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 Home » DVD » Dial M for Murder [Blu-ray 3D]

Dial M for Murder [Blu-ray 3D]

Dial M for Murder [Blu-ray 3D]
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  • List Price: $35.99
  • Buy New: $28.47
  • as of 5/22/2013 13:15 EDT details
  • You Save: $7.52 (21%)
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New (17) Used (1) from $28.47
  • Seller:The_Connection
  • Sales Rank:12,272
  • Format:3D, Color, Widescreen
  • Language:English (Original Language)
  • Color:color
  • Media:Blu-ray
  • Running Time:105 Minutes
  • Rating:NR (Not Rated)
  • Region:1
  • Discs:1
  • Aspect Ratio:1.77:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.4
  • Dimensions (in):6.7 x 5.3 x 0.6
  • Release Date:October 9, 2012
  • MPN:WARBR298479
  • UPC:883929248391
  • EAN:0883929248391
  • ASIN:B008ERNLTS
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days


Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
Ray Milland, Grace Kelly. A woman becomes aware that her husband is trying to kill her and must devise a plan to trip him up at his own game.
Amazon.com
A suave tennis player (Ray Milland) plots the perfect murder, the dispatching of his wealthy wife (Grace Kelly), who is having an affair with a writer (Robert Cummings). Amazingly, the wife manages to stave off her attacker, a twist of fate that challenges the hubby's talent for improvisation. Alfred Hitchcock wisely stuck to the stage origins of Dial M for Murder, ignoring the temptation to "open up" the material from the home of the unhappy couple. The result may not be one of Hitchcock's deepest films, but it's a thoroughly engaging chamber movie. It also features Grace Kelly at her loveliest, the same year she made Rear Window with Hitchcock. Dial M for Murder was filmed in the briefly trendy 3-D process, and Hitchcock shot some scenes to bring out the depth of the 3-D field; it's especially good for the nail-biting attempted murder of Kelly, and her desperate reach for a pair of scissors that seems to be just outside her grasp. However, the film was rarely shown with the proper 3-D projection, going out "flat" instead (a 1980 reissue restored the process for a limited theatrical release). Dial M was remade in 1998 as A Perfect Murder, a film that changed and expanded the material, with no improvement on the clean, witty original. --Robert Horton

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