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DVD - Walk Don't Run
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Walk Don't Run is a light-hearted Cary Grant favorite. I saw this movie only about a year ago and really enjoyed it. Cary Grant is not the lady's man in this, though he does seem to be quite happily married. Handsome Jim Hutton and lovely Samantha Eggar are the romantic pair in this movie, guided by Cary Grant's gentle nudges. This is a fun, romantic movie. : )
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I've watched this over and over. Samantha Eggar is lovely. Jim Hutton is gorgeous and sexy. It's easy to see why the 2 would get together. It's such a feelgood film and really captures the feel of the 60's. I found myself feeling ever so wistful and sentimental I wanted the film to go on and on and my only criticism is that it ended too soon!
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For the baby boomer this is a classic. Cary Grant is suave and comical in this 60's movie. I grew up watching this movie with my sibs. The TV network must of showed it often because it became a popular favorite with our generation. This movie is entertaining without the harsh languages or violence of today's movies. Very sweet movie.
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Funny, smart, a picture into the era and a great remake of a classic. The original - The More the Merrier - was wonderful, but this is a great update of that story. The more I have watched it the better it gets, especially the dialog between Steve (Jim Hutton) and William (Cary Grant).
It does take you back to the 60's and gives you a look at that time, but the humor is timeless.
Rating: -
Cary Grant is known to romance the leading ladies in most of his movies with few exceptions, and this is one of them. This may be appropriate since he was 62 when this movie was made. The twist in the movie is that he sees a younger version of himself in a young American Olympian named Steve Davis (Jim Hutton) whom he meets during the 1964 Olympic Games.
Cary Grant plays William Rutland a charming businessman; during one of his business trips to Tokyo, he persuades a young woman named Christine Easton (Samantha Eggar) to sublet her apartment, when he could not find a place to stay in the city. The two become unwilling roomies because of the gender difference. While the Christine is not too thrilled with the arrangement she tries to adjust with the new situation, but it gets a little more complicated when Rutland sublets his apartment to Steve Davis. Rutland plays cupid on two young roommates in spite of their incompatible personalities, and Christine's engagement to a boring diplomat named Julius Haversack (John Standing). Rutland meddles in the young couple's romantic problems, and goes an extra distance to pretend as a competitor of 20 kilometer walk to talk to Jim during his event, and tries to heal the differences between the young lovers. The best moments of the film are Rutland's walk in his boxer shorts and a T-shirt avoiding the police and the game regulators; and sharing the cramp apartment with the two young people. Rutland makes references to his two earlier movies; Charade and An Affair to Remember by singing the theme songs.
1. Charade
2. An Affair to Remember
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