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Harvey - 1950 Xvid version

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91a8a8ba81658747e0c8fd8835b644c83c4731e2
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http://inferno.demonoid.com:3391/announce
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697.98 MB (731,881,711 bytes)
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2006-06-15 08:05:58 - 180 weeks 9 hours 43 minutes ago
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Harvey 1950 starring Jimmy Stewart

 :: NFO for Harvey - 1950 Xvid version

                   ------ Harvey (1950) ------


Directed by: Henry Koster

Writing credits
Mary Chase (play)
Mary Chase (screenplay) ...


Genre: Family / Fantasy / Comedy

Tagline: The Wonderful Pulitzer Prize Play... becomes one of the Great Motion Pictures of our Time!

Plot Outline: Elwood P. Dowd (James Stewart) is a mild-mannered, pleasant man, who just happens (he says) to have an invisible friend resembling a 6-foot rabbit.

User Rating: ********  8.1/10 (10,003 votes)  Top 250: #154

Complete credited cast:
James Stewart	.... 	Elwood P. Dowd
Josephine Hull	.... 	Veta Louise Simmons
Peggy Dow	.... 	Miss Kelly
Charles Drake	.... 	Dr. Sanderson
Cecil Kellaway	.... 	Dr. Chumley
Victoria Horne	.... 	Myrtle Mae Simmons
Jesse White	.... 	Wilson
William H. Lynn	.... 	Judge Gaffney (as William Lynn)
Wallace Ford	.... 	Taxi driver
Nana Bryant	.... 	Mrs. Hazel Chumley
Grayce Mills	.... 	Mrs. Ethel Chauvenet (as Grace Mills)
Clem Bevans	.... 	Mr. Herman Schimmelplusser

Rest of cast listed alphabetically:

Gino Corrado	.... 	Eccentric Man (scenes deleted)
Jack Curtis	.... 	(scenes deleted)
Ida Moore	.... 	Mrs. McGiff (scenes deleted)
Billy Wayne	.... 	Man in Car (scenes deleted)


Runtime:	104 min
Country:	USA
Language:	English
Color:		Black and White
Sound Mix:	Mono (Western Electric Recording)

Awards: Won Oscar. Another 1 win & 4 nominations

--------------------------------

Reviews:
	
Considered a classic with good reason, 21 March 2005
10/10
Author: Howard Schumann from Vancouver, B.C.

For about the first thirty minutes, I was thinking of some way to politely inform those who recommended this film that it wasn't my cup of tea, but the more I stayed, the more captivated I became. Based on a stage play that opened six years earlier, Harvey, the 1950 film directed by Henry Koster, is a delight. If this Jimmy Stewart classic doesn't make you feel good, you must be related to Mr. Henry F. Potter of Bedford Falls. Harvey is a 6' 3'' Pooka who has befriended a certain Mr. Elwood P. Dowd and this causes all sorts of complications for those around him. In case you didn't know, in Celtic mythology a Pooka is a fearsome spirit that usually takes the form of a sleek dark horse that roams the countryside at night, creating harm and mischief. Well, Harvey is not like that at all.

In fact, Harvey is a very gentle spirit who is always helping people out and can make everybody around him feel relaxed and in a good mood. Now Dowd needs all the help he can get. He likes to take a nip once in a while and is always talking to that danged rabbit to the chagrin of his sister Veta Louise (Josephine Hull) whose social life takes a nosedive when brother Elwood is around. Elwood's shenanigans also interfere with her plans to marry off her daughter Myrtle Mae (Victoria Home). When Veta decides that she has had enough and tries to commit Elwood to a psychiatric institution, the tables are turned and she ends up being committed in a hilarious case of mistaken identity. When Elwood leaves the hospital after being released, the medical staff in the hospital (a bit eccentric themselves) realize their mistake and all try to find him.

The madcap beginning soon turns into a gentle and moving drama. Jimmy Stewart is flawless as the decent man who never loses his temper and always has a smile on his face, giving everyone his card and inviting strangers home for dinner. The supporting cast is top notch as well including the unpleasant Dr. Chumley (Cecil Kellaway), the egotistical psychiatrist Dr. Sanderson (Charles Drake), his love struck assistant Miss Kelley (Peggy Dow) and the overwrought orderly (Jesse White, later known as the Maytag repairman).

Eventually some that ridiculed Elwood and his rabbit privately admit that they could see Harvey themselves and by the end we are gradually convinced that the so-called normal people may be stranger than Mr. Dowd. Harvey is considered a classic and with good reason. It works because of its good-natured humor and its gentle slap at those who automatically condemn ideas that are outside socially acceptable norms without thinking for themselves.

---------------------------------------

Magical, 10 December 2003
10/10
Author: carflo from San Antonio, Tx

I have read that James Stewart considered Elwood P. Dowd his most personally significant role. In a career that spanned decades and included such great works at It's a Wonderful Life and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, choosing Harvey's friend, Elwood, as his personal favorite says something about rather powerful about Mr. Stewart and Mr. Dowd.

James Stewart was a down to earth, decent man whose personal life was as honorable as the lives of George Bailey and Jefferson Smith - but he admired Elwood P. Dowd, an alcoholic dreamer with an invisible giant white rabbit as his best friend. Not what you would expect of a man who piloted B-17's and led giant raids over Germany in WWII.

Elwood's attraction for us is perhaps what attracted him so much to James Stewart. Elwood is happy with himself and his life and even more importantly, he makes others happy with their lives. That is the great magic of Elwood and Harvey: they make others happy and they bring peace and a measure of contentment to almost everyone who know them.

I have seen another version of Harvey with Art Carney and it was quite good, but lacked the sense of magic that is a benediction in this version of Harvey. In the Carney version, you can see Harvey - he is a giant white rabbit - and seeing Harvey takes much of the magic away. When you watch Jimmy Stewart, you never really know if Harvey is real or not. You know that Elwood thinks he is real and you know that Elwood's family thinks Elwood is crazy. After watching for a while, you don't really care if Harvey is real. Elwood is real and it is his belief in Harvey and what Harvey represents to him that endows him with such sweet and gentle charm. Harvey is his rejection of the harshness and materialism of the world.

Harvey is a charming, magical masterpiece of kindness and goodness that somehow never becomes maudlin. Elwood and Harvey do not feel sorry for themselves and they most certainly do not expect you to feel sorry for them either. If anything, Elwood feels sorry for the rest of the world and he does not understand how everyone can't see as clearly as he does. For in his world, we are all brothers who should love as generously and kindly as Mr. Stewart's Elwood P. Dowd.

---------------------------------------

A true classic which will last forever, 18 October 2000
Author: Kevin Birch (superkev@nashville99.fsnet.co.uk) from Nottingham, England

There are too many aspects of Harvey to analyse. This is a typical example of a film being incredibly deceptive. On the outside the film is a light hearted comedy but when looking at it closely it is very clearly a serious social commentary of it's time, and indeed of the present time (for the same prejudices still exist today).

Harvey is a "pooka" ( a mischievous spirit) that manifests itself as a six foot white rabbit. Only Elwood P. Dowd can see Harvey and it is from this that the underlying dark story of an alcoholic's friendship with an invisible spirit blends itself in to comic fantasy.

The comic side to the film opens up the subject of prejudice and peoples fear of what is different from themselves. Elwood P Dowd is seen as insane by his sister, neice and the public and yet he is not a killer, he is not an angry or violent man. What he is, however, is a happy, cheerful and exremely pleasant gentleman who takes great pleasure in trying to make other people happy with the aid of a six foot white rabbit.

The film's success, in my mind, is entirely on the shoulders of James Stewart who's portrayal of the eccentric Elwwod P Dowd is exceptionally moving and fulfilling. He is surrounded by an outstanding supporting cast and one of the best scripts in movie history.

If this does not sound appealing to you, I urge you to watch Dowd's comments regarding Harvey outside the bar. This speech never fails to bring a lump in my throat. Not because it is sad but because it is such an innocent speech (delivered superbly by Stewart).

To me, Harvey has a hidden message to the audience,

"Elwood P. Dowd does not see life as it is, but life as it should be!!

Shoudn't we all see life like this?" 

---------------------------------------

Quotes:

"I'd just helped Ed Hickey into a taxi. Ed had been mixing his drinks, and I felt he needed conveying. I started to walk down the street when I heard a voice saying: 'Good evening, Mr. Dowd'. I turned, and there was this big white rabbit leaning against a lamp-post. Well, I thought nothing of that! Because when you've lived in a town as long as I've lived in this one, you get used to the fact that everybody knows your name."

"Harvey and I have things to do... we sit in the bars... have a drink or two... and play the juke box. Very soon the faces of the other people turn towards me and they smile. They say: 'We don't know your name, mister, but you're all right, all right.' Harvey and I warm ourselves in these golden moments. We came as strangers - soon we have friends. They come over. They sit with us. They drink with us. They talk to us. They tell us about the great big terrible things they've done and the great big wonderful things they're going to do. Their hopes, their regrets. Their loves, their hates. All very large, because nobody ever brings anything small into a bar. Then I introduce them to Harvey, and he's bigger and grander than anything they can offer me. When they leave, they leave impressed. The same people seldom come back."

"Well, I've wrestled with reality for 35 years, Doctor, and I'm happy to state I finally won out over it."

"Myrtle Mae, you have a lot to learn, and I hope you never learn it."


-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-@-

Technical information:

File size:	697MB (731871232 bytes)
Length:		01:44:17 (104 min, 17 sec.)
Video: 		XVID 592 x 448 (4:3 aspect) 23.98fps
Audio: 		MPEG Audio Layer 3 32000Hz mono 45Kbps


This was originally posted to Demonoid by otis123 as a full DVD, then re-ripped by me for a swifter download. It's dedicated to a buddy who has an 'imaginary' yet very real 'pooka' who is a Border Collie Dog.


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