Menu
Apparel
Baby
Beauty
Books
Classical Music
DVD
Digital Music
Electronics
Gourmet Food
Personal Health Care
Jewelry
Kitchen & Housewares
Magazines
Miscellaneous
Music
Musical Instruments
Music Tracks
Office Products
Outdoor Living
PC Hardware
Photo
Restaurants
Software
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Toys
VHS
Video (DVD & VHS)
VideoGames
Wireless
Wireless Accessories
Information
Payment Methods
Shipping
Safe Shopping
Contact Us

 

Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - Barbarella

Barbarella
List Price: $14.95
Our Price: $6.99
Your Save: $ 7.96 ( 53% )
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Paramount
Starring: Jane Fonda, John Phillip Law, Anita Pallenberg, Milo O'Shea, Marcel Marceau
Directed By: Roger Vadim
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786300216044
Format: Color
ISBN: 0792105281
Label: Paramount
Manufacturer: Paramount
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Paramount
Release Date: 1998-01-01
Running Time: 99
Studio: Paramount
Theatrical Release Date: 1968-10-10

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

Jane Fonda's memorable, zero-gravity striptease during the opening credits of this 1968 Roger Vadim movie is the closest the film comes to a liberated marriage of wit and sex. Based on a French comic strip, the story concerns the adventures of a 41st-century woman, who pretty much gets it on with whomever asks. The sci-fi sets were pretty interesting at the time, though they look rather anachronistic now. Appreciated today mostly as a camp classic, the movie is actually more trying than anything else. --Tom Keogh


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Giggle and bounce
Comment: "Barbarella" turns forty years old, the year this is written. If anything, its silliness has just gotten sillier over time.

Fonda herself embodies the biggest of the changes since this movie was made. This stars the old, giggly, pre-feminist, pre-political Fonda, the one willing to strip-tease all the way down to her sweet self during the opening credits. Another set of social changes happened when the Sexual Revolution turned into the AIDS Era. Back then, sex was good fun between grownups. So, in keeping with the times, casual (but not challenging) kinds of nudity appear throughout. This flick stands as close to Buck Rogers as to the current day, so borrows from Buck in the subtlety of acting, complexity of plot, and depth of characters - i.e., not a lot of any of them. The effects show it a pure product of its own time, though: blobby opticals with mattwork that looks naive to today's viewers. Then there's the costuming - imagine Mardi Gras, I mean the part that attentive parents steer their kiddies away from, blocks away, then add a Hollytwood budget. Barbarella's Lucite bra (that must have been uncomfortable) and Duran Duran's ocean-liner outfit stand out, but hardly represent the limit of what appears here.

The movie starts with a cute blonde (the 1968 version of Fonda) luxuriously undressing in a fur-lined spaceship - pink spaceship, if you must know. Let that image set your expectations. Back then, it was daring but campy. Now it looks cheesy and campy, but I mean that in the nicest way.

-- wiredweird

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: Barbarella
Comment: Totally awful movie. I can understand why Jane Fonda was so embarassed for years.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: From a Galaxy Far, Far Away
Comment: I can remember standing in a long line to get in to see this movie back in 1968, the year it was originally released. I was 12 years old, and my dad had dropped off me and my best friend, thinking that we were going to watch another juvenille sci-fi extravaganza, for which I had developed an extreme fondness. It was the dead of winter and there was snow falling, but we perservered, having heard that we would have the opportunity to see Jane Fonda buck naked, and, above all else, we wanted to be the first in our school to lay claim to that dubious achievement. However, the lady in the ticket booth had other ideas. Although we were 12 years old, we looked no older than 9 or 10, which didn't matter anyway, since we needed to be 16 to get into the movie. So, we didn't see "Barbarella", or Jane Fonda's flaunted nudity, and my father had to immediately turn around and make an 18 mile drive back to pick us up in falling snow, with my mom lecturing him, loudly, all the way home about "parental responsibility" and "pornography". And so it was that, 40 years later, give or take, I decided to order "Barbarella" from Amazon and find out what the fuss was all about and why I couldn't get into see this movie back when it first came out.

Well, for starters, there is nudity, for sure, but it's often fleeting and almost demure. There are breasts, a glimpse of buttocks, and...wait...was that what it looked like? Hard to tell and, at this stage, even harder to care. Jane looks good in the title role and she's funny; "Barbarella" may have been the last time that she was allowed to demonstrate any comic ability in a film for almost a decade. Sure, she was sensational in "Klute", perfection in "Julia" and "Coming Home", but she was a lot more fun in "Barbarella".

There's not much plot worth writing about. Barbarella is a sort of agent for the planet Earth, who drifts through the universe correcting wrongs and fighting evildoers. She travels in an outrageous spaceship driven by a computer that talks to her (not unlike HAL in "2001"). The always watchable David Hemmings is on hand as handsome Dildano, with whom she engages in a literal hand-to-hand sex ritual; hirsute Ugo Tognazzi engages her the old-fashioned way, leaving her sated and singing. And John Phillip Law is both blind and blonde as the angel Pygar, who manages to offend the Black Queen (Anita Pallenberg) by rebuffing her sexual advances, proclaiming, "An angel doesn't make love, an angel is love."

It's all very silly and tastefully lewd, on a sophomoric, 60's-era, "Tonight Show" level (and don't get me wrong, I loved Johnny Carson and my dad was the "Tonight Show's" biggest fan). Despite the presence of some very big names of the time, it doesn't add up to much, and a certain degree of tedium creeps in after awhile. Still, the acting is tongue-in-cheek, the sets are wacky and colorful, and there is a sexy innocence about the whole enterprise that strikes me as being very much in context with the times; in that respect, though worlds apart, Antonioni's "Blow Up" has some of that same carefree attitude. Director Roger Vadim (Fonda's then-husband) seems to embrace the spirit of the '60's without ever imbuing his film with much substance.

The quality of this DVD seems variable, for some strange reason. There are scenes where the colors are beautiful and vibrant, and suddenly the scene is transformed into a muddy murk, before the vibrancy just as suddenly returns. It doesn't really interfere with the enjoyment of the film; "Barbarella" is much too slight to be affected by minor color distortions.

Was it worth waiting 40 years to see? For me, the answer is yes, but mainly as a curiosity piece more than anything. It's not great cinema by any means, but it holds a nostalgic place in my mind of a time that is so radically different from the world we're currently living in, as to seem almost inconceivable. "Barbarella" is my own proof that 1968 did, indeed, exist, that it wasn't a beautiful fable where people still had audacious dreams and the courage to pursue their beliefs.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: 1960s High Camp
Comment: Barbarella: Queen of the GalaxyA great period piece that is (unintentionally?) funny. A cross between soft core porn and early Star Trek

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Despite the PG listing . . .
Comment: . . . this DVD actually has the original, uncut, 98-minute R-rated version of the movie, with all of the nudity intact. Just FYI, because one of the reviewers below says otherwise.


Buy it now at Amazon.com!

 
Copyright © 2000-2004 Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace. All rights reserved.
powered by My Amazon Store Manager v 2.0, © Stringer Software Solutions |

PlayMyVideos.net Business News

Your Ad Here




Chat While You Mail | Software Guru | Chat While You Mail | Yakible.com Domains and Hosting In One Business | Software Guru | Sms Shop | Free Ad Track | Proxy Browser | Free Url Rotator That Pays| Get Paid To Do Tasks| Technology Friendly Forums| Document Haven| Arcontica Village| Maypajo Community| Puwedeng-Puwede| Romance Desktop| Proxy Browser| Where The Girls Are| Nabaza Forums| Play Flash Games Online | Get Paid For A Guestbook| Article Directory| Web Author's Directory| Affiliate Link Protector| Nabaza.com Network of Sites| The MarketPlace| Free Hosting Blogs| Philippines Search Engine| General Web Directory| Weblord's Community| More Freebies| Post To Host | Free Ad Track | Autosurf For Traffic and Cash | Full Domain Services Portal | MyHerbal.Us | Bible Forum