"…He Began Our Friendship With A Gift…"
*** THIS REVIEW IS FOR THE '2012' BLU RAY
COLLECTOR'S SERIES BOOK PACK VERSION ***
In
April 2012 Universal Studios was 100 years old - and to celebrate that
movie-making centenary they had 13 of their most-celebrated films fully
restored for BLU RAY. 1985's "Out Of Africa" is one of them and like
the other titles in this series so far - the print quality of this beloved film
is extraordinary and the presentation classy (a full list of titles in the
100th Anniversary BLU RAY Series is in the attached 'comment' section -
including DVD releases).
Issued
in the US 6 March 2012 (later given a UK release) - "Out Of Africa
Collector's Series" comes in a gorgeous limited edition 44-page hardback
'Book Pack' (use Barcode 025192127793 on the Amazon search bar to get the right
issue). It's a 2-disc set with the BLU RAY to the front and the Anamorphic
Widescreen DVD to the rear. There's also a foldout insert included that has a
code for a Digital Copy via download from Universal's website valid until 31
December 2013.
But
the really great news for film fans everywhere is a stupendously good print and
a REGION FREE release - so it will play on ALL BLU RAY machines and PlayStation
3 Consoles too (there was a preceding version on BLU RAY that received bad
reviews re print - this version is not that one).
Also note: there is a cheaper standard packaging version due 4 September 2012 in the USA with slightly altered front artwork - again it has a BLU RAY, DVD and Download - so check you're using the Barcode provided above to get the 'best' version).
Also note: there is a cheaper standard packaging version due 4 September 2012 in the USA with slightly altered front artwork - again it has a BLU RAY, DVD and Download - so check you're using the Barcode provided above to get the 'best' version).
PICTURE
QUALITY:
Digitally
remastered and Fully Restored from Original Film Elements - Universal are
reputed to have stumped-up over $300,000 for the restoration - and the results
have already received huge praise on web sites dedicated to the format. This
overhauled 2012 "Out Of Africa" print is a full 1080p High Definition
release with an aspect ratio of 1.85:1. What that means is the picture fills
your entire screen without stretching - and combined with the gorgeous transfer
- the effect is truly cinematic. For example the movie opens with a sunrise on
the African Plains - all yellows and gold and browns. With the natural heat
haze the land would produce and the semi-lighting conditions - this is a very
difficult moment to get right - yet it is fantastically clear and clean. But
even this is aced a few moments later when a bi-plane flies over the open
plains during the daytime and it's little short of gobsmacking (dialogue from
it titles this review). There then follows a scene in Denmark in snowy fields
at a shooting party where I swear it looks like Dr. Zhivago (it's that good).
In fact it's in these outdoor scenes (of which there are many) that the
beautiful 'look' of "Out Of Africa" really excels - and it does so
right through to the very end when Karen (Streep) bids farewell to her trusty
steward Farah (played by Michael Bowens) at the train station.
It
should be stressed however that it isn't perfect at all times by any means -
there is some shocking fuzziness and grain on indoor shots - sequences at night
around campfires and tents with Redford. There's a scene where Michael Kitchen
as the dapper Englishman Berkeley Cole is talking to Meryl Streep at dinner in
her home - the camera cuts to Streep and the print is perfect - but it then
flicks back to Kitchen and the shot is suddenly covered in speckles of grain.
They were either filmed apart or on two cameras - but the cleaned up print has
only made the discrepancy more apparent and not less so.
But
for the most part this is a joy to look at and at last gives full reign to
David Watkin's sumptuous cinematography and Milena Canonero's crafted outfits
(aristocratic European fashions alongside the colourful garments of African
tribesmen). Throw in John Barry's most magisterial score ever - and as you can
imagine - the impact is properly beautiful. A good example of all three occurs
when the credits role - a steam train trundles across the wide-open expanses of
1913 Kenya in East Africa as we see the Danish Baroness standing at the back of
her carriage in her immaculate outfit - then John Barry's score just nails it
as the title of the film goes up onscreen. It's both fabulous to look at and
moving too...a rare combination indeed.
BOOK
PACK:
The
44-page booklet inside the hardback outer is pure eye candy as you can imagine.
It opens with a 2-page appreciation by film-critic and historian Leonard
Maltin, has reproductions of several script pages, US, Polish and East German
advert posters, a Cast of Characters, a piece on the political makeup of Kenya
at the time - the British to the North and the Germans to the South and essays
on the principal leads Streep, Redford, the Composer John Barry and Director
Sydney Pollock. There's interesting trivia items dotted throughout the text -
for instance Redford initially played the Englishman Denys Hatton with an
English accent - but Pollock felt no-one would accept Redford as a Brit so he
had him re-record all of the parts in American. Or that during the tender
hair-washing scene wild Hippos were in the river nearby and they kill more
people than lions if they feel their territory is threatened - so Streep was
more scared of them than bullwhipping lions. The quality of the colour photos
is top-notch too.
EXTRAS:
Clocking
in a whopping 1 hour and 12 minutes Charles Kiselayk's "A Song Of
Africa" is a substantial bonus feature that has charming, insightful and
witty contributions from Streep, Redford and Pollock - intermixed with archive
footage of the young, older and near-death Karen Blixen. It fills out a lot of
the gaps as to what happened before and after the films' parameters where she
left Africa in 1931 after 17 years - 46-years old, childless, penniless, divorced
and broken-hearted. She then wrote over 10 books under the pseudonym Isak
Dinesen between 1935 and 1996 and suffered from Syphilis all her life. This
extra is also in standard 480p definition - so when you see the washed-out
widescreen stock footage - you begin to realize just how astounding the
cleaned-up 1080p fullscreen print really is. The only mild irritant is the
overly wordy narration where the speaker wants to prove he's Kahlil Gibran
every few moments, as he waxes lyrical about the lady's journey. The 15 or so
Deleted Scenes (Widescreen and in Standard Definition) come fast and furious –
they’re very short and although one or two with the Farah character are
interesting - you can see why most were cut...
CAST:
With
18 Oscar nominations and 3 wins to her name - you can't imagine any other
actress ballsy enough to take on such a difficult, willful and frustrated
woman. Yet Streep chews it up. Her accented Karen Blixen is wholly believable -
vulnerable, proud, literate, deep, religiously repressed yet wanting to be
sensually liberated - and reaching for it with the man she grew to adore and
love - the English and debonair African hunter Denys Hatton. This is a big and
romantic canvas - and both principals have affection for each other and respect
for their various skills - their on-screen chemistry being a lovely thing to
see. The scene where Denys takes her up in the bi-plane and flies across the
landscape of mountains, rivers, waterfalls, zebras, giraffes and a lake full of
birds to show her the real beauty of Africa - is breathtaking and even a little
spiritual. Pollock's use of the indigenous tribes is superbly done too. Klaus
Maria Brandauer, Michael Gough, Leslie Phillips, Shane Rimmer and the sorely
missed Irish actor Donal McCann as her Doctor - all wonderful. Blink and you'll
miss IMAN - David Bowie's wife - nursing the Michael Kitchen character whose
contracted black water fever...
To
sum up - clocking in at 2 hours and 40 minutes - "Out Of Africa" may
seem a tad indulgent by today's standards of
chop-em-out-fast-and-leave-em-panting blockbusters - but it works precisely
because its epic. It was a mammoth undertaking at the time made by maverick
people (Pollock worked on the script with Kurt Luedtke for over a year -
Pollock sadly passed away in 2008) and this BLU RAY reissue does it proud.
And
as with the other titles in this series - it's also heartening to see Universal
Studios finally throw some proper money at the preservation of their movie
legacy and be proud about doing so too. I'm collecting the whole series and
live in hope that other studios respect their past in the same glorious way.
BLU
RAY and DVD Specifications:
EXTRAS:
1.
Deleted Scenes - over 15 short segments (about 15 minutes)
2.
A Song Of Africa - An Original Full-Length Documentary On The Making Of The
Film and Karen Blixen's Life by Charles Kiselayk (72 minutes)
3.
Theatrical Trailer
4.
Feature Length Commentary With Director Sydney Pollack
5.
My Scenes
6.
BLU RAY Exclusive: Pocket BLU - For Tablets and Smartphones - take the content
on the go
7.
BLU RAY Exclusive: BD Live - Internet-Connected Feature
VIDEO:
1080p High-Definition Widescreen 1.85:1
BLU
RAY AUDIO: English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and French 5.1 DTS Surround
DVD
AUDIO: English Dolby Digital 4.1 and French Dolby Digital 2.0
SUBTITLES
BLU RAY: English SDH (Deaf and Hard-Of-Hearing), Spanish and French SUBTITLES
DVD: English SDH (Deaf and Hard-Of-Hearing)
-----------------------------------------------------------
PS: The 13 Restored Titles in this Limited Edition Book Pack
'Collector's Series' are:
1. All Quiet On The Western Front (1930)
Released 13 Feb 2012 in the UK. Restored, Remastered and
comes in a beautiful 40-page Book Pack. SEE DETAILED REVIEW.
2. The Birds (1963)
Release date to be advised...
NOTE: the UK 23 April 2012 'DVD' with Universal 100th
Anniversary packaging does NOT contain a restored print - it will be in the BLU
RAY book pack later in the year.
3. (Abbott And Costello in) Buck Privates (1941)
Released 17 April 2012 in the USA. A 2-disc Book Pack with
Blu Ray, DVD and Digital Copy. It's fully restored and digitally remastered.
This BLU RAY has no UK release date as yet - but its a
non-region coded disc so will play on ALL machines.
4. Dracula (1931)
Book Pack release date to be advised. Will contain both the
English and Spanish versions. The restored print on BLU RAY is due in the USA
and UK in Oct 2012 as part of the 8-film Box Set "Universal Classic
Monsters: The Essential Collection".
NOTE: the UK 23 April 2012 'DVD' with Universal 100th
Anniversary packaging does NOT contain a restored print.
5. E.T. - The Extra Terrestrial (1982)
USA release date Oct 2012 - November 2012 in the UK.
6. Frankenstein (1931)
Book Pack release date to be advised. The restored print on
BLU RAY is due in the USA and UK in Oct 2012 as part of the 8-film Box Set
"Universal Classic Monsters: The Essential Collection"
7. The Bride Of Frankenstein (1935)
Book Pack release date to be advised. The restored print on
BLU RAY is due in the USA and UK in Oct 2012 as part of the 8-film Box Set
"Universal Classic Monsters: The Essential Collection"
8. Jaws (1975)
Released August 2012 in the USA/September 2012 in the UK.
BLU RAY Book Pack. Fully restored print with Steven Spielberg's involvement -
new extras.
9. Out Of Africa (1985)
Released 6 March 2012 in the USA-Only. A 2-disc set
containing a BLU RAY, DVD and means to a Digital Download via Universal's
Website (a REGION FREE release so will play on all machines). There is a 'standard
packaging' 2-disc version due 4 September 2012. See DETAILED REVIEW...
10. Pillow Talk (1959)
7 May 2012 UK release. BLU RAY in a 44-page hardback Book
Pack. Fully restored print and remastered sound. SEE DETAILED REVIEW.
11. Schindler's List
(1993)
Release date to be advised...late 2012 (DVD released in Jan
2012).
12. The Sting (1973)
Released 11 June 2012 in the UK. Restored and remastered and
in Book Pack.
NOTE: There's also a 'card-wrap' version of this BLU RAY in
the USA - so check which issue you're buying.
The Amazon code for the card wrap version is B007N31ZLA -
the 'Book Pack Collector's Series' is B007UOWM6E. SEE DETAILED REVIEW.
13. To Kill A
Mockingbird (1962)
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