DVDMovies

"Cliff" notes

By November 17, 2009No Comments

36

John Woo’s fre­quently breath­tak­ing Red Cliff opens in the U.S. soon in a 140-minute-or-so “inter­na­tion­al ver­sion” that severely abridges the ori­gin­al two-part, almost five-hour epic. I’ve seen both, and you, too, can see the grand two-parter if you’re got a multi-region DVD play­er or a domest­ic Blu-ray machine—the BR discs of the film are not region-coded. Details are at The Auteurs’, as the two-part Cliff is the sub­ject of today’s Foreign DVD Report.

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  • Tom Russell says:

    Oh, Jesus, that’s a pretty shot. I’ve nev­er quite warmed up to Woo, but this one might just do the trick.
    And not to stray too far off-topic here, but since you men­tion it in your piece– wowza, isn’t Die Nibelungen just a grand piece of film­mak­ing? I was just spell-bound the entire time.
    Having recently seen the also beyond-excellent Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler– albiet Kino’s rather poorly-translated ver­sion– I can say that the only one of the three Lang two-parters I did­n’t fall abso­lutely in love with was The Indian Epic.

  • don r. lewis says:

    I know, I know…I’m lazy. Buuut.…I just star­ted click­ing around for the 5ish hour blu ray of this and the only ones I’m see­ing are the 140 minute ones. Anyone gotta quick link?? My patience is low for search­ing today for some reason.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    You ARE lazy, Don. I sym­path­ize, actually.
    FYI, the Blu-rays of the com­plete ver­sion are sold sep­ar­ately, as “Red Cliff” and “Red Cliff II,” like so:
    http://www.yesasia.com/us/red-cliff-part-ii-blu-ray-japan-version/1020340944–0‑0–0‑en/info.html
    YesAsia is likely to have sev­er­al ver­sions, all pretty high-priced. You can also link through DVD Beaver:
    http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film2/DVDReviews43/red_cliff_blu-ray.htm
    Also, if you live in a city with a large Asian pop­u­la­tion and/or a Chinatown dis­trict, you’re liable to find the discs at retail, which is what I did, at a joint whose name escapes me at the inter­sec­tion of Boawery and Canal by the Manhattan Bridge.

  • Bill Sorochan says:

    Thanks for the won­der­ful recom­mend­a­tion for Red Cliff Glenn! I was able to see parts 1 and 2 on you­tube about six months ago. Amazing political/historical film(s) that unfor­tu­nately will be pretty much over­looked because of the butchered North American Version. Keep up the great writing!

  • jbryant says:

    Tom: If Debra Paget’s temple dance did­n’t make you fall in love with Lang’s Indian epic, noth­ing will. Yowza!
    I sort of lost interest in Woo after M:I 2, but this looks like some­thing to see.

  • don r. lewis says:

    Thanks, GK. I’ll hit up Chinatown in the Frisco Bay this week­end maybe!

  • S. Porath says:

    I saw some 2+ hour ver­sion of it a film fest­iv­al over the summer…can’t hon­estly say if it was part one or if it was simply con­densed. It enjoyed the hell out of it. Ridiculous as all hell, but there sure are some pretty shots. And being from John Woo, it felt less pre­ten­cious than the equally deep (or shal­low) Yimou films.
    I do recall being shocked that the peace­makers were made into weak pussies, but I may be mis­re­mem­ber­ing how that turned out.

  • ZZMike says:

    We saw the American ver­sion at the (West Coast?) première in Costa Mesa, CA, with Woo intro­du­cing. Some of the scenes are amaz­ing – espe­cially the dolly shot that starts with a clos­eup of Cao Cao up to a long shot of the whole fleet on the river.
    I don’t think I’m ready for a 5‑hour epic. We saw Abel Gance’s “Napoleon” in L.A. some years back – that was close to 4 hours.
    It seems like mater­i­al for a year-long BBC “Masterpiece Theater” series.