HomeMovies Raisin in the Sun

Raisin in the Sun

Sidney Poitier  Actor Claudia McNeil  Actor Ruby Dee  Actor Diana Sands  Actor Ivan Dixon  Actor

MPAA Rating: NR
Contains:Questionable for Children

See full product details
Choose a format:
Previous
  • Digital Video Disc (DVD)   $11.98
  • Used - Digital Video Disc (DVD)   $8.36

Used - Digital Video Disc (DVD)

Usually Ships Within 48 Hours.

$8.36

Add to Cart Add to Wish List Share with a Friend
Check Store Availability
Next
  • Overview
  • Format Details
  • Edtitorial Reviews
  • Cast & Production Credits
Raisin in the Sun

UPC: 043396009196

Studio: Columbia TriStar

MPAA Rating: NR   Contains:[Questionable for Children]

Summary: While this original movie version of Lorraine Hansberry's award-winning play may have dated somewhat, it was groundbreaking when first released in 1961, and a wealth of future plays, films, and TV productions have taken their lead from this socially conscious drama about a struggling African-American family. Lena Younger (Claudia McNeil) is a strong, proud woman who has raised a family in a crowded apartment on the South Side of Chicago. Her son Walter Lee (Sidney Poitier) works as a chauffeur; intelligent and ambitious but impulsive and often angry, he desperately wants to get ahead in a world that offers him few opportunities. His wife Ruth (Ruby Dee) takes in laundry to help make ends meet and watches over their son. Younger daughter Beneatha (Diana Sands) is a college student who wants to become a doctor and often speaks of searching for her cultural identity. On the death of her husband, Lena becomes the beneficiary of a $10,000 life insurance payment, and suddenly the family is in conflict over how the money should be spent. Lena wants to use the money for a down payment on a house. Beneatha is hoping that Lena will help her pay for medical school. And Walter Lee wants to go into business with friends who plan to open a liquor store, which he's convinced will be a sure money maker. The cast, nearly all reprising their roles from the original Broadway production, offers a collection of superb performances; also keep an eye peeled for a young Louis Gossett Jr. as George Murchison. While Daniel Petrie's direction never takes A Raisin in the Sun very far from its roots as a stage play, it captures the power and tension of a strong ensemble cast working with an intelligent and moving script. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Category: Drama

Awards: Best Director – Directors Guild of America Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama – null Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama – null Gary Cooper Award – Cannes Film Festival Best Supporting Actress – National Board of Review Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama – Hollywood Foreign Press Association

Features: Digitally remastered audio and anamorphic video
Production notes
Interactive menus
Audio: English [mono]
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Thai
Talent files
Theatrical trailer
Bonus trailers
Scene selections

Raisin in the Sun

Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)

Release Date: 02/22/2000

Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Theatre Wide-Screen, 1.33:1 Pre-1954 Standard

Audio: 5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, 1 USA & territories, Canada

Runtime: 128 Minutes

Sides: 2

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: English,Spanish,Portuguese

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Chapters: Side #1 -- Widescreen
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [1:24]
2. 7:30 Am [6:52]
3. "I Got Me a Dream." [2:56]
4. Beneatha [3:14]
5. "My First Day Home." [4:35]
6. Money Plans [4:29]
7. Guitars, Dates & God [4:25]
8. "He Needs His Chance." [5:22]
9. Two-Months Pregnant [1:20]
10. Joseph Asagai [7:52]
11. $10,000 Check [3:29]
12. Lena Says No [2:04]
13. "I Ain't Got Nothing!" [4:13]
14. 5 Dollars Down [3:15]
15. African Heritage [4:16]
16. George [7:28]
17. "She Bought You a House." [5:51]
18. Butchered Dream [3:15]
19. Kitty Kat Klub [5:22]
20. Their New Home [5:59]
21. The Welcoming Committee [7:21]
22. "You Had a Caller." [2:59]
23. Bobo's News [5:02]
24. A Bit of a Suggestion [5:35]
25. "Tell Them Not to Come." [2:34]
26. "I Made a Call." [4:32]
27. The Time to Love [2:51]
28. Plain & Proud People [8:56]
Side #2 -- Full Screen
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [1:24]
2. 7:30 Am [6:52]
3. "I Got Me a Dream." [2:56]
4. Beneatha [3:14]
5. "My First Day Home." [4:35]
6. Money Plans [4:29]
7. Guitars, Dates & God [4:25]
8. "He Needs His Chance." [5:22]
9. Two-Months Pregnant [1:20]
10. Joseph Asagai [7:52]
11. $10,000 Check [3:29]
12. Lena Says No [2:04]
13. "I Ain't Got Nothing!" [4:13]
14. 5 Dollars Down [3:15]
15. African Heritage [4:16]
16. George [7:28]
17. "She Bought You a House." [5:51]
18. Butchered Dream [3:15]
19. Kitty Kat Klub [5:22]
20. Their New Home [5:59]
21. The Welcoming Committee [7:21]
22. "You Had a Caller." [2:59]
23. Bobo's News [5:02]
24. A Bit of a Suggestion [5:35]
25. "Tell Them Not to Come." [2:34]
26. "I Made a Call." [4:32]
27. The Time to Love [2:51]
28. Plain & Proud People [8:56]

Dan Jardine

After a successful run on Broadway, A Raisin in the Sun came to film in 1961, offering a snapshot of an urban, working-class, African-American family at a turning point in their lives. The film powerfully conveys the inter-familial and inter-generational conflicts that arise out of different hopes, dreams, and ambitions. Set in the 1940s, but filmed just as America was beginning its civil rights movement, the film draws its intelligent dialogue from the complex questions facing a racial minority in an environment in which the effects of prejudice are always percolating just beneath the surface. The story examines such serious generational and racial issues as assimilation and the conflicts between idealism, the pursuit of the American dream, and pride in one's racial and cultural heritage. The cramped and claustrophobic apartment setting reminds us of the film's theatrical roots, but it also serves the movie's themes well, and director Daniel Petrie keeps the camera moving, even if the setting and action are static. The issue of racism is handled relatively subtly, quietly insinuating itself into the situation rather than slamming you in the face. There is some unevenness in the performances, as some of the actors from the stage production still seem to be projecting to the back row of the theater, but Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee lead the cast with their charismatic presences. ~ Dan Jardine, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Thomas D. Jones  Actor 
Louis Terkel  Actor 
Daniel Petrie  Director 
Laurence Rosenthal  Composer (Music Score) 
David Susskind  Producer 
Philip Rose  Producer 
Lorraine Hansberry  Screenwriter 
Sidney Poitier  Actor 
Claudia McNeil  Actor 
Ruby Dee  Actor 
Diana Sands  Actor 
Ivan Dixon  Actor 
Louis Gossett, Jr.  Actor 
Stephen Perry  Actor 
John Fiedler  Actor 
Joel Fluellen  Actor 
Roy E. Glenn, Sr.  Actor 
Ray Stubbs  Actor 
Rudolph Monroe  Actor 
George de Normand  Actor 

Country: USA

Get Noticed