Fail-safe (Special Edition)

DVD : Fail-safe (Special Edition)

Fail-safe (Special Edition)

starring: Dan O'Herlihy, Walter Matthau, Frank Overton, Ed Binns, Fritz Weaver
directed by: Sidney Lumet



 : Fail-safe (Special Edition)
See Larger Image

List Price: $14.94
Our Price: $10.99
You Save: -$3.95 (26%)
Prices subject to change.


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours




Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Brand: Sony
EAN: 9780767854993
Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD-Video, Letterboxed, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0767854993
Label: Sony Pictures
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Picture Format: Letterbox
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Region Code: 99
Release Date: 2000-10-31
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: 1964-10-07



Editorial Review:

















Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Related Items:
     see more

Related Items:



banned interdit verboden prohibido vietato proibido
  banned    interdit    verboden   vietato     prohibido    verboden  banned      vietato      interdit proibido   vietato       interdit      verboden      banned  prohibido   

Your IP has been blocked. Please perform the action below to regain access.

Code:  security image
Please enter the Code: 



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - We have nothing to fear
But perhaps the machines we have built to protect us.

"Fail Safe" was filmed in 1964 at the height of the Cold War nuclear anxiety. The premise is that our US technology mistakenly labeled a troubled passenger aircraft as an incoming Soviet bomb and scrambled our own Air Force fighters against Moscow. President (Henry Fonda) and the Soviet Premier must work together to try and diffuse the situation and ultimately to solve the problems our failed 'fail safe' system created.

I am aware this film was redone in color and I am not sure it could ever be as good. The starkness of the black and white adds to the drama and period authenticity of the situation. Plus, Henry Fonda is in my opinion one of the best US Presidents on screen. This film is a classic and well worth the cost of the disc to add to your collection if you are a political science or a war buff.

Rebecca Kyle, June 2008



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - FEEL SAFE ?
A "cold war' chiller that still maintains one's attention today after 44 years.While a brilliant, but truly eerie professor (Matthau) is holding center stage at a symposium, pontificating on the number of "acceptable losses" in a nuclear war, a computer malfunction sends an American bomber streaking towards Moscow. As scientists scurry to contact the jet,Fonda, doing a superb job as American President,effectively uses the "hot line",trying to buy time and to allay the fears of the Soviets. The plane is finally contacted, but the pilot has been specifically trained to disregard any orders from anyone once he has flown past his fail-safe point.Fonda then relays an impromptu plan to the Soviets to avoid nuclear warfare. Stay tuned! I would assume that all age groups, once seated, will still find this film downright scary and absorbing.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Great, Great movie
Fail-safe happens to be one of the few books I've read. A great book and a fine theatrical adaptation. I feel that Larry Hagman and Henry Fonda gave some of the best performances of their carrers. Very true to the book, in my opinion. I would watch it, commercials and all, each time it would come on broadcast TV and finally checked to see if it was on DVD. An exciting cold war thriller. I highly recommend this DVD.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Exercise in Tension.
Fail-Safe (Sidney Lumet, 1964)

That Sidney Lumet has traditionally been one of America's finest directors almost goes without saying; this is the man who directed 12 Angry Men, Long Day's Journey into Night, Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, Network, and Equus, among many, many others. Fail-Safe came relatively early in his career; while he had done a good deal of television work, it was only his sixth big-screen feature. It takes the tension of 12 Angry Men and ramps it up another couple of notches.

The story: a series of mechanical mishaps causes a routine alarm to turn into a potential nuclear catastrophe when a flight of bombers doesn't receive a stand-down signal. With the bombers on their way to deliver a nuclear payload to Moscow, the president (Henry Fonda) gets into a frantic series of impromptu peace talks with the Soviet premier. Meanwhile, we're also given glimpses into the cockpit of the lead bomber, the control room where things went wrong, and a Pentagon war room whose cast have become last-ditch advisors to the President. Their job is somewhat complicated by the presence of a pundit (Walter Matthau) who believes this is the perfect opportunity to launch a strike that would wipe the Soviet Union off the map forever.

While it's never explicitly stated, the action seems to take place in real time. This is a tricky trope to pull off (and when it doesn't work, it really bombs, viz. Brian de Palma's Snake Eyes), but Lumet handles it perfectly. As well, Lumet, who is well-known for getting the best out of actors, wrings every last drop from everyone involved here. And there are many-- Fonda, Matthau (as with many comics, put Matthau in a serious role and he gets scary), Dan O'Herlihy, Frank Overton, Fritz Weaver, Larry Hagman, Dom DeLuise, and many others turn in fantastic performances. When filming a suspense movie, though, great performances can only get you so much; the director also has to have a sense of timing. Spend too long in one scene and you kill the pace; speed up too much and you've got an action flick where nothing happens. Lumet keeps it right where it needs to be. And, of course, you need something unforgettable, something that will stick in the viewer's mind for years after they've seen the film (and in 1964, you had to do it within the confines of the "we don't have a ratings system, but you'd better be family-friendly" atmosphere of Hollywood). Without giving anything away, that's the movie's final scene. You'll never hear a piercing electronic shriek in the same way again. Well, not that you ever heard it much before, but still.

It's probably impossible to put together a ranked list of Lumet's major films; you'd have too many tied for first, and Fail-Safe is one of them. **** ½




Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A period classic

This film is full of surprises, from the opening inside a dream to its unforgettable conclusion. The solemn twin to the brilliant parody, Dr. Strangelove, it has been overlooked and undervalued.



read more customer reviews on Fail-safe (Special Edition)


 




  flztpanel
Baby 




Objectware Community Wiki RSS Feed

Page added by Erik Drolshammer

Secondary benefits:

  • More content and more consistent content in the Agile 2.0 wiki space
  • A list of unsolved "pains" that we should know how to solve
  • Code examples/patches to ease some known pains.

Some starting questions

  • Deployment and packing
    • Create Maven-archetype? (programming)
  • Maintenance
    • What problems usually cause problems later on?
    • Can these be prevented with simple/cheap means?
    • Code monsters?
      • There has recently been created a maven-plugin which checks for new versions of the dependencies in a project. Perhaps this is worth looking at as a means to detecting possible library update candidates?

This is a first for yours truly--Wi-Fi from a commercial flight: I'm blogging from somewhere above 10,000 feet on Virgin America's press event flight to kick off its commercial launch of Internet in-flight Internet service. The flight is littered with e-celebrities and a few real ones (a couple of the great ensemble from 30 Rock are here). We're flying over the ocean. And the Gogo Internet service from Aircell seems to be working just fine. I've Twittered, I've IM'd, and I'm about to post this blog entry. (Success! Updated later.)

There are about 130-odd people aboard, and I should apparently recognize lots of people, but I am so unhip, as Douglas Adams once wrote, that it's a wonder my bum doesn't fall off. I was able to talk briefly with Dave Cush, the head of Virgin America, who is very keen on having this rolled out, and at some length with Jack Blumenstein, the head of Aircell. (I did a in-flight air-to-ground interview with Blumenstein for BoingBoingTV which I'll link to when my fine friends there have the segment edited and up.)

virgin_wifi_small.jpg

The service works as one might expect: Aircell has had months to troubleshoot problems via the American pilot, and we're flying right around San Francisco, so nothing unpredictable in the middle part of the country. In a quick test using Qwest's bandwidth tester, I was able to get 700 Kbps downstream--while there were 100 other people using the service, too.

This wasn't a commercial flight (it was technically a charter), but it was on a regular Virgin America Airbus 320 using Aircell's ground network. Some material was broadcast live from the plane to YouTube Live, which was hosting a simultaneous event on the ground at Fort Mason in San Francisco.

This is the first time I've used Internet service on a commercial plane. Back a few years ago, I was on a Connexion by Boeing press flight that used ground stations for the flight instead of the production satellite servers.

Virgin isn't the first domestic airline to launch Internet service; American Airlines has a pilot with 15 planes that have been in the air on cross country routes for nearly three months. But Virgin is poised to be the first airline to launch Wi-Fi fleet wide. Delta has made a commitment--and they have several hundred planes in the U.S.--but hasn't gotten its first bird launched with service. Alaska, Southwest, and JetBlue have various plans that seem to have been pushed into 2009.

(Photo courtesy Virgin America. I'm the guy in an oatmeal sweater holding a white MacBook up. Disclosure for clarity: I paid my own way to San Francisco for the event.)






Fail-safe (Special Edition)

Shopping