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Starring
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David Niven
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Peter Sellers
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Robert Wagner
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Capucine
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Brenda De Banzie
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Director
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Blake Edwards
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Genre
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Crime
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Romance
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Comedy
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Studio
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MGM (Video & DVD)
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Subtitles
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French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Greek, Norwegian, Swedish, Turkish
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Time
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115 Minutes
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Awards
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Oscar,Golden Globe, Won : ASCAP Award : Most Performed Feature Film Standards Nominated : Oscar : Best Music, Score - Substantially Original BAFTA Film Award : Best British Actor Golden Globe ; Best Motion Picture Actor - Musical/Comedy
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MPAA Rating
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Not Rated
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DVD
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List Price:
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160.00 L.E
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Our Price:
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140.00 L.E
- Save:
20 L.E (12.5%)
1
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Arriving at a posh resort with her precious "panther" a large gem with them image of a leaping feline inside sexy Princess Dala meets the debonair Sir Charles. She is unaware, however, that Charles, a.k.a. "The Phantom," is a professional thief who steals from the rich and gives to…himself! Enter Jacques Clouseau, the clumsiest inspector ever to trip over a case. Can he stop Charles' attempts to relieve the princess of her diamond? Can he even exit a room without breaking off the doorknob? Or will The Phantom steal away the "cat" and leave Clouseau to hold the bag?
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The history of film comedy would have been much altered if Peter Ustinov had stayed in the role of Jacques Clouseau, the bumbling French police inspector in The Pink Panther. But Ustinov dropped out, the role went to Peter Sellers, and a classic character was born: suspicious, blundering, with a pompous little mustache and a sometimes impenetrable accent, Clouseau was always one step behind everybody else in the room. The Pink Panther introduced Clouseau hot on the trail of a famous jewel thief (David Niven), who may be planning to make off with an expensive gem known as the Pink Panther. Set in a European ski resort, this bubbly comedy is a wonderful dose of '60s style, from the famous Henry Mancini theme music to the presence of two of Europe's top sex symbols of the era, Claudia Cardinale and Capucine. The film also introduced the popular cartoon Pink Panther, slinking around to Mancini's music in an animated credits sequence. The film's success brought a follow-up, A Shot in the Dark, also released in 1964; after 11 years, Sellers and top comedy director Blake Edwards (10) returned with three more sequels.
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