Price: £15.99 Average customer rating: Binding : DVD EAN : 0014381917628 Label : Image Entertainment Manufacturer : Image Entertainment Publisher : Image Entertainment Release date : 2001-07-10 Title : Zorro, The Gay Blade [DVD] [1981] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] Actor : Array Format : Array Languages : Array Number of items : 1 Original release date : 1981-01-01 Region code : 1 Running time : 93 Studio : Image Entertainment Theatrical releaseDate : 1981-07-17 MPN : D9176D
Customer reviews
review by: hw date: 2009-02-27 rating: A good laugh if you are a Zorro fan already Not sure if you'd really understand this one unless you are already a Zorro fan. As I am, I've enjoyed all versions I've seen of Zorro, from the simply splendid Tyrone Power version (still my favourite with one of the best screen swordfights ever, even better than Flynn in Robin Hood) to the Banderas great fun movies to the recent jolly stage musical in London. If you are tempted to see this without any prior knowledge of Zorro, I'd suggest you read up the original story online first. This is a real fun takeoff so you need to know what is being taken off....
review by: xyzzy date: 2005-10-16 rating: We named our cat Esteban We named our cat Esteban because he has the same arrogant attitude that the character Ron Leibman plays. They say that cants can't make expressions but this one sometimes made the same faces. This is one of my all time favorite George Hamilton movies. It is right up there with "Love At First Bite (1979)". Lauren Hutton also gets to be a vampire in Once Bitten (1985). And Brenda Vaccaro makes you feel sorry for Florinda's situation. Brenda also is a seasoned actress who appeared in several movies before this and later in Ten Little Indians (1989) as Marion Marshall. pActually the movie follows the original script better than the old TV programs. Don Diego Vega comes back too late to find that his father had a fatal accident when his horse was frightened by a tortuga and Esteban summarily executed the tortuga for the dastardly deed. The music that starts the credits is "The Adventures of Don Juan" by Max Steiner. This movie is so packed with mirth that you can not convey this by telling the shoreline. One of my favorites is when Zorro makes the sine of the Zee and asks a peasant what that symbol stands for. "Senior that is the sign of a two." "My daughter learned this in the school."