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DVD REVIEW
O
Brother, Where Art Thou?
(2001) Starring:
George Clooney, John Turturro, Tim B. Nelson
Director: Joel
Coen
Rating: PG-13
Studio:
Touchstone Pictures
Review
Posted: 7.15.01
By
Dennis Landmann
The
Coen Brothers have made great movies. Their movie before this
one, The Big Lebowski, was one hell of a fun ride! Their
latest, O Brother Where Art Thou?, is also fun, but not
as great. It does have its moments, but overall moves slower
than I thought. However, one thing is for sure. The Coen
Brothers know exactly what music to use in their movies.
O
Brother, Where Art Thou? is loosely based on Homer's
'Odyssey.' It takes place in 1930's Mississippi. Escaped from a
chain gang, Everett Ulysses McGill (George Clonney) and his two companions Delmar
(Tim Blake Nelson), the dimwitted one, and Pete (John Turturro),
the somewhat more intellectual one, are out to recover a buried
loot of a bank heist. However, right after the breakout, they
meet a blind prophet who warns them
that "the treasure you seek shall not be the treasure you
find."
They're
spending the night over at Pete's friend's barn. But, he ratted
them out for the ransom money, and so they must flee from the
coppers. And Everett is in a tight spot, damn it. A quite funny
run-on joke, by the way. On the road with Pete's friend's car,
they pick up Tommy (Chris Tommy King), an African-American
guitarist. He tells them he sold his soul to the Devil. They
quickly record a song at an outsider radio station and collect
some dough, not aware that their song becomes a nationwide
favorite soon after.
>Read
my Full
Review
This
is the perfect movie to display all of its great variety of
colors. It has an overall saturated feel to it and the video
here is a very well done presentation and/or representation of
this color-driven movie.
A
lot of music here. They're all old-timey songs and ballads (what
do I know about these?). They work perfect in the movie, but
when it comes to the presentation here, it's not as good as it
was in the theater. It doesn't quite utilize the capacity of
one's surround system, but where it stands now it's acceptable,
nothing to complain about, really.
Ah,
I wish there was a little more, but when it comes to a Coen
Bros. DVD, this is top of the line (as untrue as this sounds,
it's not too bad, actually).
Exclusive
behind-the-scenes featurette
Hey,
this would've seemed to be the standard featurette, but it's
actually more than that. The comments, sometimes voiced over
some behind the scenes footage, by the Coen Bros., Clooney,
Turturro and Nelson were not only informative, but also funny
here and there (mainly the Coen's and Nelson).
"Painting
With Pixels", the groundbreaking digital post-production
process
This
featurette, about 10 minutes long, details the process of how
and where this movie got its spectacular colors from. I didn't
know it before, but the Coen's and D.O.P. Richard Deakins took
the print to a team of computer colorists who then changed the
color digitally. You can see -- as this featurette compares
BEFORE and AFTER the effects have been completed. It's definitely
worth a look and a great addition in the extras dept.
Soggy
Bottom Boys "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" Music
Video
Hey,
this is mostly footage from the film cut together with this way
cool song (but, let me tell you, the song gets kind of annoying
over time). Nothing great, but cool to have on this disc.
Script
to storyboard to final scene comparisons
Ah,
it's not the standard extra on most DVDs, but here it's
interesting to see how close the Coen's went by the storyboard.
There are two scenes that you can view the comparisons of. A
nice touch, but no for everybody.
Menus
These
are quite boring, only background pictures and whatnot. But what
the hell do you expect from menus? Most are standard, while some
are very creative and out of this world. These aren't.
Acceptable. Mediocre. OK.
Sure,
we got the trailer. That's pretty much a standard extra, well,
actually you'd be surprised how some DVDs do not. The prime
example would be M:I2.
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Movie
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7
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Video
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9
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Audio
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8
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Extras
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6
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Final (not an average)
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8
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TOP
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