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  Welcome back one of the treasures of international cinema.  In 1929-30, when  Hollywood was stymied by the arrival of talkies, a Frenchman named René Clair  set about reinventing the movies for the world of sound.  Rather than enslave  his camera--and imagination--to a microphone in a potted palm, Clair embraced  sound as a liberating new dimension of the motion picture.  His effervescent  comedy-musical-romance Le Million doesn't just feature a witty commingling of  dialogue and song--it's a jeu d'esprit in which every movement, every cut,  every sound effect (or absence thereof) contributes to a lilting rhythm.  The plot is precisely as airy and as farcically complicated as it needs to  be.  Suffice it to say that there's this threadbare jacket with a winning  lottery ticket in the pocket.  It becomes separated from its starving-artist  owner and leads him and numerous others a merry chase over the roofs of  Paris, through the urban underworld, and onto the very stage of the Opera.  You'll wonder more than once whether the Marx Brothers were taking notes.   For no good reason whatsoever, Le Million remained out of  circulation for decades, except for a few bleary dupe  videos.  Now we have a crystal-clear DVD that does full justice to Lazare  Meerson's ethereal settings, Georges Périnal's luminous camerawork, the  enchanting beauty of leading lady Annabella, and René Clair's world-class  comedy masterpiece.  There shall be dancing in the streets. --Richard T. Jameson
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