Red Violin - Meridian Collection (1998)
Facts
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Red Violin - Meridian Collection (Remastered - WS)
DVD Price: You save 37%! As of Sep 6 12:01 EDT (details)
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| Cast | Carlo Cecchi, Jason Flemyng, Greta Scacchi, Samuel L. Jackson, Jean Luc Bideau and Samuel L Jackson |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1997 |
| DVD Release | June 3, 2008 |
| Running Time | 130 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 031398240808 |
| Buy this item | $16.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 6 12:01 EDT (details) 1 DVD, LION'S GATE ENTERTAINMENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 42 new from $12.99, 15 used from $12.98 |
About Red Violin - Meridian Collection
An epic adventure of mystery and obsession unfolds when Charles Morritz (Samuel L. Jackson) an appraiser of rare musical instrument s discovers a one-of-a-kind red violin at a prestigious Montreal auction house. Convinced he's found an authentic long-lost master piece Morritz uncovers the spectacular journey of the priceless violin how it changed hands and the lives of all who touched it. W hen the violin's shocking secret is finally revealed Morritz must wrestle with his own demons and choose between burying the truth and risking everything.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA/PSYCHOLOGICAL DRAMA Rating: R UPC: 031398240808 Manufacturer No: 24080 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| an unusual biography |
| Meridan Collection--Superb transfer to DVD |
I viewed this DVD on a 46-inch Samsung LCD high definition TV, played on a Toshiba 1080p HD DVD player--and the picture and sound are stunning. If you play this DVD on a player that can "upconvert" a regular DVD (such as this release),the resulting image is already high definition--no need for a separate Blu-ray or HD DVD edtion.
The movie is itself, is of course, quite engaging and has more of a European/foreign film flair about it. The only well-known American movie star in this film is Samuel Jackson, who, although he is somewhat miscast in this role (as other reviewers have also noted), still manages to make his character believable--his inclusion in this movie was not a train wreck for me. The rest of the cast is quite good, although likely to be largely unknown to American audiences. If you appreciate beautiful violin music, accurate and elaborate period sets, other cultures and foreign languages (English subtitles are provided)--then you will love this film.
The "R" rating for this film could have easily been avoided. There are two brief scences in one segement of the story involving partial nudity, one of which is a sex scene (involving the violin, no less), but these scenes are not graphic or violent--one of them is actually more like a pose ("caught in the act" as it were). These scences could easily have been modified without compromising the plot, resulting in a PG-13 or even PG rating instead. Otherwise, there is no profanity or violence anywhere else in the film. This is a very light "R" film. I have seen PG-13 films that contain a greater amount of more objectionable material (frequent cursing, double entendres, etc.). This is a film that you will watch again and again. The Meridian Collection edition of "The Red Violin" is Highly recommended!
June 9, 2008
| A feast for the senses ... and the everlasting magic of music. |
Each card symbolizes one of the stories told about the travels through time and space made by the Red Violin, Niccolò Busotti's last masterpiece, over the course of the centuries. And each of the violin's owners we meet symbolizes a stage of life: birth, childhood, coming of age, political awakening and maturity. In that, it is not so much the violin's voyage that links the five vignettes dealing with its owners' lives, such as Glenn Gould's life provided the links between the individual parts of writer-director Francois Girard's first film, "32 Short Films About Glenn Gould." Rather, the humans' stories provide snapshots of various stages of the instrument's existence, brought to life by John Corigliano's magnificent and Oscar-winning score and Joshua Bell's virtuoso performance - and of course, it is also obvious throughout that a link exists between Anna Busotti and the violin created by her husband.
"The Red Violin" is feast for the eyes and ears - luscious and true to detail in its costume design and cinematography, it not only faithfully uses the original languages of its various locations but also actors who are native speakers (to the point of having Suisse-born actor Jean Luc Bideau portray the French teacher of Austrian wunderkind Kaspar Weiss [Christopher Koncz], thus choosing an actor who is on the one hand fluent in German but on the other hand speaks it with a "genuine" French accent ... and although I don't speak any Chinese/Mandarin, I wouldn't be surprised if the scenes taking place in China were linguistically as faithful to their location as those set in Vienna and elsewhere).
Unfortunately, the movie's plot lines fall somewhat short of its visual and acoustic splendor. Granted, there was only limited possibility to develop meaningful stories for each of the vignettes. But given the highly symbolic nature of the movie's five parts, too many gaping holes remain. Although we know the violin's story doesn't end with Kaspar, for example, we can only guess as to how it falls into the hands of gypsies. And the following sequence, involving British composer and virtuoso Frederick Pope (Jason Flemyng) and his mistress Victoria Byrd, has rightfully been criticized for the shallow waters it treads: Even if you don't have a whole movie to develop the relationship between a sensual, gifted and somewhat eccentric composer and his novelist lover (such as 1991's magnificent and in the U.S. sadly overlooked "Impromptu"), and even if Greta Scacchi's Victoria is far from being another George Sand, her talent seems ... well, maybe not wasted, but reduced to another "blonde bombshell" role unworthy of her Old Vic training. And don't even get me started on the final scene in Montreal and the "conflict" faced by violin appraiser Charles Morritz ... (although Samuel L. Jackson, at least, gives a finely tuned and sensitive performance which almost manages to smooth out the edges of the script's sometimes scratchy composition.)
But this movie's real star and ultimately, its saving grace, is the Red Violin itself - not the six models physically representing the instrument throughout the film of course, but the personality it gains through Corigliano's score and its uniquely beautiful interpretation by Bell, and the idea the violin stands for; that of music's everlasting magic. For bringing this idea to life alone, the movie is well worth seeing.
Also recommended:
Amadeus - Director's Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition)
Immortal Beloved
Impromptu June 8, 2008
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