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SAVING PRIVATE RYAN (2 DVD) S.E (SZEREGOWIEC RYAN)

07-10-2014, 3:50
Aukcja w czasie sprawdzania nie była zakończona.
Cena kup teraz: 49 zł     
Użytkownik Failte_Eireann
numer aukcji: 4584259893
Miejscowość Kołobrzeg
Wyświetleń: 21   
Koniec: 07-10-2014 03:59:02

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Wydanie oryginalne w idealnym stanie, nieużywane,

BEZPŁATNA WYSYŁKA !!!

Uwaga! Film bez polskiej wersji językowej!!!




Tytuł oryginalny: SAVING PRIVATE RYAN Commemorative D-Day 60th Anniversary Edition (2 Discs)


Obsada: Tom Hanks, Adam Goldberg, Tom Sizemore, Matt Damon, Vin Diesel
Reżyseria: Stephen Spielberg



Region: 2 PAL (Europa, Polska)
Języki: angielski
Napisy: brak

Dodatki:

  • Introduction from director Steven Spielberg
  • 'Looking Into The Past': Steven Spielberg explains the research, the screenplay and his intentions
  • 'Miller And His Platoon': Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks and the cast introduce the characters they played
  • 'Boot Camp': memories from the participants about the intense boot camp under the supervision of military advisor Dale Dye
  • 'Making Saving Private Ryan': a look at the production, costumes and photography
  • 'Recreating Omaha Beach': how the famous opening battle was constructed
  • 'Music And Sound': information from the Oscar-winning team who scored the film
  • 'Parting Words': Spielberg and Hanks conclude on their respective experiences
  • Interactive menu
  • Scene access


Since its release in 1998, Steven Spielberg's D-Day drama Saving Private Ryan has become hugely influential: everything, from the opening sequence of Gladiator ("Saving Marcus Aurelius") to the marvellous 10-hour TV series Band of Brothers, has been made in its shadow. There have been many previous attempts to recreate the D-Day landings on screen (notably, the epic The Longest Day), but thanks to Spielberg's freewheeling hand-held camerawork, Ryan was the first time an audience really felt like they were there, storming up Omaha Beach in the face of withering enemy fire.
After the indelible opening sequence, however, the film is not without problems. The story, though based on an American Civil War incident, feels like it was concocted simply to fuel Spielberg's sentimental streak. In standard Hollywood fashion the Germans remain a faceless foe (with the exception of one charmless character who turns out to be both a coward and a turncoat); and the Tom Hanks-led platoon consists of far too many stereotypes: the doughty Sergeant; the thick-necked Private; the Southern man religious sniper; the cowardly Corporal. Matt Damon seems improbably clean-cut as the titular Private in need of rescue (though that may well be the point); and why do they all run straight up that hill towards an enemy machine gun post anyway? Some non-US critics have complained that Ryan portrays only the American D-Day experience, but it is an American film made and financed by Americans after all. Accepting both its relatively narrow remit and its lachrymose inclinations, Saving Private Ryan deserves its place in the pantheon of great war pictures.

On the DVD: Saving Private Ryan on disc comes in a good-quality anamorphic 1.85:1 transfer with a suitably dynamic Dolby Digital 5.1 sound mix in which bullets fly all around your living room. Extra features are pretty minimal, with a standard 30-minute "making of" piece called "Into the Breach" and two trailers. There are text notes on the cast and crew as well as the production, and a brief message from Mr Spielberg himself about why he decided to make the movie.