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Carmen (2003)

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Carmen
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Directed byVicente Aranda
CastPaz Vega, Leonardo Sbaraglia, Antonio Dechent, Joan Crosas, Jay Benedict and Simon Shepherd
Theatrical ReleaseNovember 30, 2002
DVD ReleaseAugust 5, 2008
Running Time119 minutes
MPAA RatingUnrated
UPC Code031398218838
Buy this item$12.49 at Amazon.com
As of Nov 26 0:42 EST (details)
1 DVD, Lions Gate, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Languages: Spanish (Original Language), English (Dubbed)
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About Carmen

Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 08/05/2008 Run time: 119 minutes Rating: Nr Product Description

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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.0 (6 reviews)

rating: 4 QuoteCarmen w/o the music w the Sex!Quote
This film is an adaptation of the original story that the opera Carmen was based on. It has a great look ( very Goya in it's landscapes ) and it has an actress, Paz Vega, who is quite believeable as a woman who could make most fellows stray off the straight and narrow!!!
Well worth a look! November 4, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteSteamy and dramaticQuote

Paz Vega creates the steamiest Carmen ever in this gorgeous period drama. She brings the character to life. This isn't Bizet's Carmen, though. This one takes impulsiveness and fiery temper to extremes, and combines that volatile mix with a personality that seems to interact with others only to manipulate them. Then, with raw sensuality as her lure and reward, she brings out the same in men, not just poor José.

The settings come to life almost as much as the characters - that cavernous cigar factory at the start, the cities of nineteenth century Spain (but much older), and the rocky, raw wilds ruled by bandits. Award-winning costumes help too, including gaudy soldier's uniforms, and elaborate recreations of women's clothes, down to humble details like drawers.

Don't expect to like these characters. José's military honor implodes, leaving a shell of murderous jealousy. Carmen herself - kissing a viper seems safer. Not even the lush promise of her body makes that look like such a good deal. Nice people don't make good drama, and these are very dramatic. Recommended, but not for the skin-shy.

-- wiredweird October 24, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteThe Original 'Carmen' RealizedQuote
Even for the non-opera loving public the name CARMEN is immediately recognized as an opera by Bizet about a gypsy girl whose capricious loves destroy men. But as much as the opera is now considered a staple in every opera house repertoire, the real story of the wild gypsy lass as created by Prosper Mérimée in 1845 has never been told as well as in this cinematic version by the abundantly gifted Spanish director Vicente Aranda ('Juana la Loca AKA Mad Love','Amantes', 'If they tell you I fell', etc.). Incorporating the author of the novel as a main character seeking the story of Carmen from one of her lovers - José - provides just the right vantage for the story of this famous gypsy wild lady to be told.

Carmen (the amazingly beautiful and talented Paz Vega) works in a cigar factory in Seville, a factory adjoining the military station where the very proper José (Leonardo Sbaraglia) is stationed. Carmen is tempestuous and in a fight instigated by a fellow factory worker bringing attention to the fact that Carmen is a gypsy, Carmen murders the co-worker and is arrested. José is physically attracted to the voluptuous Carmen and when Carmen flirts with him he consents to allow her to escape - his payback is the promise for a night of passion with Carmen. Carmen keeps her pact, providing José with his first sexual encounter, and José is doomed. His lack of military discipline results in his losing his rank and being imprisoned for a while, but at his release José encounters Carmen again, kills a fellow officer, and in fear runs off to the hills to live with the smugglers and gypsies that are Carmen's people. Many incidents occur to try the passionate bond between the lovers, but when Carmen's real husband is released from prison, destructive behaviors take over, behavior's that include Carmen's infatuation and affair with a bullfighter and the passion of Carmen and José comes to a tragic end.

One factor that makes the story (as adapted for the screen by director Aranda and Joaquim Jordà move so well is the role that Prosper Mérimée (Jay Benedict) plays: his questioning of José completes the story that Bizet's opera only outlines. The acting is superb, the cinematography by Paco Femenia and the excellent musical score by José Nieto contribute enormously to the success of this very fine film. This is a must for lovers of the opera Carmen, and a splendid action drama for those viewers who admire historical pieces. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, September 08 September 6, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteShould read "based on Mérimeé's short story"Quote
This film is an almost line-by-line retelling of Prosper Mérimée's short story Carmen, which, decades later, became the source of Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy's libretto for Bizet's opera. The American DVD edition cover dutifully dumbs this down for our consumption: "based on Bizet's wildly popular opera".

So much for ignorant marketing! At least, we get an anamorphic transfer -the Spanish edition is woefully letterboxed!

Superb photography, beautiful actual locations, and Ms Vega, who is not at all shy about performing head-to-toe, full frontally and rearly **clothed** in more than one scene!

What an eyeful! August 26, 2008

rating: 2 QuoteMás o menos ...Quote
Los puntos a favor de esta película son varios:
- Paz Vega es hermosa, y muestra bastante piel. Además, actúa lo suficientemente bien para que las escenas eróticas no parezcan gratuitas, incluso cuando algunas lo son.
- Leo Sbaraglia por fin se relajó y abandonó sus patéticos esfuerzos por sonar castizo. Ahora simplemete habla en una especie de murmullo grave y de acento neutro, pero que al menos no distrae al oyente, y permite disfrutar de su considerable talento actoral.
- El vestuario de época es lindo y detallado, especialmente los trajes típicos de los contrabandistas sevillanos.
- La fotografía es excelente, como en casi todas las películas españolas.
- Joan Crosas, aunque actúa en un papel relativamente pequeño, lo hace con gran oficio.

Pero, lamentablemente, estos puntos no bastan para redimir a esta película. Adolesce de las falencias que parecen aquejar a muchas de las producciones multinacionales europeas, en particular, la inserción de actores y situaciones que no agregan mucho al desarrollo de la trama.

En efecto, la historia de Carmen se cuenta mediante el recurso del "relato enmarcado", empezando por el final, y por boca de una especie de arqueólogo-humanista franco-inglés (Próspero, interpretado por el correcto Jay Benedict). Este recurso arruina cualquier suspenso que la la película pudiera haber tenido para aquéllos no familiarizados con la ópera, y nos fuerza a esperar a casi la mitad de la película para que la acción comience a tener sentido.

La acción es en general tan lenta, que la película recurre, de manera un tanto barata, a los desnudos de la hermosa Paz Vega (o su doble de cuerpo) para mantener el interés.

El vestuario, aunque vistoso y bien investigado, demasiado a menudo tiene ese aspecto de "demasiado nuevo, brilante y almidonadito" que le resta credibilidad.

Las escenas de lucha y tiroteos, en general son anticlimáticas y están pobremente coreografiadas. En particular, una muy importante lucha con navajas es tan mala que da risa más que provocar suspenso.

Finalmente, como es una constante en casi todas las películas españolas, el sonido es malo. Se usa un registro de volumen muy amplio, que va desde actores apenas susurrando en baja intensidad, a partes musicales de volumen mucho más alto que saturan. ¿Por qué este detalle técnico continúa arruinando las películas españolas? ¿No hay buenos técnicos de sonido en España?

En suma, con los recuros y el talento invertidos en esta película, podría haberse logrado un producto final mucho más atractivo. Una lástima. August 11, 2008

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