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Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (Single Disc Edition) [DVD] [2003]
A**N
great film
England expects that every man will do his duty
M**S
Great film
Almost makes you think you are their on an old ship.
L**N
Brilliant improvement in sound quality and scenery so much more credible
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R**N
Excellent Film, Delivery... not so excellent.
I will give this Film 5 stars but I will have to take one off because it not only reviews the Film but also who sells this product, the condition of the box and delivery time. This film is one of my favourites with key and rememberable music and scenes in this film.I have to say although this seller is not very reliable. I used the standard delivery with my order made on the 29th of May, and it was shipped on the 31st of May. Delivery estimate was for the 8th of June. I recieved my DVD on the 12th of June. Very worrying for me as I seemed certain it was lost in the post, but enough of the seller.The Film was very spectacular and as great as when I first saw it when it came out. The DVD box it came in was abit shabby in my taste and old WW2 Box sets, flimsy and not to my liking. This does nothing to change the fact this is a great film and one which will be remembered for me alongside Gladiator (Russell Crowe).All I have to say if you want a reliable and easy delivery with a good seller then you won't get it here, although if you don't care if its late then go ahead.
A**B
Excellent!
Nothing to dislike!
M**4
History
Great film for it’s time
D**N
Master and Commander
Peter Weir is one of the few directors who has, over the years, courted a mass audience whilst retaining artistic integrity. I first encountered his work whilst growing up in his own native Australia. "Picnic at Hanging Rock", while it was always rather frustrating for those who admire the scientific rationalism of a proper detective like Sherlock Holmes, nevertheless provided a showcase for the young director's eye for the beauty of the Australian bush. The timeless "Gallipoli", whilst its plot subscribed to a myth which has long since been disproven by historians, still remains one of the most poignant anti-war films ever made. After Weir's move to America, I still followed him, and was entranced by "Witness", his portrayal of a tough Philadelphia cop exiled by grim necessity in an Amish community, which combines all of the usual features of an action film with the full gamut of unanswered questions about the power of non-violence.Weir's latest movie has all the hallmarks of similar greatness. It has an excellent pedigree, having been inspired by the novels of Patrick O'Brian, a novelist with a genuine knowledge of Napoleonic history, and of natural history too. O'Brian was capable not only of writing superb novels; he also wrote an erudite and entertaining biography of Sir Joseph Banks, one of the most intelligent of the early European-Australian pioneers. When I first watched this movie, I expected to see something out of the ordinary.I was not to be disappointed. From the opening scene, in which the seamen slump listlessly inside their hammocks, the inventive camera angles captured life aboard a ship in the Napoleonic wars with an unerring eye for detail, from the grisly surgical scenes to the disastrous attempts to shoot an albatross. Much of it was gruesome in the extreme, and yet this realism was matched by a great beauty. Never has a sailing ship's rigging been captured by such an aesthetic eye, and in all weathers too, nor with such evocative music as a backdrop. It is possible for the viewer to spend the duration of this film feeling quite convinced that Captain Aubrey and the surgeon Maturin really are just at hand, although Maturin, perhaps, had rather more panache than he possessed in O'Brian's novels.Do not be put off by the reviews in newspapers such as the Guardian and the Independent, written as they are by would-be film-makers who presumably didn't make the grade, and feel miffed as a result. It is not true that the only conflict in the film is over whether Maturin will get to go birdwatching on the Galapagos Islands. It is far from mere birdwatching, after all; these are the same islands that gave birth to Darwin's "Origin of Species", and Maturin is about to encounter marine iguanas and flightless cormorants. And besides, there is always the small matter of a rather formidable French ship which Aubrey is determined to blow out of the water. I hate war films, but this one so engaged me that my heart leapt when the enemy ship's mainmast fell. For me, at least, this film succeeded where C.S. Forester's epics failed.Peter Weir has allowed only one compromise in his courtship of that mass market. Captain Aubrey's original target was an American ship, not a French one. It seems that, ever since Vietnam, at least, American audiences have become too used to being winners for them to accept an account, even a ficticious one, in which their would-be forbears end up blown to smithereens.
B**I
classic
I SAID CLASSIC!
P**P
Geat movie
Works well. Great movie.
J**F
Excellent film shows what it was really like at sea.
It’s very gratifying to see that two decades after its making, “Master and Commander” continues to do well on streaming platforms and not only has a solid base of core fans but also picks up new ones. There has been a tradition of tall ships films going back to the 1930s, but it had been a while and the undertaking was a calculated risk by Fox executive Tom Rothman, who dreamed up the project as a possible new franchise. Though it wasn’t the flop that some people suggest and even turned a profit in worldwide figures, it wasn’t the blockbuster that was needed to justify sequels. Rothman is also to be thanked for choosing Peter Weir to direct the film and investing all the time it took to get him to say yes.Weir had a great career as a director, especially one coming out of Australian television,having achieved international success with “Picnic at Hanging Rock”in 1975. He was a director who could work in any genre and his films included “The Year of Living Dangerously”. “Gallipoli”. “Witness”, “Dead Poets Society” and “The Truman Show”. He was given a large budget and great freedom as a co-producer and co-screenwriter, and was a fan of the books himself. He took a straightforward, serious approach, ignoring many of the tropes of the genre. Notably, there is no big romance, once a prerequisite for any epic-length action film. There is also no subplot taking place involving politicians and admirals in London, no Governor’s Ball in some colorful colonial capital, only the briefest glimpse at any local people and no overtly comic sidekicks. It takes place entirely aboard the ship at sea.His goal was to make its depiction of life on board a military ship in the early 1800s as authentic as possible, and this he accomplished so well that historians of the period go out of their way to praise it. The historical situation is not quite as perfect, (in 1805 Napoleon was not yet the “Master of Europe”) and in fact in the book it’s the War of 1812 and the enemy ship preying on Pacific Ocean British whalers is American. Try getting that financed in Hollywood. With typical economy, Weir introduces you to life aboard the ship at dawn in a long, almost totally silent sequence without any opening credits that tells you all you need to know. Within minutes we learn that life aboard is always in jeopardy and that this is a serious world where just waking up in sound shape is something to be thankful for.We are then thrown into a harrowing situation where the ship, H.M.S. Surprise, is under attack by the larger, faster, greater-gunned French ship, The Acheron. We meet Captain Jack Aubrey (Russell Crowe) who immediately shows his leadership and ability to make correct decisions, which is one of the themes of the film. In this case he has to turn and run to lose the enemy in the fog, which shows that he won’t let ego get in the way of the right choice. Known as “Lucky Jack”, he values his ship and the men on it and they know it. He will have to make a number of decisions as things develop, one of them particularly troubling, but he does what must be done. Russell Crowe is superb in conveying this character who is as intelligent and responsible as he is a fighter who will be the first to board an enemy ship when the time comes. He also plays violin and performs duets with his friend and ship’s surgeon, Dr. Stephen Maturin.Their friendship is one of the highlights of the film and Maturin is probably the only man with any access to Aubrey’s inner thoughts. The doctor is the modern man of the Enlightenment while Aubrey is more traditional and though they clash at times, it’s mostly along the expected lines of the idealist and the realist. These never develop into dense philosophical arguments as some might suggest, though at one point the doctor tells Aubrey that ego, not duty, is driving him. Paul Bettany is up to the task of standing up to Crowe without melting and creates a warm, human character of the surgeon. Both actors actually learned to play their instruments so it would look right and documentaries have shown them actually playing the music note for note, even though professional recordings were used for the final cut.All of the other actors are convincing in their roles. They should be, as they had to go through “boot camp” training to learn their jobs on the ship and how to do everything from climbing the rigging to loading and firing the cannons. It was a long shoot, mostly in Mexico and the isolated circumstances led to them working well as a group. It’s hard for me to grasp how almost 200 men could live and work together on a ship this size. Officers, midshipmen, Marines, sailors, cooks (there were even animals aboard for food), in conditions virtually no one today would find tolerable. Duty, loyalty to each other in conditions where if the enemy didn’t get you, the sea might and a strict hierarchy shown by the various uniforms, held it all together. Even then things could get rough, as when superstition causes a crisis on the journeyThe midshipmen get a much larger presence here than usual in films, where they often aren’t depicted at all or if they are, they are played by older actors. Here they are actually played by the 13 to 15 year olds they would have been back then. And they are treated as adults, fighting, drinking with the older officers at dinner and not spared from danger. This looks rather startling today, seeing what look like children in this situation, but like the rest of the details it’s historically accurate. People didn’t live as long back then and didn’t create an extended childhood into their twenties. The midshipmen are upper class, of course and the youngest is addressed once as Lord Blackeney, but there are even younger teens among the sailors. As for the rest of the cast, Weir went out of his way to find men who didn’t look “modern” and he succeeded.The film was made on a real replica of a period ship - the Rose, a 160’ 20-gun frigate - modified to become the Surprise. In fact it was when Weir was touring the Rose while trying to decide whether to do the film that he found out the ship was for sale - and when the studio okayed buying it, he said yes. There was also a duplicate built and mounted on platforms set in the enormous water tank used for “Titanic”. The ship looks very lived in, a big improvement over the past when even some of the better movies in the genre had perfectly clean movie set decks. The violent Cape Horn storm was real and was the result of a replica of Captain Cook’s ship, the Endeavour, duplicating his journey allowing their transit of the Cape to be filmed for “Master and Commander”.This is a film whose worth is being more and more appreciated over time and it’s really good they got to make it before CGI took over. This is probably the best approximation of life on ships of this type that we’ll ever see. I got the blu-ray. If you activate them, there’s a pop-up map you can call up to show you where the ship is and a similar history/trivia function that will fill you in on those kinds of details if you wish. Since this is a film most fans will watch more than once, it’s nice to have those options. But the best are the deleted scenes, of which there are quite a few. None of them are big, dramatic scenes with lots of dialogue, but there were many bits of two minutes or less that had to be cut for time but which illustrate a lot of day-to-day shipboard life.
R**O
Doblada al español latino
Gran película. Excelente sonido en 5.1 canales. Doblaje al español latino.
M**N
Excellent film
...as it was a film I watched it!
M**E
Best movie
Must buy
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