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List Price: $24.99Amazon.com's Price: $22.49 You Save: $2.50 (10%)as of 11/22/2009 01:22 EST details
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780769796369
Format: Color, DVD, NTSC
ISBN: 0769796362
Label: Kultur Video
Languages: EnglishOriginal Language
Manufacturer: Kultur Video
MPN: KLTD2636D
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Kultur Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 24, 2002
Running Time: 90 minutes
Studio: Kultur Video
Theatrical Release Date: May 04, 1973
Editorial Review:
Product Description: Studio: Kultur Release Date: 10/08/2002 Run time: 90 minutes
Amazon.com: This unique play presents the afterlife as a steam bath, in which dead souls continue to obsess about the same petty concerns that obsessed them in their lives, until they are cast into a dark void by God, the Puerto Rican attendant (José Pérez). But new arrival Tandy (Bill Bixby) at first refuses to accept what's happened, and when he finally does, he pleads to be allowed to return to his life. Steambath was controversial in its day for its obscene language (which was softened for this filmed version, originally presented on PBS), its satirical take on religion, and some brief nudity by bombshell Valerie Perrine. Today it's still very entertaining, but mostly as a core sampling of the surprisingly uncensored male attitudes from the dawn of the 1970s. Everyone gives a solid performance and Bixby's easy charm makes his self-centered character sympathetic. --Bret Fetzer
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
An amusing, well performed insight into the immediate after-life - with an unexpected twist. Thought-provoking. Denial leads to some superb introspection. Find out that even God has a sense of humor.
Rating: -
This is a program that I saw on Public Television back in the early 70's.
When I found out this was on DVD I couldn't wait to see it again. I have to say I was a bit dissapointed to notice that some scenes were altered from the original broadcast. Call me a purist, but I love to see things the way they were originaly broadcast.
This program originally had nudity, in particular Valerie Perrine's shower scene. In the original you can see her breasts, in this version you do not. ... Read More
Rating: -
A chance to see Bill Bixby in a real change-of-pace role, playing a recently deceased man who slowly comes to realize that his life, to which he is so anxious to return, was not all it had cracked up to be. Bixby is thoroughly believable in his performance, by changes funny, anxious, fearful, supportive, intense, and even ever-so-slightly sleazy. He's the perfect choice to head this cast in a wildly offbeat story of a group of people who, having died, find themselves in a steambath on their way to ... Read More
Rating: -
The intriguing and imaginative plot, the excellent acting, and the tragedy of this TV adaptation of Bruce Jay Friedman's play not being available for today's audiences have been repeated by several reviewers. They are, in my opinion, all correct in their views about this wonderful, thought-provoking "black" comedy.
I know that at least one reviewer lamented the fact that many reviewers seemed to talk more about the "nudity" than the merits of the play/movie. I have not found this to be ... Read More
Rating: -
Bill Bixby proves to be a real talent in this truly funny play in which a steambath is a sort of waiting place between death and the afterlife, and God is a Puerto Rican towel boy. The only negative to this work is that it calls for some special effects that really are pretty limp technologically - but pretty fair for its day. Valerie Perrine is actually a pretty good actress in this one.
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