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created 12/15/97. |
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review
added: 6/13/02
Pearl
Harbor
Vista
Series Director's Cut - 2001 (2002) - Touchstone (Buena
Vista)
review
by Jeff Kleist of The Digital Bits
|
Program
Rating: C+
Disc Ratings (Video/Extras): A/A+
Audio Ratings (DD/DTS): A/A+
Specs and Features
Disc One: Pearl Harbor, Part One
130 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (2.35:1), 16x9 enhanced,
THX-certified, single-sided, RSDL dual-layered (layer switch at
???), custom cardboard foldout packaging with slipcase, audio
commentary (with director Michael Bay and film historian Jeanine
Basinger), audio commentary (with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and
actors Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and Alec Baldwin), audio
commentary (with cinematographer John Schwartzman, production
designer Nigel Phelps, costume designer Michael Kaplan, art director
Martin Laing and composer Hans Zimmer), THX Optimode test signals,
widescreen explanation Easter egg, liner notes booklet, 4 postcards
with teaser poster art, letter insert with text from President
Roosevelt's speech to Congress, animated film-themed menus with
sound and music, scene access (31 chapters), languages: English (DD
5.1, DTS 5.1 & Dolby Headphone 2.0) and French (DD 5.1),
subtitles: English (for the hearing impaired) and Spanish, Closed
Captioned |
Disc
Two: Pearl Harbor, Part Two
55 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (2.35:1), 16x9 enhanced,
THX-certified, single-sided, dual-layered (no layer switch), audio
commentary (with director Michael Bay and film historian Jeanine
Basinger), audio commentary (with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and
actors Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and Alec Baldwin), audio
commentary (with cinematographer John Schwartzman, production
designer Nigel Phelps, costume designer Michael Kaplan, art director
Martin Laing and composer Hans Zimmer), Journey
to the Screen: The Making of Pearl Harbor documentary (47
min), Faith Hill There You'll Be
music video, National Geographic Beyond
the Movie: Pearl Harbor preview, THX Optimode test
signals, gag reel Easter egg, animated film-themed menus with sound
and music, scene access (13 chapters), languages: English (DD 5.1,
DTS 5.1 & Dolby Headphone 2.0) and French (DD 5.1), subtitles:
English (for the hearing impaired) and Spanish, Closed Captioned
Disc Three: Supplement, Part One
9 Production Diary
featurettes (including Airfield Attack,
Arizona Dive, Baja
Gimbal, Battleship Row,
Doolittle Raid, Dorie
Miller, Dud Bomb,
Mechanics Row, Nurse
Strafing and Sandbag Stunt
- most with optional director's commentary, approx. 3-7 mins each),
Soldier's Boot Camp with Ben Affleck,
Josh Hartnett and Ewan Brewer featurette (16 mins), Officer's
Boot Camp with Alec Baldwin featurette (6 mins), Super-8 "newsreel"
montage (5 mins), teaser trailer, theatrical trailer, 2 History
Channel documentaries (One Hour Over
Tokyo and Unsung Heroes of
Pearl Harbor - approx. 50 mins each), Oral
History: The Recollections of a Pearl Harbor Nurse
featurette (4 mins), animated film-themed menus with sound and
music, languages: English (DD 2.0)
Disc Four: Supplement, Part Two
Interactive Attack Sequence
multi-angle featurette (approx. 28 mins), Deconstructing
Destruction: A Conversation on Visual Effects with Michael Bay and
Eric Brevig featurette (approx. 21 mins with 28 mins of
branching footage), Animatic Attack
featurette (6 mins), When Cultures
Collide: From Perry to Pearl interactive timeline,
production art & photo gallery (segmented into production
design, publicity, historical, storyboards, ILM and Stan Winston
makeup), DVD-ROM features (including the Pearl
Harbor Definitive Biography), DVD credits, animated
film-themed menus with sound and music, languages: English (DD 2.0)
Editor's Note: the 4-disc Vista
Series release includes a $10 rebate for those of you who have
already purchased the 2-disc version of this film - a gesture from
the studio we appreciate and something we feel is worth noting.
What can I say about this film that hasn't already been said? Bill
Hunt covered most people's opinion of the movie in
his
first review, so there's no reason to repeat it. Suffice it to
say, at its heart, Pearl Harbor
is an over-long attempt to cash in on the success of Titanic.
Filming an hour and a half of draggy love story is the only way
Michael Bay could get anyone to pay for him to shoot the bombing of
Pearl Harbor. And that's where Bay enters the element that he's a
master of: blowing things up.
If you can enjoy Pearl Harbor
on that level, fantastic. If not, you're not going to find much of
an improvement in the director's cut. Only a few minutes of footage
has been added to this release, mostly consisting of blood and gore,
which would have qualified the film for an R rating. While this does
provide an edge that the movie was lacking in PG-13 form, most
viewers won't even notice the additions.
Of course, none of this matters to fans of supplemental material.
In NO OTHER DVD on the market will you find such an in-depth,
step-by-step dissection of the filmmaking process. Created by DVD
producer David Prior (Fight Club,
Big Trouble in Little China,
The Rocky Horror Picture Show,
etc...), this 4-disc set is THE REFERENCE DVD of 2002 for extras.
Studios will be hard-pressed to top it for a very long time to come.
Special note should be given to the menus. For once, those Gladiator
menus haven't been ripped off, but actually improved upon. Each disc
is located in a different "place", and menu choices bring
you to different areas like a radio or a desk. Each menu is also set
to immersive audio, like period music or actual radio news broadcast
clips the attack on Pearl Harbor. The menus are so subtle and
elegant, it's positively stunning.
Let's talk about the film. Spread across the first two discs, the
video is sourced from the same transfer as the first DVD release,
but has had some obvious work done on the compression. This transfer
exhibits very few of the halos that Bill mentioned in the first
review, while color and definition remain spot-on. I'm guessing work
was done on the MPEG-2 video compression to make it even more
efficient. Mostly shot in the sort of olive/drab pastel scheme that
so many associate with the 40's, Pearl
Harbor's bright oranges of fiery explosions really stand
out, as do the stark whites of the Japanese torpedo bombers. The
shadow delineation is exceptional and blacks are deep and true. This
is reference worthy video.
The sound continues that level of quality. Whether you choose the
DTS or Dolby Digital 5.1 mixes, your entire sound system will rumble
and resound with deep bass and constant surround activity. Bullets
bounce around your head like popcorn, fighters whiz over your
shoulder and bombs exploding from every direction. Pretty quickly
into the battle, your subwoofer alone has rattled any boredom from
the first 90 minutes of the film right out of your skull. As with
the first DVD release, you also get a French Dolby Digital 5.1
soundtrack, as well as a Dolby Headphone track for those of you who
view this film on your laptop or portable player. The inclusion of
Dolby Headphone is something I hope other studios take note of and
emulate on future releases.
Before I begin examining the extras, I just want to once again give
a nod to producer David Prior and every other single member of the
production team on this DVD. There are so many other movies I would
like to see receive this level of supplemental attention to detail.
In many minds, probably hundreds of films are more deserving than
Pearl Harbor. People can say
Michael Bay is a hack, but no one has EVER complained about the
quality of his special editions.
Kicking off this virtual encyclopedia are a trio of feature-length
audio commentary tracks spanning the two movie discs. The first
features director Michael Bay and film historian Jeanine Basinger.
Bay is always fairly serious when he does commentaries, and he
sticks pretty close to the task at hand here. Occasionally, Basinger
chimes in with tidbits on various elements of the film as they
relate to historical events. On the second commentary, we have
producer Jerry Bruckheimer, along with actors Ben Affleck, Josh
Hartnett and Alec Baldwin. As usual, Affleck takes the Kevin Smith
School approach, and he and Hartnett (recorded together) ham it up
for the entire three hours of the film. Affleck does many voice
impressions of his castmates - all we need is a couple of robot
puppets for this to be virtual Mystery
Science Theater 3000. Of course, there are moments where
both actors are serious and reflective, as events on screen warrant,
and many mentions are made of the September 11th attacks (which were
quite recent when these commentaries were recorded) and the
parallels between those events and the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Bruckheimer and Baldwin, on the other hand, lean toward the more
serious side of filmmaking, with Baldwin probably being the stiffer
of the two. He comments often that he believes the film was never
given a fair shake by critics, and had it been released after 9/11,
reaction might have been quite different. Bruckheimer splits his
time evenly between humorous stories and serious reflection and
production issues, and is probably the most balanced commentator
here. The final audio commentary features cinematographer John
Schwartzman, production designer Nigel Phelps, costume designer
Michael Kaplan, art director Martin Laing and composer Hans Zimmer.
As expected, it's the more technical of the three.
In addition to the commentaries, there's literally hours of
material here on these discs. The only supplement on Disc One is a
comparison of the widescreen and pan & scan versions of the
film, unfortunately hidden as an Easter egg (this is the kind of
thing that should be much easier to find). Press right on "main
menu" on the disc's audio setup menu. Disc Two features the
Journey to the Screen: The Making of
Pearl Harbor documentary, recycled from the original
release. This 50-minute piece is a little more EPK in style than I'd
like, but it does contain some valuable information, along with
tidbits of what you'll see later in much more detail. You also get
Faith Hill's There You'll Be
music video and a preview trailer for the National
Geographic Beyond the Movie: Pearl Harbor DVD, available
separately. You'll find another Easter egg here as well - the Pearl
Harbor gag reel. In my opinion, every film should have a
gag reel - I really appreciate the fact that Michael Bay includes
them in his special editions.
Disc Three brings you right into the heart of the supplements
package, with extras split into two sections: The
Film and The History.
Included in The Film are some
nine featurette breakdowns of the production of various key aspects
of the film. You'll see ADs shouting directions, extras prepping,
set dressers dressing, pyro techs exploding... EVERYTHING. You also
get occasional comparisons of the production with the final film
here. For example, when action is called and a helicopter swoops in
for an aerial shot, you see the final footage in the corner of the
screen as everything unfolds. And the majority of these featurettes
have optional audio commentary by Bay. The Soldier's
Boot Camp and Officer's Boot
Camp featurettes take you behind-the-scenes on the
elaborate, four-day training the actors received in military
procedures and daily life. Next up is a montage of Super-8 footage
shot for use in the film as newsreel material. It's almost scary how
close the footage shot only two years ago approximates actual
footage from fifty years back. And the film's teaser and theatrical
trailers are also available in this section.
The History section then
provides a pair of excellent documentaries on the real events
depicted in the film, produced for The History Channel. One
Hour over Tokyo includes interviews with the surviving
members of the Dolittle Raiders. Unsung
Heroes of Pearl Harbor highlights some of the individual
stories from survivors of the actual attack. Each features hordes of
archival photos, vintage film and modern interviews that really put
you in the shoes of the men and women who found themselves living in
a world suddenly consumed by war. The last feature on Disc Three is
Oral History: The Recollections of a
Pearl Harbor Nurse, which is a re-enactment of the actual
testament of a nurse who was stationed at Pearl at the time of the
attack (accompanied by historical photos and film).
After many hours worth of documentaries, the fun continues on Disc
Four. First up, you get a multi-angle version of the entire attack
on Pearl Harbor sequence. From animatic to wireframe to final
footage, it's all there. Complementing this is the original animatic
done by Michael Bay to sell the film to the U.S. Navy and to Buena
Vista. It's amazing how close this came to the final footage in
terms of composition and execution. As if this wasn't enough,
Michael Bay and visual effects supervisor Eric Brevig guide you
through the entire process of putting the effects sequences together
in the Deconstructing Destruction
featurette. You also get an absolutely packed gallery of photos and
artwork, broken into various subjects for easier digestion (these
include production design, publicity, historical, storyboards, ILM
and Stan Winston makeup). There are DVD production credits as well,
along with the Pearl Harbor Definitive
Biography (available via DVD-ROM). And finally, you get
an "interactive timeline" documentary called When
Cultures Collide: From Perry to Pearl. Over the course of
70 minutes, the entire history of American/Japanese relations, as
well as many internal events that led to changes in policy on both
sides, are covered in great detail. As someone with a fascination of
Japanese culture, I probably enjoyed this feature a lot more than
most. But if you want a huge amount of insight into the situations
and Japanese mindset that brought about the attack, this is where
you'll find it.
How can I sum this 4-disc set up, except to say that this is
arguably the DVD of the Year thus far, with only New Line's 4-disc
Lord of the Rings threatening
to challenge it. Even if by some miracle Rings
manages to top these supplements, the Pearl
Harbor: Vista Series Director's Cut will stand in the
annals of DVD-dom as one of the finest special editions ever
produced. You may not like the movie, but you won't complain at all
about the extras here. It's especially refreshing to see was that
equal time has been given to exploring the climate in Japan at the
time, as well as the reasons for the attack. Many people always want
to view "the enemy" as evil, but there's always another
side to the story and you'll see that here. Bravo.
If you want a more straightforward, historically precise Pearl
Harbor movie, go get yourself a copy of 20th Century Fox's Tora!
Tora! Tora! But if you want something that blows out your
eardrums and brings your understanding of filmmaking and history to
the next level, you can't go wrong with the Pearl
Harbor: Vista Series Director's Cut. Highly recommended.
Jeff Kleist
kodai_kun@hotmail.com |
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