Site created 12/15/97. |
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review added: 1/5/00
Run Lola Run
1999 (1999) - Columbia
TriStar
review by Todd Doogan of
The Digital Bits
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Film
Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
A/A-/B+
Specs and Features
81 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1) and full frame
(1.33:1), 16x9 enhanced, dual-sided, single-layered, Amaray keep
case packaging, commentary track with director Tom Tykwer and star
Franka Potente, music video for I Believe
by Franka Potente, 3 theatrical trailers (Run
Lola Run, Dreamlife of Angels
and Orlando), cast and crew
bios, film-themed menu screens, scene access (28 chapters),
languages: English and German (DD 5.1 & DD 2.0), subtitles:
English and French, Close Captioned |
One of 1999's most
original and ingenious films is on DVD, and if you missed it in
theaters, now's your chance. It is a great film - so good in fact
that there's a definite chance you'll find this film in the Best
Foreign Film category in this year's Oscar race. Basically, it's
three versions of the same 20-minute event. The event? A girl named
Lola (Franka Potente), with the reddest red hair you've ever seen,
must race to save the life of her boyfriend. Can she come up with
$100,000 in 20 minutes? And can she do it while also keeping herself
and her boyfriend alive? Sometimes the answer is yes, sometimes no.
The fun with the film is watching how each 20-minute piece changes.
Along with the MTV-styled violent editing, you get a thumping
electronica soundtrack (with a chant by actress Potente) that varies
in each of the "vignettes", and various film techniques
(animation, 35mm, stills and video) melded together differently each
time. It's all really well put together by director Tom Tykwer, and
because it changes so much, it'll take a few viewings to piece
everything together.
As a DVD Run Lola Run looks
and sounds great. The film is German, and it includes dual versions
of both the original German soundtrack and an English dub (the dub
isn't very good even if it sounds great). The 5.1 booms and the 2.0
bangs - both are Dolby Digital, which is nice. The English subs are
well placed and read fine. As for the picture quality, it's pretty
good. It's an anamorphic transfer, and the colors are nice and
crisp. You will notice a few source problems, like a mysterious blue
line that runs vertically through a few "running" shots,
but that's no fault of the disc. On the extras side, you get a
commentary track with the director and the star that sheds a bit of
light on the complications of shooting this film, along with a
trailer and a music video for a song by Potente. The video has some
clips and cameos from actors in the film, and it's a pretty cool
song.
Run Lola Run is a real fine
disc of a real fine film. I hope everyone who likes the kind of
stuff I do checks it out. It's got just about everything genre fans
want. Hurry on over to your local shop and pick this disc up, like
quick.
Todd Doogan
todddoogan@thedigitalbits.com |
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