Lorre, Greenstreet to mention a few) which produced countless movies in short order. In Summary; French Morocco during World War II love triangle night club owner Rick (Humphrey Bogart), Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) & Victor (Paul Henreid) try to outwit & escape the Nazi's with many twists & turns involving an assortment of memorable characters you'll never forget. Casablanca was the greatest of Warner Brothers (Best Picture Oscar)1940's features. In my opinion the #1 movie as yet due to the fantasic script, sreenplay (Won an Oscar) plots, cast, direction (Best Director Oscar)and charismatic attraction you'll have in watching this movie over and over. The extras include a fantastic documentary narrated by Bogarts wife, Lauren Bacall. Seeing is believing, trust me, pull up a comfortable chair and watch this digitalized Black & White classic "CASABLANCA".
Rating: - Intrigue, corruption, love and tension in every scene
This 1942 film is a classic, and rightly so. Staring Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman and Paul Heinreid, it was originally just another one of the more than 50 films turned out each year by each of the major studios that dominated Hollywood in those days. It's release coincidentally coincided with the Nazi occupation of France, and its theme and its timeless love story caught the public's imagination.Casablanca in French Morocco is under French rule and one of the places in the world where refuges can get safe passage visas to go on to Lisbon and eventually to America and freedom. It is seething with intrigue and corruption. Humphrey Bogart is an ex-patriot American citizen who runs Rick's Cafe, where much of the commerce takes place. Peter Lorre is a smuggler, Sidney Greenstreet is a black marketeer, and Martin Dooley is the piano player known as Sam. When, one evening Ingrid Bergman comes in to the cafe on the arm of her husband, Paul Heinreid, and asks the piano player to "play it Sam", he reluctantly plays "As Time Goes By." This melody which is played throughout the movie, is the glue that defines the romance. There's electricity between the lovers. There's intrigue and double dealing. Something exciting happens in each scene. And the acting is so good that it brought me right into Casablanca. The story is always clear. The danger is always there. The tension sizzles. One particularly meaningful scene was when some Nazi soldiers gather round the piano and sing an ominous song to the "Fatherland". It makes everyone in the Rick's cafe very uncomfortable. That's when Paul Heinried instructs the orchestra to play the French national anthem, the "Marseilles". Everyone starts to sing. The Nazis are silenced. The music takes over. I found my eyes filled with tears. The video I rented included a "made for TV program" that featured interviews with some of the original writers and recollections from people working on the set at the time. There was an interview with the man who did the music. He said that when he wrote that into the script he actually felt tears running down his face. It was the same powerful emotion that I felt too. The movie was shot in black and white. It was also shot in a studio in Hollywood. The airplane scene used a cardboard cutout of a plane and hired midgets dressed as mechanics. Shot from a distance and through a fog it was realistic and served the same kind of purpose of today's video imaging and special effects. Of course all the principals are dead, but their celluloid images in a timeless classic film lingers on.
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