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created 12/15/97. |
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review
added: 1/23/03
Signs
Vista
Series - 2002 (2003) - Touchstone (Buena Vista)
review
by Bill Hunt, editor of The Digital Bits
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Film
Rating: B-
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
B/B+/C+
Specs and Features
106 mins, PG-13, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1), 16x9 enhanced,
THX-certified, single-sided, RSDL dual-layered (layer switch at
1:15:04 in chapter 17), Amaray keep case packaging, Making
Signs documentary (4x3, DD 2.0, in 6 parts with play all
feature: Looking for Signs,
Building Signs, Making
Signs: A Commentary by M. Night Shyamalan, The
Effects of Signs, Last Voices:
The Music of Signs and Full
Circle), 5 deleted scenes (4x3, DD 2.0), 2 multi-angle
storyboard sequences (with multiple video and audio options), video
excerpt from "Night's first alien movie", insert booklet,
DVD-ROM feature (online DVD registration), THX Optimizer test
signals, animated film-themed menus with sound and music, scene
access (17 chapters), languages: English & French (DD 5.1),
subtitles: English for the hearing impaired, Closed Captioned
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"What you are seeing... is real. It's unbelievable. Everything
they wrote about in science books is about to change."
Picture if you will... Graham Hess (Mel Gibson), a middle-aged,
former preacher who lost his faith when his wife was accidentally
killed by a sleeping driver one night. Graham lives on a farm in
rural Pennsylvania, raising his young son and daughter with the help
of his younger brother, Merrill (Joaquin Phoenix), a washed-out,
minor league baseball player.
Life's a struggle for the Hess family, but it's going along okay...
until Graham discovers a strange circle in his cornfield one
afternoon. Soon his dogs are freaking out and the local sheriff says
it's happening all over the county. Later that night, Graham and
Merrill see a strange figure creeping around their house. And the
next day, the TV starts going crazy with reports of strange lights
in the sky and crop circles appearing all over the world. People
you'd normally file away as nuts are claiming it's an invasion and
that the end is near. But if you've lost your faith, to what do you
turn when your world is falling apart all around you?
Signs is writer/director M.
Night Shyamalan's follow up to The Sixth
Sense and Unbreakable.
And like those films, Signs
isn't quite what it appears to be at first. As a director, Shyamalan
likes to end his films with a twist that the audience doesn't see
coming. The problem with doing that is two-fold. First, as an
audience, we know that's Shyamalan's schtick, so the surprise is
never as good as it was the first time around, with The
Sixth Sense. And the second problem, is that the film can
ultimately only be as good and effective as the twist.
In the case of Signs, what
plays out for 90% of the film as a genuinely creepy and chilling
alien invasion story, suddenly turns into something else. Just as
the main narrative plot is about to climax, we're taken out of the
moment for a series of flashbacks that pay off the emotional
subplot. And the cost of doing that, unfortunately, is to lessen the
impact of the main story.
Still, Shyamalan's writing and direction here is first-rate for
most of the film. Knowing that what you don't see is infinitely more
frightening that what you do, he keeps his audience in the dark for
most of the film, only teasing you here and there with a glimpse of
what it is that lurks in the dark. And he uses sound to great
advantage in this film, playing on your nerves with subtle clicks
and whispers to great effect. It helps that Gibson and Phoenix are
terrific in their respective roles. They way they play off one
another, and use humor to mask their fears, makes it very easy to
place yourself in their shoes. And Shyamalan's approach to the
actual invasion plot strikes the perfect note. He keeps the
invaders' motivations utterly alien, making the events seem that
much more real. In so doing, he had me on the edge of my seat until
very near end. The film is so effective, in fact, that you can
almost forgive the cumbersome final scenes. Almost.
On DVD, Signs looks and
sounds quite good. The anamorphic widescreen transfer is clean and
clear, with an excellent range of contrast. Blacks are deep and well
defined, and yet there's plenty of detailing in the shadows -
important for a film about things that go bump in the night. Colors
are warm and muted, but accurate to the theatrical experience.
There's a little bit of edging on occasion, and there is subtle
grain visible throughout the print, but neither is distracting in
the least.
On the audio front, Signs is
also generally good. The Dolby Digital 5.1 soundfield is smooth and
natural, with nice subtlety and some very active directional play in
key dramatic moments. Vocals are well presented and the music is
effectively layered into the mix. I can't help feeling, however,
that a DTS 5.1 option would have an obvious choice here. This is a
film where sound plays a very important role. A DTS track would have
really widened the soundstage, and the added clarity would have
provided an additional kick to the most tense, and the most subtle,
moments.
The place where this DVD really lets you down, however, is the
supplemental materials. I'll say it right now - this is the most
disappointed I've ever been by a Vista Series disc. To start with,
it's only one disc! For a film that made $60 million in the first
few weeks, that feels like awfully short shrift. All of the extras
(except the multi-angle storyboards) are presented in 4x3 format, so
if you're watching on an anamorphic TV, you're constantly switching
the viewing mode. There's a decent behind-the-scenes documentary,
Making Signs, which is
presented in six parts (with a play all option). It features some
good interviews and production video, but I don't know that you'll
watch it more than once. There are five deleted scenes, but they
aren't anamorphic and they aren't in 5.1 (like they were on the Unbreakable
DVD), which is disappointing. You also get two storyboard sequences,
which let you switch back and forth between the storyboard art and
the final scene, and give you the option to hear music-only audio,
effects-only or the final sound mix. Again, this is cool, but you're
not likely to view it more than once. And the final extra is
downright lame. Not to dog Night or anything, but a minute-long clip
from his shot-on-video-as-a-kid "first alien film" is not
worth viewing... much less including here.
For this film, I wanted an audio commentary! Forget Night's
Spielberg complex about doing commentaries. I wanted to hear him
talk about all the subtle things he was trying to do - the things
that worked and the things that didn't. And I wanted to hear the
actors talking about each scene! There's one scene in particular,
when Graham and Merrill are boarding up the house, where Graham
looks out the window and is frightened by what he sees. Except we
never learn what that is. From having read the script, I know that
what he saw was lines appearing in the cornfield and approaching the
house. So why not include the script? What not include all the
storyboard art? What not include a gallery of production art showing
the alien design concepts? Why not include all the TV broadcast
footage that was shot for the film? Why not include some of the
research material Night consulted for the film? Why not include a
look at the book that the Hess children are reading in the film?
There's just SO many directions that Buena Vista could have gone
with this DVD... but didn't. What we get here ultimately feels like
second-best compared to past Vista Series releases.
Complaints about the extras aside, Signs
is worth at least renting. And if you can find it on sale, you might
want to own a copy. For most of the film at least, it's a very good,
old-school, edge-of-your-seat thriller. Take the ending for what you
will, and know that it probably isn't going to satisfy you. If you
go into the film knowing that, Signs
is completely entertaining and easy to enjoy. It's just a shame
someone decided to cheap out on the DVD.
Bill Hunt
billhunt@thedigitalbits.com |
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