sale-deal.com


Search: Keywords:



foodsofnature.com
living healthy

 Books

 Music

 DVD

 VHS

 Magazines & Newspapers

 Computer & Video Games

 Software

 Electronics

 Audio & Video

 Camera & Photo

 Cell Phones & Service

 Computers & Add-Ons

 Office Products

 Home & Garden

 Automotive

 Bed & Bath

 Furniture & Décor

 Kitchen

 Outdoor Living

 Pet Supplies

 Tools & Hardware

 Toys & Games

 Baby Products

 Health & Personal Care

Click for big image Learning Tree






Actor(s): Kyle Johnson, Alex Clarke, Estelle Evans, Dana Elcar, Mira Waters
Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: VHS Tape
Creator(s):
  • Cinematographer Burnett Guffey
  • Producer Gordon Parks
  • Writer Gordon Parks
  • Editor George R. Rohrs
  • Producer Jimmy Lydon

  • Director(s):
    EAN: 9786300271081
    Format(s):
  • Color
  • NTSC
  • Widescreen

  • ISBN: 6300271080
    Label: Warner Home Video
    Language(s):
  • English Analog Original Language

  • List Price: $14.98
    Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
    Number Of Items: 1
    Package Dimensions:
    Height: 1.12"
    Width: 4.19"
    Length: 1.12"
    Weight: 0.38 lbs.
    Product Group: Video
    Publisher: Warner Home Video
    Release Date: 1994-12-12
    Running Time: 107minutes
    Studio: Warner Home Video
    Theatrical Release Date: 1969
    UPC: 085391159131
     

    Editorial Reviews
    Description:
    Film adaptation of Gordon Parks's autobiographical novel about his youth in Kansas.

    Customer Reviews Average rating - 4.5

    Rating - 5 Date: 2008-02-22
    Content: I am a retired high school teacher & first saw a VCR copy of The Learning Tree when our class read the book & saw the film back in the 1970's. The film was so well done & loved by teachers & students. I've never forgotten the story & want to see it on DVD & to give it as gifts,
    Summary: The Learning Tree

    Rating - 5 Date: 2007-03-03
    Content: The Learning Tree, is one of the best movies ever made, and yet, it has yet to be released on DVD. The first time I saw it, which I think was in my early twenties, I was absolutely blown away. Everything about it from the cast to the story line, was brilliant. Gordon Parks and everyone else involved, did an excellent job, and if I see it a hundred times, it will be as if it was released, yesterday. It's the kind of film, that you could never get enough of, and in case you don't remember, the 70s offered little, in the form of great black films, which is another reason why this, deserves to be made into a DVD. Thanks, Mr. Parks.
    Summary: Thanks, Mr. Parks

    Rating - 5 Date: 2006-07-07
    Content: I have loved this film from childhood and have
    taped it down through the years.
    But in this day and age of DVD, I think it's ridiculous
    that they have released all the old "pimps & ho's"
    blaxploitation flicks of the late 60's and early 70's,
    yet are reluctant to release treaures like this one
    as readily!
    The late Gordon Parks did an excellent job of bringing
    his book (a recount of his coming of age in 1920's Kansas)
    to life with vivid performances by some young actors
    and a few of the old school legends of that time
    who were still around.
    It's a wonder they haven't tried to remake it with
    some of the good actors of today!
    I've always wondered what happened to some of the
    actors who played in this film over the years.
    I think that they probably also have some great
    behind-the-scenes documentary-style footage
    as well, which both could make great extras
    on the DVD version.
    Bottomline, this movie is a piece of living history
    and should be restored and enhanced with
    the technology of today!

    Summary: This Classic Needs To Be On DVD!!

    Rating - 5 Date: 2004-12-01
    Content: I put this film in the same category as such films as Where the Red Fern Grows, The Yearling, or Sounder. It deals with harsh subjects (racism, murder) but in a gentle way or should I say in a way that is straightforward and isn't gratuitous or sensational. I would say its closest modern counderpart is Once Upon a Time When We Were Colored. Definately an underrated classic.
    Summary: Excellence should be more popular

    Rating - 5 Date: 2004-10-25
    Content: This movie is a classic because it is real. Not only is the setting incredible, but the clothing, the speeech patterns and the general atmosphere make "The Learning Tree" a potentially powerful and impactful learning tool as swell.

    Its the 1920s south and there isn't one black person who doesn't have a grandparent or a great grandparent who doesn't remember those times. The acting in this movie leaves a great deal to be desired, but the story is so powerful that you can relate ot every character. Newt, the young boy (Gordon Parks as a child) is polite, considerate and curious. The movie begins with him lsoing his virginity to a much older person, a young woman who rescues him from a tornado.How Parks pulled off that storm is a wonder to me, because if I'm not mistaken this flick pre-dates the kind of special effects that we see in "Twister." But then agian, they used it in the "Wizard of Oz," so I guess it must be a director's secret.

    The key to this movie is that a young boy grows up, falls in love, learns about life when hsi girlfriend runs off with a thug, witnesses a murder and has to decide if he should tell or not. The man who commits the murder is the father of a young bully that Newt always had problems with. THe racism of the sheriff of the town and how black kids were used back then is a key part of the story.

    This movie is a treasure. No black studies department or ethnic studies program should be without it. The "learning" that young Newt attained transcended the classroom, but began with a loving family, all sticking together no matter what the odds. That love spread throughout the community. I'm not sure if race relations during that time were as amicable as this movie makes them appear, but the black community of today could learn some lessons from the community that was depicted in "The Learning Tree."

    This movie, like "Raisin in the Sun," "Imitation of Life," "Sounder," "Man and Boy" and "The Spook Who Sat By the Door" should be mandatory teaching tools for all high school students, black and white.
    Summary: The Learning Tree: As Pure as the African-American Spirit


          Copyright © 2005 sale-deal.com     In Association with Amazon.com