Rediscover the classic tap dancing film with this sublime vintage Let's Dance in the Rain poster, starring the magnificent Gene Kelly.
- Paper characteristic:
- 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
- By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
- ✅ Size: several choices available . ✅
- Great UV resistance .
- Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
- Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
- Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
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FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .
⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️
Description of this Let's Dance in the Rain Poster
Singing in the Rain is a 1952 American musical comedy, directed and choreographed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, starring Kelly, Donald O'Connor and Debbie Reynolds, and starring Jean Hagen, Millard Mitchell and Cyd Charisse. It lightly depicts Hollywood in the late 1920s, with the three stars playing artists caught in the transition from silent to talkies.
The film enjoyed only modest success upon its release. O'Connor won the Golden Globe for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, and Betty Comden and Adolph Green won the Writers Guild of America Award for their screenplay, while Jean Hagen was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor feminine. However, contemporary critics have since accorded it legendary status, and it is often considered the greatest musical film ever made, as well as the greatest film made in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer "Freed Unit". It topped the AFI's list of greatest musicals and is ranked as the fifth greatest American film of all time in its updated list of greatest American films in 2007. In 1989, Singing in the Rain was among the first 25 films selected by the United States Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry due to their "cultural, historical, or aesthetic significance." In 2005, the British Film Institute included it in its list of 50 films to see before the age of 14. In 2008, Empire magazine ranked it as the eighth best film of all time. In Sight & Sound magazine's 2012 list of the 50 best films of all time, Singin' in the Rain ranked 20th.