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Written on the Wind (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 452 ratings
IMDb7.3/10.0

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Genre Drama
Format Blu-ray
Contributor Harry Shannon, Robert Stack, Edward Platt, Rock Hudson, Robert Keith, Dorothy Malone, John Larch, Douglas Sirk, Grant Williams, Lauren Bacall, Robert J. Wilke See more
Language English
Studio The Criterion Collection
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From the manufacturer

Written on the Wind title banner

The quintessential Douglas Sirk melodrama, a lurid family tragedy in luscious Technicolor

Douglas Sirk’s Technicolor expressionism reached a fever pitch with this operatic tragedy, which finds the director pushing his florid visuals and his critiques of American culture to their subversive extremes.

Alcoholism, nymphomania, impotence, and deadly jealousy—these are just some of the toxins coursing through a massively wealthy, degenerate Texan oil family. When a sensible secretary (Lauren Bacall) has the misfortune of marrying the clan’s neurotic scion (Robert Stack), it drives a wedge between him and his lifelong best friend (Rock Hudson) that unleashes a maelstrom of angst and fury.

Featuring an unforgettably debauched, Oscar-winning supporting performance by Dorothy Malone and some of Sirk’s most eye-popping mise-en-scène, Written on the Wind is as perverse a family portrait as has ever been splashed across the screen.

Special Edition features

  • New 2K digital restoration
  • "Acting for Douglas Sirk," a documentary with Sirk, Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, and Dorothy Malone
  • New interview about the film and melodrama
  • And more
Written on the Wind three scenes

Product Description

The Technicolor expressionism of Douglas Sirk reached a fever pitch with this operatic tragedy, which finds the director pushing his florid visuals and his critiques of American culture to their subversive extremes. Alcoholism, nymphomania, impotence, and deadly jealousy—these are just some of the toxins coursing through a massively wealthy, degenerate Texan oil family. When a sensible secretary (Lauren Bacall) has the misfortune of marrying the clan’s neurotic scion (Robert Stack), it drives a wedge between him and his lifelong best friend (Rock Hudson) that unleashes a maelstrom of psychosexual angst and fury. Featuring an unforgettably debauched, Oscar-winning supporting performance by Dorothy Malone and some of Sirk’s most eye-popping mise-en-scène, Written on the Wind is as perverse a family portrait as has ever been splashed across the screen.

BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES

  • New 2K digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
  • Acting for Douglas Sirk, a 2008 documentary featuring archival interviews with Sirk; actors Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, and Dorothy Malone; and producer Albert Zugsmith
  • New interview with film scholar Patricia White about the film and melodrama
  • Trailer
  • English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • PLUS: An essay by filmmaker and critic Blair McClendon

Product details

  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ NR (Not Rated)
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.8 x 6.3 x 0.6 inches; 5.92 ounces
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Douglas Sirk
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Blu-ray
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ February 1, 2022
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Rock Hudson, Lauren Bacall, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone, Robert Keith
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ The Criterion Collection
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09LX1F7NW
  • Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ USA
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 452 ratings

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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2005
    Presented here in an excellent DVD from Criterion, Douglas Sirk's Written on the Wind may well have been primarily aimed at cashing in on the huge success of Warners' blockbuster Giant, directed by George Stevens. Both films deal with the doings of Texas millionaires; not so coincidentally, both films star Rock Hudson. But Giant has dated badly, and its epic pretensions seem woefully bloated today. It's forgivable to have made a Classic Comics adaptation of War and Peace as King Vidor did, but far less pardonable to have adapted an Edna Ferber potboiler as it were War and Peace. By contrast, Sirk's lurid melodrama remains a highly entertaining, if at times overwrought vehicle. Certainly Universal-International and Sirk made no bones about catering to the audience's fantasies in depicting the lifestyles of the rich and famous. But in a country where the difference between movie audiences and the rich and famous has often been only one of money, Written on the Wind by no means lacks a basis in reality. The movie's action effectively dramatizes the daydreams many people would act out if they suddenly had the wealth of the Hadley family in this film.
    Based on a novel by Robert Wilder, Written on the Wind reprises a plot motif that had appeared before in Vincente Minelli's Undercurrent and Max Ophul's Caught, recounting the fate of a young woman who unwarily marries an unbalanced wealthy man probably modeled upon Howard Hughes. Kyle Hadley (Robert Stack), an alcoholic playboy given to sleeping with a pistol under his pillow, is the heir to an oil fortune who weds Lucy Moore (Lauren Bacall) and takes her back to the family homestead with the intent of continuing the Hadley dynasty. But apparent sterility frustrates his hopes, and when Lucy becomes pregnant, he accuses her of having an affair with his best friend, Mitch Wayne (Rock Hudson), a suspicion encouraged by Kyle's venomous, scheming sister, Marylee (Dorothy Malone), who spends her spare time sleeping with the town studs.
    Freudian family sagas were quite in vogue in 1956, both in stage productions like Tennessee William's Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and in films such as Elia Kazan's adaptation of John Steinbeck's East of Eden. Kyle is recognizably a tortured soul in the vein of James Dean's Cal in East of Eden, but the screenplay lacks what a follower of New Criticism would have called an objective correlative. Written on the Wind offers little plausible explanation for its hero's self-destructive behavior. While Kyle's father reproaches himself for having failed to live up to his paternal responsibilities, he hardly seems to have done anything to justify the curse that has descended on his household.
    Less naïve contemporary viewers-a fortiori viewers today--might well have suspected other problems lurking behind the false front of Kyle's sterility: both an incestuous attraction to his sister and an unacknowledged homosexual attachment to the more virile and successful Mitch. But nothing of that kind could have gotten past the PCA. When Richard Brooks made his execrable version of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, he replaced Brick's longing for his dead buddy, the cause of his estrangement from his wife, with straightforward-and sexually straight-adultery between Maggie and Skipper. So Written on the Wind falls back on the stock clichés of the genre, making its enfants terribles into a pair of spoiled rich kids. Nonetheless, Sirk gets away with an outrageously symbolic shot when the film ends with Marylee caressing a phallic-looking replica of an oil well as her substitute for the hunky Mitch, who has eluded her grasp.
    Where Brooks changed a serious play into despicable schlock, Sirk was able to inject some class into this febrile soap opera, although with rather odd results. The director's fundamental commitment to aestheticism, a constant of his career, enabled him to treat such an unpromising subject with a remarkable degree of artistic objectivity. In the words of Andrew Sarris, "The essence of Sirkian cinema is the confrontation of all material, however fanciful and improbable." However, Sirks's calculated tastefulness in composing shots, which leaves no detail to chance, clashes with the almost stupefying tastelessness of settings that resemble garish color ads for home interiors or fancy resorts, and unfold before the spectator's eyes a veritable saturnalia of fetishism-commodity and otherwise.
    Looking at Written on the Wind almost fifty years later offers something of the voyeuristic pleasure of studying life in the dreary Eisenhower years through a telephoto lens-just as did the protagonist of Hitchcock's Rear Window. At the same time, Russell Metty's color cinematography so strongly accentuates the flamboyant mise en scene that after a while the film begins to take on an oneiric quality-upper middle-class culture as a collective hallucination. But Written on the Wind is no 1960s acid trip like Easy Rider or Performance, and Sirk inscribes his signature indelibly on every image in the film. It is no small tribute to the director's formidable skill as a stylist that in the opening shots he brilliantly establishes the tone of the entire movie that is to follow in what might seem a marginal flourish: the dead leaves that swirl around Kyle and even follow him into the family mansion when he arrives for the confrontation with Mitch and Marylee that will culminate in his death. No harbinger of spring these, the leaves thematically conjoin the mortality of the character, the mortality of an artistic style, and the mortality of the studio system itself in a single breathtaking gesture. At one point, Kyle offers a toast to "The truth, which is anything but beautiful." What better epigraph could Sirk have chosen for this movie!
    28 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2025
    Just as decribed
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2016
    Very good, glossy Douglas Sirk 1956 romantic melodrama. Rock Hudson plays an oil industry engineer who works for a magnate who partially raised him alongside his son and daughter. The son is played by Robert Stack as an over-indulged rich boy who has never worked a day in his life, with money coming out of his ears and has a deep affection for booze. Dorothy Malone plays the daughter, another over-indulged spoiled brat with money to burn and a penchant for sleeping around with anything in pants and an unfulfilled yen for Hudson. He sees her as a former sister, and now as a skank for who he still has brotherly affection. Lauren Bacall plays the secretary who falls in love with Stack and marries him, but is loved by Hudson. She realizes her mistake but is willing to fulfill her obligation to Stack. Stack's biggest problem, among many, is that he has a low sperm count and may never father a child, which he feels he needs to do so as to please his father and outman Hudson. The best moments are when Malone mambos up a storm at any given moment. When she mambos with Hudson, WOW, what a moment. Hudson dances like he has a broom taped to his back. Malone even mad mambos while her poor put-upon dad falls down the stairs and dies. Watch this torrid soap opera. The Criterion Collection DVD is excellent quality with a few extras. Very entertaining and highly recommended.
    18 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2023
    For fans of 1950s cinema this movie is a no-brainer. Sirk brings his usual flair for color and drama but notches it all the way up to 10, to the point that the movie almost seems impressionistic. If you're a fan of post WW2 cinema, this movie will be a great addition to your collection. The remaster looks fantastic, the colors pop and the Criterion extras are interesting. Compared to other Sirk movies, the characters in this one are a bit more removed from most viewers' own life experiences, which results in some distance between viewer and characters on screen. The dialogue is also a bit stilted, which isn't uncommon for movies of the era. Those issues aside, if you can get past them, the movie is an enjoyable over the top melodrama well worth its price. Special mention goes to Dorothy Malone, playing the spoiled trampy sister of one of the main characters. She tackles her role with relish and, more than any of the other actors, matches the movie's garish tone with aplomb.
    4 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Anblo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Dorothy Malone remporte l'Oscar de la meilleure actrice de soutien
    Reviewed in Canada on June 20, 2024
    Prince du pétrole texan et sa descente au enfer.
    Report
  • Patrice F-G
    5.0 out of 5 stars Du grand Hollywood
    Reviewed in France on January 13, 2025
    Magnifique. La perfection de la mise en scene ou chaque acteurs est à sa place, remarquable. Le grand art à voir et à revoir.
  • ISIDRO LOZANO CARRILLO
    5.0 out of 5 stars Todo bien.
    Reviewed in Spain on September 25, 2024
    Todo muy bien,gracias.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Technicolor classic from the golden age.
    Reviewed in Australia on April 29, 2024
    One of Douglas Sirks best movies from the golden age of hollywood. Portrait of a dysfuctional family headed by the great Robert Stack as an impotent alcoholic and his lifelong friend Rock Hudson and the jealousy that drives them apart when Stack marries Lauren Bacall. Also an oscar winning performance from Dorothy Malone as Stack's nymphomanic sister. Features the wonderful song Written on the Wind sung by the Four Aces.
  • Tita Fürst - Koren
    4.0 out of 5 stars Was man für das Geld NICHT kaufen kann
    Reviewed in Germany on September 21, 2019
    1955/56 drehte Douglas Sirk ("Die wunderbare Macht", "Was der Himmel erlaubt", "Duell in den Wolken" u.a) einen für damalige Zeit mutigen Film. In der prüden Gesellschaft, in der man über einige Themen nur flüstern konnte oder sogar musste, zeigt Sirk ein Werk, das mehr als Andeutungen macht - über Alkoholismus, Eifersucht, Promiskuität (hm, die Frauen!), über eheliche Probleme, die man nie in der Öffentlichkeit ausspricht.
    Und das ganze geschieht in einer Stadt, die sogar den Namen der Familie eines Ölmagnaten trägt; Hadley.

    Der "alte" Jasper Hadley (Robert Keith) leitet sein Unternehmen mit einer harten Hand. Er vertaut am meisten seinem Ziehsohn, Mitch Wayne (Rock Hudson), der als Geologe am besten die Ölquellen betreuen kann und den er von klein auf in der Familie integriert hat, obwohl Mitch einen Vater hat.

    Mitch trifft eines Tages eine junge Dame, Lucy Moore (Lauren Bacall), die als Sekretärin arbeitet. Er verliebt sich sofort in die kühl wirkende, aber wunderschöne Frau. Er ist es, der Lucy seinem Freund Kyle (Robert Stack) vorstellt. Kyle ist der Sohn der Familie Hadley und sollte später das Unternehmen übernehmen. Bisher hat der Filius eher mit Frauengeschichten, schnellen Wagen und enormen Alkoholkonsum geglänzt. Der Vater ist enttäuscht und zeigt es offen, dass Mitch mehr kann und er als "der Sohn" gelte.
    Auch Kyle verliebt sich in die junge Frau. Doch diesmal sind seine Versuche nicht mit dem Erfolg gekrönt. Lucy will sich nicht "verkaufen", was Kyle so imponert, dass er ihr einen Heiratsantrag macht. Lucy ist geblendet und auch verliebt. Sie willigt ein und die beiden sind nach kürzerster Zeit verheiratet.
    Nach den Flitterwochen beziehen sie die Räume im großen Haus der Familie Hadley. Alle sind überrascht, als sie Kyle sehen. Seit Jahren trinkt er NICHTS, er arbeitet, wünscht sich Kinder. Die Ehe scheint glücklich zu sein.

    Im Haus wohnt noch Marylee (Dorothy Malone), Kyle's Schwester, eine junge Frau, die ihr ganzes Leben nur einen Mann liebt, Mitch. Er mag sie, sagt ihr immer wieder, sie sei wie die Schwester für ihn. Sie haben am Fluss zusammen gespielt, daran erinnern sich alle, nur sieht Marylee in Mitch mehr als einen Freund/Bruder. Als sie bemerkt, dass er in ihre schöne Schwägerin verliebt ist, wird sie eifersüchtig, unglücklich und gefährlich. Um sich zu trösten, trinkt sie sehr viel, nimmt die Männer mit ins Motel, flirtet, kann sich aber ihre Eskapaden nur wegen ihres Namen leisten.

    Mitch wird klar, er muß gehen. Mit seinem richtigen Vater (Harry Shannon) spricht er über seinen neuen Job weit weg. Doch, auch bei Lucy und Kyle schleichen sich die ersten Schatten über ihre Ehe. Kyle erfährt von dem Hausarzt, er kann vielleicht keine Kinder bekommen, was ihn aus den Bahn wirft. Er beginnt wieder besinnungslos zu trinken. Am liebsten in Dan's Bar, wo er schwarzgebrannten Korn kauft. Lucy kann ihn nicht aufhalten, er erzählt ihr auch gar nichts.
    Auch sein Vater ist nur noch traurig, müde und bietet Mitch um Hilfe.

    Die Familie Hadley hat alles - außer innere Ruhe und Gelassenheit. Das Glück kann man auch nicht kaufen...lange Jahre des Schweigens haben alle verändert. Die Geschwister sehen sich ähnlich, beide unglücklich, für das tägliche Leben nicht geschaffen. Beide brauchen einen Mann, der auf sie aufpasst. Ihre Probleme lösen sie auf die schlimmste Weise, sie laufen weg, sie betrinken sich und suchen die Schuld bei anderen Menschen.

    Keine gute Prognose für die Zukunft. Und es kommt, fast wie programmiert - die Tragödie wartet in der Nähe, das Schlimme war nie ganz weg, es hat sich nur versteckt.
    Zwei Menschen, die trotz oder gerade wegen Geldes schwach sind. Die weglaufen, wenn man sie braucht. Die nur verlangen, geben können sie wenig. Die Angst vor der Zukunft haben, die Gegenwart zerstören sie mit kleinen und größeren Schritten.
    Marylee und Kyle sind Menschen, die immer einen "Lehrer" brauchen, der sie lenkt. Man erfährt etwas über ihre Mutter, der Vater gibt sich die Schuld für das Benehmen seiner erwachsenen Kinder (warum?).

    Der Film hat alles, was ein Melodram braucht. Die Geschichte kommt langsam zu ihrem Höhepunkt, man weiß es, man wartet auf den Ausgang. Die verpassten Gelegenheiten können nicht mehr zurückkommen.
    Es geht darum, ob ein Mensch über sein Schatten springen kann, ob er seine Dämone überwinden kann...

    FAZIT: ein guter Film, Dorothy Malone bekam für ihre Rolle als trinkfeste, nym­pho­manische junge Frau einen Oscar.
    Sie spielt gut, übertreibt ein bisschen, doch ihr Spiel ist, wie schon geschrieben, sehr klar. Rock Hudson spielt wie immer - einen Mann mit tadelosem Ruf, das sollte so sein. Robert Stack ist als alkoholsüchtiger Schwächling für mich besser und dem wahren Leben näher. Lauren Bacall hat die Rolle, die sie perfekt beherrscht - sie ist schön, wirkt zwar etwas verlegen, distanziert, aber sie wächst mit der Zeit. Das macht sie fast immer, wenn man an ihre Rollen denkt.
    Douglas Sirk hat noch einige Filme mit Rock Hudson gedreht, Jane Wyman war fast seine Muse, aber auch Dorothy Malone und Robert Stack sind in einigen Filmen zu sehen.

    Die Farben in Film sind typisch für die 50-Jahre..., sie erzählen eine eigene Geschichte, Blumen überall, immer passend zu der Gelegenheit, die Kleider - farblich eine Welt - Marylee in schrillen Tönen, Lucy in Pastell...Die Umgebung - ein Prachthaus - nicht weit entfernt von den Ölfeldern mit viel Staub und Schmutz.
    Ein 4 Sterne Film, das Thema sehr aktuell und gut umgesetzt! Auch nach vielen Jahren sehenswert!