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Hot Keywords
butterflies  desire  obsession  stalker  terence stamp  

The Collector

The CollectorDirector: William Wyler
Actors: Terence Stamp, Samantha Eggar, Mona Washbourne, Maurice Dallimore, Allyson Ames
Studio: Columbia Tri/Star
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.94
Buy New: $8.27
as of 7/30/2010 08:18 CDT details
You Save: $6.67 (45%)

Qty 25 In Stock


New (24) from $8.27

Seller: moviemars
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 34 reviews
Sales Rank: 20411

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Languages: English (Unknown), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
Rating: Unrated
Region: 99
Discs: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 119 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: 07893
ISBN: 0767882881
UPC: 004339607893
EAN: 9780767882880
ASIN: B00006RJ5W

Theatrical Release Date: June 17, 1965
Release Date: October 2, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Product Description
No Description Available.
Genre: Feature Film-Drama
Rating: UN
Release Date: 14-JAN-2003
Media Type: DVD


Amazon.com essential video
As one of the greatest directors of Hollywood's golden age, William Wyler had a long and distinguished roster of films to his credit, among them a number of classics (including Wuthering Heights and The Heiress) that rank among the finest literary adaptations to emerge from the studio system. Near the end of his career, Wyler focused his veteran skills on John Fowles's novel The Collector, and it's easy to see how Wyler would be drawn to the story's resonant psychological underpinnings. It's conceivable that the director was also fascinated by the cinematic precedents set by Alfred Hitchock's Psycho and Michael Powell's Peeping Tom; like those films, Wyler's 1965 production of The Collector focuses on the obsessions of a young man whose need for a woman's affection leads him to desperate measures at the expense of his object of desire.

Terence Stamp was a fine choice for the role of Freddie Clegg, a young, nondescript bank clerk who wins a fortune in a sports pool and is financially liberated to pursue his psychological fixation--specifically a lovely London art student named Miranda Grey (Samantha Eggar) whom Freddie captures in the comfortably furnished cellar of his remote, newly purchased Tudor farmhouse. In many respects she is just another addition to Freddie's impressive and meticulously catalogued collection of butterflies--delicate and beautiful, and kept against her will. Freddie genuinely loves her and treats her with utmost respect, but she is his prisoner. Having been subdued by Freddie's use of chloroform, she later observes that he is responsible for "so much death," and of course she could never return his affection. Or could she?

This richly psychological situation is handled by Wyler with understated grace, but the weight of Freddie's psychosis is never keenly felt; the film's subdued quality ultimately works against the thriller aspects of the story. And yet, the performances of Stamp and Eggar remain sharp and mutually sympathetic, and when Wyler brings the story full circle to yet another "butterfly" for Freddie's collection, the stalker theme leaves the viewer with a considerable chill. Where another movie like 1967's Wait Until Dark relied on more explicit and effective shocks, The Collector works on a subtler level of disturbing but undeniably human behavior. --Jeff Shannon


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 34



5 out of 5 stars 90% Romantic...10% Creepy.   October 12, 2009
Tammy A. Rubio (MO)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I really liked the movie so I bought the book and its great. I love how the writer tells the story with all the details.


5 out of 5 stars Pure Obsession!   September 19, 2009
zalii (Perth, Australia)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

One of the very best!! So happy I could get this through Amazon, many thanks to the seller.


3 out of 5 stars Not as exciting as I remember   September 5, 2009
Starr (Covington, LA)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Enjoyed seeing this again. I saw this movie when I was 19 years old back in 1965. I thought it was the most exciting movie of all time ... then ... now I guess I've seen a movie or two that was a bit more exciting lol. Actually, it is still a good movie just not as thrilling as I had remembered.


5 out of 5 stars William Wyler in a claustrophic setting   August 7, 2009
Charles J. Garard Jr. PhD (Liaocheng University, China)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Other reviewers of this excellent film based on John Fowles early novel criticize the poor transfer and editing or censoring of one scene of brief nudity, so I won't, as they say, go there. The film, in whatever condition the DVD happens to be in, will be my concern.

The novel is written with a dual first-person point of view structure. The beginning and ending of the story are told from Clegg's perspective, and the middle passages reveal Miranda's perspective about what is-- or what she thinks is -- going on. Clegg tells us what Miranda doesn't know, and Miranda does the same; she even refers to him as Caliban, the unfortunate creature from Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST. In the film, we have a voice-over narrative by Terrance Stamp as Clegg only at the beginning and at the very end. Exposure to the character's thoughts gives audiences the first-person point of view. However, we never hear a voice-over by Samantha Eggar as Miranda.

The dual first-person point of view is the perspective that director William Wyler affords viewers in his 1965 film version of the novel. Some critics, in fact, fault him for distracting audiences with outside points of view. Wyler, as we know, is noted for his use of a stationary camera and the wide-angle lens; in THE COLLECTOR, wide-angle shots, which create a deep-focus image, dominate the interior scenes. Through the years, from WUTHERING HEIGHTS in 1939 to THE BIG COUNTRY and BEN-HUR in the late 1950s, Wyler has been admired for his wide-angled vistas and deep-focus shots that give the viewer the option to choose from what is visually provided.

The film opens with a long, establishing shot of a green meadow. Clegg enters the upper-right portion of the frame as a small figure. He chases a butterfly across the meadow as the single opening credit appears; from a close-up of a butterfly, which he captures and inspects, the camera raises to include his boyish face as he routinely places the specimen into a killing jar. When he notices the Tudor house, the lilting score by composer Maurice Jarre becomes ominous. He finds a sign that reads "Freehold For Sale," and upon further inspection discovers the archway for the outside cellar. Suspenseful musical chords underscore the cinematic text as he approaches it, the huge net thrown over his shoulder. The net, in fact, seems be be purposely thrust toward the camera as if to collect the audience and drag it along with him. From then on, we, like Miranda, are caught in Clegg's net and, for the most part, are confined to the cellar until the end of the film, observers of the drama that Clegg not only stages and directs but acts in.

When I showed THE COLLECTOR to film students at a small college in Atlanta, I had to break the showing into two halves to accommodate class scheduling. Before I began the second half of the film, I asked the students how they thought it was going to end. They thought that Miranda would eventually escape from Clegg and that Clegg would be caught and punished, which is what usually happens in British and American kidnapping/ sociopath films. That the novel and the film do not end as many of us expect is to its credit as a literary and cinematic work. For both to end in the usual way would detract from Fowles' message about people who are creators and people who are merely collectors and treat this subject as just another thriller.

Although filmed in gorgeous Technicolor, one particular scene in the film is worth noting. A shimmering dissolve from a close shot of Clegg's face as he is gloating and being pelted by rain provides a visual transition to a black-and-white flashback of Clegg sitting at his desk in a bank while a co-worker dangles a butterfly mobile over his head. His bank colleagues laugh at this juvenile prank which Clegg fails to see until an artificial butterfly brushes his head. The sequence has no equivalent in the Fowles novel but it shows, better than words can describe, his alienation from society. Wyler avoids the first-person perspective; a voice-over narration is unnecessary.

A wide shot after his aunt bursts in the door reveals Clegg crouched in one corner of the room. Wyler's skillful mise-en-scene allows the other bank clerks to appear larger and brighter as they sit at their desks, but when his aunt beckons him to the counter to inform him that something important has come to him in the post, he is the center of attention. He ambles with his head to one side -- a mannerism that he continues when confronting, or being confronted by, Miranda. "I told you never to come into the bank," he whispers to her. This statement, joined with the fact that she has obviously opened his personal mail, reveals much about their relationship. Her lower-class appearance and manners link Clegg with a social status that he would undoubtedly prefer to conceal from his colleagues. She calls him Freddie, and this remains the only time viewers hear any references to his real name. Before Clegg can even read the letter, she bellows to the others that he has won 71,000 pounds on the football pools. Clegg is understandably stunned as colleagues gather around him, and his aunt expresses her delight like a hooting charwoman. The film dissolves again to a close shot of Clegg's face, once again in color, in the rain. This monochrome sequence remains the only flashback in the final cut of Wyler's THE COLLECTOR, the only view of Mona Washbourne as Clegg's aunt, and one of few expositional moments. G.P. -- Miranda's mentor and possible older lover in the novel -- never appears, except in one distant back shot in the pub; nor do any of the other characters revealed through Miranda's journal in the Fowles novel show up on the screen. What remains is a tight production which focuses mainly on the two antagonists. If the rough cut of the film, which supposedly includes other characters and more of the story, still remains, perhaps a future DVD version might be released as the EXTENDED CUT, which DVD companies like to tout.

If you have not yet read El Lagarto's excellent review of this film elsewhere on this page, I recommend that you do. My own comments have been updated and revised, as are my comments on THE MAGUS also based on a John Fowles novel, from my dissertation and book POINT OF VIEW IN FICTION: FOCUS ON JOHN FOWLES. Reportedly, Fowles didn't approve of Wyler's version of THE COLLECTOR. While I recognize Fowles as one of the greatest British writers since D. H. Lawrence and Thomas Hardy, I fail to see many flaws in this production. THE COLLECTOR is tight and concise, emphasizing the two characters who represent the creators and collectors among us all.



1 out of 5 stars HACKED AGAIN.   May 2, 2009
R. Lewis (Michigan USA)
5 out of 7 found this review helpful

YOU REMEMBER A MOVIE WITH ALL OF ITS NUANCES HOPING THAT SOME DAY TO BE ABLE TO HAVE IT IN YOUR COLLECTION TO WATCH AGAIN. THE MOVIE FINALLY COMES OUT AND YOU FIND THAT SOME CORPORATION HAS BUTCHERED THE FILM THAT YOU REMEMBER. Time and time again this happens to the classic movies that were watched by millions of people. We the public "Who are plunking our hard earned cash to purchase THESE MEMORIES", not only deserve to watch the entire movie that we remember but, maybe with additional features like deleted scenes and comentary but, not with detractions. I don't understand why they do it. Colombia and Sony did it with this film. MGM and others, do it with many other classics that I remember. WHY?? This is a disservice to the art of the movie and to the public that is paying good money for a memory. Only to be ripped off!! I only wish they knew that these efforts to butcher a movie is not appreciated. I feel like they are playing a cruel joke and wish something could be done about it

Showing reviews 1-5 of 34



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