DVD Review: Sin City [Blu-ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV
DVD Review: Sin City [Blu-ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 200942313411426577801](/dvd/30/200942313411426577801.jpg)
Amazon.com
The two-disc edition of Sin City easily makes the earlier single-disc theatrical-cut release obsolete by including the regular theatrical cut on the first disc, recutting the movie into four extended segments on the second disc (separated by story line), then piling on an impressive load of bonus features. But there’s a catch. Billed as “Recut, Extended, Unrated,” with “over 20 minutes” of new footage, the new set’s four separate stories are extended by only about 6.5 total minutes of movie action (see details below in “What’s New”); the rest of the added running time is the splashy new title shots (named by the title of the story or book) and the four minutes of credits that run at the end of each segment. Each addition makes the movie even closer to the comic books, and these extended segments are generally preferable to the theatrical equivalents (unfortunately, there’s no Play All option), but don’t expect the same impact as Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings extended editions. And although this version is unrated, the only risqué addition is a bit of violence from Miho that’s no worse than the rest of the crazy violence in the film.
How Are the Bonus Features?
Robert Rodriguez has always loved DVDs, so the bonus features are extensive. On the first disc, there is somehow room for the theatrical cut of the film with its DTS track (the extended versions have only Dolby 5.1), two commentary tracks, an alternate audio track with a live audience in Austin, Texas, an interactive map of characters and locations, and 47 minutes of featurettes covering Frank Miller, Quentin Tarantino, cars, costumes, props, and special effects. The first commentary is Rodriguez and Miller discussing the concepts and the cast. The second commentary is mostly by Rodriguez, but Tarantino drops in briefly for the scene he directed (with Clive Owen and Benicio Del Toro in the car), as does an enthusiastic Bruce Willis for his segment.
The Tarantino scene gets a lot of attention on the second disc as well, in a 14-minute take in which he can be heard coaching the actors. Also on the disc are Rodriguez’s usual “flic school” (among the topics is how scenes were created by merging footage of actors who never actually met), footage of Bruce Willis’s band performing in Austin at the time of the shooting, and another Rodriguez cooking school (this time it’s breakfast tacos). But the most interesting feature is the “green screen version” of the film: the entire film as it was shot in front of the green screen, sped up to play in only 12 minutes. You can see the actors (in color!) interacting only with the props and each other. Last, there’s a DVD-sized complete comic book of The Hard Goodbye.
What’s New in the Extended Version?
“The Customer Is Always Right” (the opening sequence with Josh Hartnett and Marley Shelton) has no new footage, but now goes straight into the one-minute epilogue with Hartnett and Alexis Bledel that closed the theatrical cut. “The Hard Goodbye” (with Mickey Rourke as “Marv” ) has two new sequences totaling about two minutes: Marv encounters his mother and finds his gun, and talks to Weevil in the club. In “The Big Fat Kill” (with Clive Owen and Benicio Del Toro), some short dialogue is restored, along with another wicked slice by Miho (Devon Aoki)–about a minute total. “That Yellow Bastard” (with Bruce Willis and Jessica Alba) has about 3.5 new minutes: there are more visitors to Hartigan’s hospital bed, including his wife and a nurse; Carla Gugino’s Lucille character comes to assist Hartigan when he wants to get out of jail (probably the best addition); and Mr. Shlubb and Mr. Klump have some more lines. –David Horiuchi
More Sin City at Amazon.com ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 200942313411396877801](/dvd/30/200942313411396877801.jpg)
The Graphic Novels and Books ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 20094231341143177802](/dvd/30/20094231341143177802.jpg)
Films by Robert Rodriguez ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 20094231341147877803](/dvd/30/20094231341147877803.jpg)
Our interview with Frank Miller ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 200942313411412577804](/dvd/30/200942313411412577804.jpg)
The Soundtrack ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 200942313411417177805](/dvd/30/200942313411417177805.jpg)
From Graphic Novel to Big Screen ![DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV DVD Review: Sin City [Blu ray]: Jessica Alba, Bruce Willis: Movies & TV 200942313411421877806](/dvd/30/200942313411421877806.jpg)
Films by guest director Quentin Tarantino
From The New Yorker
A few strands of melodrama have been pulled from Frank Miller’s graphic novels and plaited together-just about-into a coherent comic-strip film. Miller himself co-directs, in collaboration with Robert Rodriguez (plus a little help from Quentin Tarantino), and there is certainly no letup, or pulled punches, in the heightening of style. The movie is in monochrome, splashed with occasional color, and the sheer force of overkill-the ear-crunching sound level, the disturbingly joyful violence-turns a sequence of horrific events into a stream of unfeeling comedy. The plots offer vengeance upon vengeance: cops against child-killers, cops against priests, hookers against cops, thugs against everybody. The cast is a blast, including Bruce Willis, Michael Madsen, Clive Owen, Benicio Del Toro, a bewitching Carla Gugino, and a renascent Mickey Rourke. Most of them enter with sweat and gusto into the spirit of the thing-fortunately so, for without such eagerness the movie would feel merely cruel. What it has to tell us of life, let alone suffering, beyond the savage enchantment of the movies could be written on the head of a bullet.-A.L. (4/11/05) (Battery Park 11, Chelsea Cinemas, Cinemas 1, 2, and 3, 84th Street Sixplex, Empire 25, Kips Bay Theatre, Magic Johnson Theatres, Orpheum VII, 34th Street Theatre, and Union Square.) -Anthony Lane
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker
Well, I liked it…,
By Wheelchair Assassin
(The Great Concavity) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
While it’s probably a total cliche to say it by now, Sin City really is a wild thrill ride of a movie, and quite possibly the most entertaining thing that will hit theaters all year. Adapted by director Robert Rodriguez from Frank Miller’s graphic-novel series, it’s an energetic slab of neo-noir, complete with twisted characters, ambiguous morality, and deadly serious dialogue. For those who thought the Kill Bill movies weren’t bizarre or violent enough, Sin City ought to seem like a stylish, action-packed gift from guy-movie heaven. It’s filled with negativity, outrageously over the-top bloodletting, and some of the blackest humor known to man, but it all works anyway. I even managed to forgive the incessant voice-over narration, normally a rather lazy device, because it’s so oddly poignant and poetic. It’s not really that big a deal anyway, because this movie is so impressive visually that the characters could speak in gibberish and I’d probably still be moved to give it at least three stars.
It should be noted right off the bat that Sin City is not a movie for everyone, but if you’re the type who would like it you presumably know who you are. IF you like crime movies, especially those filled with action and atmosphere, you will almost certainly get a kick out of Sin City. If you prefer lighter, more “socially redeeming” fare, you may still like it, or you may be overcome with bile filling your throat for most of its two-hour running time. It’s all a matter of how willing you are to accept what’s going on without asking too many nagging questions like “How exactly did Mickey Rourke just take out ten armed riot cops with nothing more than his fists and a hatchet?” or “is it really possible or even necessary to manually tear off a man’s scrotum?”. Everything about this movie is utterly outsized, from the themes to the characters to the action, but in the end it’s a rousing success at what it intends to do, which is entertain. It’s precisely because this movie was so utterly entertaining that I found myself unwilling to nitpick; you’ll probably be too busy having your senses assaulted to linger on any problems you may have with the movie. Nothing is more key in movies (or TV, or novels for that matter) than getting the viewer to suspend disbelief, to simply let go and enjoy what’s transpiring regardless of the plausibility level. Some of my favorite movies are wildly unrealistic, but at some point when watching them I just decided to go with it. Sin City is one such movie: I realized early on that the events unfolding onscreen bore little to no resemblance to reality as presently constituted; I just didn’t care. I went to see this movie with my wife (who is, to put it mildly, not a fan of dark or violent movies), and she may have summed up the experience of watching it the best when she said simply “I was never bored.” That, ultimately, is the secret to Sin City’s success: it’s so gripping to watch that it’s hard to care about anything else.
As everyone (and probably their brothers) knows by now, Sin City was filmed using real actors against a black-and-white CGI background with some touches of color added for dramatic effect. It may seem like a gimmick at first, but Sin City is all about bringing the viewer into a sort of parallel universe, so this unconventional device works perfectly. Sin City is a movie dealing with lives on the edge, and it conjures up a delightfully dark, grimy, and gritty atmosphere to go match the depravity of its subject matter. Weighty themes and over-the-top violence abound here, and it’s only fitting that the movie’s look and feel should be so uniformly haunting. Consisting of three tangentially related stories occurring out of sequence, Sin City brings the viewer into an underworld populated by thieves, murderers, hookers, and dirty cops, and the morality is viewed entirely in shades of grey. In the Basin City of the movie, where the good guys are bad and the bad guys are even worse, violence is often a virtue, or at the very least a prerequisite for survival. If there’s one redeeming value to Sin City’s cartoonish ultraviolence, it’s that it’s painfully clear that its recipients generally deserve it.
Anyway, if there’s one theme running through all of these stories, it’s that of redemption. The protagonist in each tale (Bruce Willis’s Hartigan, Rourke’s Marv, and Clive Owen’s Dwight) is a most unlikely hero (although Hartigan is just a regular cop and therefore not exactly bad, whereas it’s clear that Marv and Dwight are murderers), but each finds himself driven to acts of extreme courage and sacrifice in order to see justice done. Sin City portrays a kind of heroism not typically seen in movies (especially big-budget, sanitized Hollywood productions), one that comes from doing the right thing even when it’s nowhere near being the easiest thing. Rourke’s Marv is probably the most memorable character, a hulking thug with a highly overdeveloped sense of vengeance who managed to arouse some of my sympathy even as he cut a swath of unimaginable destruction through his enemies on his way to avenging a murdered prostitute. Out of the legions of other figures in the movie, the great Benicio Del Toro deserves some special mention as a comically malevolent crooked cop who won’t shut up even after he meets his unfortunate end.
Now, although I’ve gone on too long already, I’d feel remiss if I didn’t talk about Sin City’s staggering violence quotient. Yes, this an extremely graphic movie, and much of the violence is downright disturbing to watch (Elijah Wood’s character being cut up and fed to a wolf is a prominent example, even if much of the violence in that case was implied), but it’s just as true that context is an important factor when considering just how offensive such bloodletting is. Now, for one thing, Sin City is meant to be a piece of escapist cinema, so nothing that takes place onscreen should be taken too seriously anyway. After all, no one got offended during the scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail when King Arthur cut off the Black Knight’s arms and legs; that scene was meant to be funny and it was. Perhaps more to the point, the violence here is so ludicrously over the top from the opening scene that it’s hard to imagine any rational person getting too upset. You have to just go with it; if you’re the kind of person who makes it a point to be huffy and offended all the time you shouldn’t be seeing this movie anyway. ‘Nuff said
Brutal Beautiful Breathtaking “City”,
By G P Padillo “paolo”
(Portland, ME United States) -
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)
With any luck Frank Miller’s “Sin City” will inspire a new genre of filmmaking - a literal union between filmmaking and the world of comic books/graphic novels. I know, I know, there have been countless films inspired by the world of comic books which have attempted to recreate the chills and thrills. Not one of them - even the best (e,g,, Spiderman series, Tales from the Crypt, etc.) has been remotely as successful as the creative team that gives us this brilliant, jarring, vision.
Rodriguez, Miller and company obviously put themselves (and the cast) through painstaking paces to assure every frame, every emotion emoted by an astonishing array of live talent is instilled with the gritty, graphic hyperrealism of the world of Frank Miller. It is a breathtaking achievement which, alas, will go unnoticed and be underappreciated by many who don’t “get” this world.
The cast is nothing short of remarkable: Mickey Rourke gives his finest performance since Barfly - maybe ever. Bruce Willis has never given a better performance than the retiring cop, Hartigan. Everyone involved is obviously relishing having the time of their lives. Outside of Shakespeare I can’t imagine anything currently more theatrically over-the-top and satisfying than being associated with Sin City.
For many the violence will be of too gory and graphic in nature (gorygraphic?). Others will enjoy the rough ride but also be appreciative of the often stunning beauty of so many of this film’s images. The final tale in the trilogy of stories that make up the movie is shot with the cool and chill of winter bathed in a snow storm of such exquisite beauty that I don’t find it difficult to say it is among the most beautiful images I’ve seen in any film. Ever.
GREAT movie but a BAD dvd, dont fall for the double dip,
By Willie Oliver
(New York) -
This review is from: Sin City (DVD)
Remember this is a DVD review not a movie review. This DVD gets a 0. Why? It is the typical bare bones release of a great movie. People will buy it, but will soon realize that the DVD is horrid and has no special features at all. Then a few months later another one will be released. Typical hollywood and thier double dipping. Do not buy this version. Wait untill the special edition. You know it is coming.
Hope everyone reads this.
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