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 Location:  Home » VHS » 1960-1969 » Trouble With Angels  
Trouble With Angels
Trouble With Angels

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Director: Ida Lupino
Actors: Rosalind Russell, Binnie Barnes, Camilla Sparv, Mary Wickes, Marge Redmond
Studio: Columbia/Tristar Vid
Category: Video

List Price: CDN$ 14.95
Buy Used: CDN$ 1.79
You Save: CDN$ 13.16 (88%)



Used (2) Collectible (1) from CDN$ 1.79

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 62 reviews
Sales Rank: 659

Format: Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: VHS Tape
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 6302447704
UPC: 043396602502
EAN: 9786302447705
ASIN: 6302447704

Theatrical Release Date: March 30, 1966
Release Date: August 18, 1993
Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days
Condition: Save a tree, buy from Green Earth Books. Ships from USA; Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery. All books guaranteed. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Essential Video
Actress-writer-director Ida Lupino got one of her unfortunately rare opportunities behind a camera making this 1966 family comedy about two mischievous students (Hayley Mills, June Harding) making life difficult for the nuns at a girls' convent school. Rosalind Russell has a fine part as a mother superior vexed by their pranks and outwardly chilly until the girls catch her in a more private moment of emotional release. The script has an anecdotal structure--it's sort of one thing after another with Mills's and Harding's troublemakers--but there is a rising sense that these two kids gradually develop some awareness of the pain and sacrifices of others. A fun and touching movie all around, with a nice twist at the end. --Tom Keogh


Customer Reviews:   Read 57 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Happy 60s Movie   June 8, 2004
Typical of the period; a little slow, but very enjoyable. Nice for a rainy weekend afternoon.


5 out of 5 stars a wonderful movie   March 11, 2004
A film by Ida Lupino

"The Trouble with Angels" is a very charming movie and it remains one of my favorites. The story is simple, but sweet. It takes place at the St. Francis Academy for Girls, where Mary Clancy (Hayley Mills) and Rachel Devery (June Harding) are enrolling as students. This is a parochial school run by nuns and is also the Mother House of their order. The school is run by the Mother Superior (Rosalind Russell). Mary and Rachel become fast friends on the train ride to the school and when they arrive they are inseparable. They love to pull pranks and just try to have a good time and get by for as long as they have to be at that school. Mother Superior tries to keep the girls in line and run the school as well as she can.

As the movie progresses, we get to see how Mary reacts to the school and how she grows. The film quickly covers several years of their education but it doesn't feel as if it is jumping around too much. We see the transformation of Mary Clancy and while the ending comes as a little bit of a surprise, it really shouldn't.

"The Trouble with Angels" is a wonderful, good-hearted movie that is perfect for the whole family. There are complaints that this DVD is in the pan and scan format rather than the widescreen OAR that it should be in, but knowing that that is the only format available we have to understand that this is likely the only opportunity to own "The Trouble with Angels" that we will have. The purist in me wants the widescreen, but the rest of my just loves this movie and is glad to have it available at all


3 out of 5 stars Terrific movie, BUT...   February 1, 2004
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Why, oh why, did Columbia TriStar home video release this movie NON-letterboxed? At least half a dozen times on this DVD there's some little bit of action that's on or outside the edge of the screen (e.g., when Reverend Mother takes the $10 Rachel won for the dress she made--her hand with the bill in it is off-screen!!). VERY frustrating! Of course, like a jerk, I'll probably buy this DVD all over again when Sony TriStar finally decides to release this gem letterboxed. But, that's probably why they do it this way, eh? For now, however, they lose two stars for boneheadedness.


3 out of 5 stars TROUBLE WITH ANGELS - Wide Screen   January 28, 2004
It is great to have Trouble with Angels come out in DVD, but why did it not come out in it's original aspect ratio. It is not an inexpensive DVD. It was either filmed in 1.66 which is not much to worry about, but if it was filmed in 1.85 we have lost some of the feel and picture.
It definately was not filmed in 1.33, as when the movie starts it states "made to fit your t.v." , plus almost every movie after 1953 was letterboxes with exceptions.
I hope the movie is released again in letterbox, but it is doubtful since it has already been released.



4 out of 5 stars Great movie, but why standard screen only?   January 23, 2004
This is one of my all time favorite guilty pleasure flicks. I'm not going to give a detailed review of the film because there are some very fine ones already here. I would just like to know, why, why, why, was this film and it's fun sequel, "Where Angels Go, Trouble follows," only produced in fullscreen format? I had been looking forward to the DVDs to see them restored, and in widescreen. I was so disappointed to find out they weren't. Were they shot with a fullscreen format? I'd sleep better knowing that was the case. If not, who dropped the ball on this one?

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