How the West Was Won (Blu-ray Disc)
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100% Rating | Reviews
Studio: Warner Home Video
Rating: G
Genre: Western / Adventure / Drama
Release Date: September 9, 2008
Running Time: 2 hrs. 42 mins.
SYNOPSIS:
SPECIAL FEATURES
The Blu-ray edition offers an exclusive version of the film called the "SmileBox" version, which presents the film with a unique curvature that virtually recreates the true Cinerama® experience in a home theater in an aspect ratio of 2.89:1. The Blu-ray release will also include special Digi-book packaging featuring 32-pages of rare press materials and behind-the-scenes photos.

· Film Historian Commentary
· Dave Strohmaier’s critically-acclaimed, feature-length documentary Cinerama® Adventure
· The Making of How the West Was Won (Archival featurette)
· Original Theatrical trailer

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The first feature film to be photographed and projected in the panoramic three-camera Cinerama process, this epic Western is almost as expansive as the West itself, chronicling a pioneering family's triumphs and tragedies in numerous episodes spanning three generations and a half century of westward movement. Divided into five segments directed by veteran Hollywood filmmakers Henry Hathaway, George Marshall, and the legendary John Ford (and including uncredited sequences directed by Richard Thorpe), the film was one of the most ambitious ever made by the venerable MGM studio. Its stellar cast reads like a virtual who's who of Hollywood's biggest stars. Debbie Reynolds plays a sturdy survivor of many pioneering dangers, and the eventual widow of a gambler (Gregory Peck), who is later reunited with her nephew (George Peppard), a Civil War veteran and cavalryman who heads for San Francisco as the transcontinental railroad is being built. Many more characters and stories are woven throughout this epic film, which is dramatically uneven but totally engrossing with its stunning vistas and countless outdoor locations in Illinois, Kentucky, South Dakota, Monument Valley in Arizona, California, Colorado, and elsewhere. The DVD presents the film in its Cinerama aspect ratio of 2.65:1 and also includes a "making of" documentary and the original theatrical trailer.