Site
created 12/15/97.
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review
added: 1/4/02
updated: 1/5/02
Tombstone
review
by Bill Hunt, editor of The Digital Bits
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Tombstone:
Director's Cut
Vista Series -
1993 (2002) - Hollywood (Buena Vista)
Film Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Extras): B+/B-
Audio Ratings (DD/DTS): B+/A-
Specs and Features
Disc One: The Film
134 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (2.35:1), 16x9 enhanced,
THX-certified, single-sided, RSDL dual-layered (layer switch at
1:08:54, in chapter 16), dual disc custom slipcase with gatefold
packaging, audio commentary with director George P. Cosmatos,
illustrated booklet, Tombstone map insert, sneak peek trailer
for Pearl Harbor,
THX-Optimizer test signals, animated film-themed menu screens
with sound and music, scene access (27 chapters), languages:
English (DD 5.1 & DTS 5.1), subtitles: English (for the
hearing impaired), French & Spanish, Closed Captioned
Disc Two: Supplemental Materials
NR, single-sided, single-layered, The
Making of Tombstone documentary (composed of 3
featurettes: An Ensemble Cast,
Making an Authentic Western
and The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral),
interactive timeline of historical events, storyboards for O.K.
Corral sequence, The Tombstone
Epitaph (4 pages of the actual newspaper chronicling
the real gunfight), theatrical trailer, teaser trailer, 7 TV
spots, Easter egg (gallery of poster art and set designs),
DVD-ROM material (including Faro at
the Oriental game and weblinks), animated film-themed
menu screens with sound & music
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Tombstone
1993 (1997) - Hollywood (Buena Vista)
Film Rating: A
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
C-/C+/D-
Specs and Features
130 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (2.35:1), single-sided,
single-layered, keep case packaging, theatrical trailer, teaser
trailer, film-themed menu screens, scene access (25 chapters),
languages: English, French & Spanish (DD 2.0), subtitles:
English (for the hearing impaired) & Spanish, Closed
Captioned
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"You gonna do something or just stand there and bleed?"
When you think of the great "guy" flicks of recent years,
several titles come quickly to mind. There's Michael Mann's Heat
and John Frankenheimer's Ronin.
There's Luc Besson's Léon: The
Professional and Ridley Scott's Gladiator.
But one of my absolute favorites is a campy, Hollywood star-powered,
Spaghetti Western wanna-be... George P. Cosmatos' Tombstone.
The story, which you may be surprised to learn is a very accurate
depiction of the real historical events, follows ex-lawman Wyatt
Earp (Kurt Russell) and his brothers Virgil (Sam Elliott) and Morgan
(Bill Paxton), as they attempt to start a new life and make their
fortunes in the booming but lawless mining town of Tombstone,
Arizona. Not long after the Brothers Earp and their wives arrive and
settle in, their reputation catches up with them. Local law
enforcement wants Wyatt to carry a badge and help bring order to
Tombstone. And the local outlaws, the Cowboys (led by Curly Bill
Brocious, gun-slinging ace Johnny Ringo and the Brothers Clanton),
want to make sure he doesn't. Wyatt and his brothers do their best
not to get involved, but conscience and events get the better of
them, and it's not long before they're on a collision course with
the Cowboys for control of Tombstone. Fortunately, that infamous
gentleman killer Doc Holiday (Val Kilmer) is on their side. As Wyatt
himself says, "The bad guys are less apt to get nervy with Doc
on the street howitzer." Throw in Dana Delany, as a
free-spirited actress who vies for Wyatt's affections, and a whole
host of great cameo appearances (from Billy Bob Thornton to Charlton
Heston), and you've got a barn burner from beginning to end.
For my money, Tombstone
absolutely rocks. Kurt Russell was simply born to play Wyatt Earp,
as he infuses the role with the perfect mixture of testosterone
gusto and subtle humanity. Val Kilmer's devilishly poetic Doc
Holiday is the perfect friend and foil to Russell's straight man.
And the various Cowboys are played with delicious and natural menace
by the likes of Powers Boothe, Michael Biehn, Stephen Lang and
others. In fact, there's not a badly cast part in this film.
Everyone delivers the goods. And the dialogue! Tombstone
boasts some of the best period dialogue you've ever heard in a
Western. Great scenes, big and small, abound here. I could spend the
entire review listing the film's many "enchanted moments".
But among these, Billy Bob Thornton's confrontation with Wyatt (as
Wyatt "acquires" a quarter interest in the game at the
Oriental) is a true gem. God, this is good stuff!
You should also know that this DVD features a new director's cut of
the film, which reinstates approximately four minutes of previously
deleted footage. There's an additional scene between Wyatt and
Mattie (dealing with her opium addiction), an interchange between
Doc and Kate (in which he leaves her to back Wyatt's effort to rout
the Cowboys), a moment of Doc drunk in his hotel room and a scene in
which McMasters meets with the Cowboys and is betrayed. The
inclusion of each adds additional weight to later moments in the
film. Plus, it's just cool to have four more minutes of this fun
film.
Tombstone was one of Buena
Vista's very first live-action DVD releases when the studio decided
to climb aboard the format bandwagon in late 1997. As such, the disc
was fine at the time, but pales by today's quality standards. The
video on the disc is non-anamorphic, and exhibits all kinds of NTSC
artifacts that you'd expect to see on a re-purposed laserdisc
transfer. There was an abundance of edge-enhancement and compression
artifacting, and the print exhibited considerable grain, dirt and
scratches. The colors were good, if a little muted, but black levels
were weak and left something to be desired. In terms of extras, the
disc included only the film's theatrical trailer and teaser trailer.
As much as I love Tombstone,
I was very much looking forward to the day when Buena Vista would
revisit it on DVD with the kind of quality treatment it deserved.
Thankfully, their new Vista Series
Director's Cut is almost exactly what the doctor ordered.
I'll get to the 'almost' part in a moment. But let's start with the
video. The new anamorphic widescreen video is a vast improvement
over the old disc, mastered from a digital, high-definition
transfer. It's not perfect and it isn't reference quality, but if
you've had to suffer with the old disc, you'll be thrilled with
this. There's a hair too much edge enhancement and the print is
occasionally a little soft. But it's far smoother and more natural
looking, with a greater sense of depth and much deeper blacks. The
colors are lush and accurate without bleed, and this print is
definitely cleaner. You'll barely notice film grain and there's
hardly a spec of dust or dirt to be seen. I'll wager a digital dirt
removal pass was done in addition to using a newer print.
While the audio on the original DVD was about as good as you could
expect of a Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround track, this new disc blows it
away with not just newly re-mixed Dolby Digital 5.1 sound, but DTS
5.1 sound as well. Both tracks provide a nicely wide soundstage,
with good dialogue imaging, solid low frequency support and adequate
ambiance from the surround speakers. This film, surprisingly, isn't
highly active surround-wise, even given this new mix. You'd expect
the bullets to zip around your head during the O.K. Corral gunfight,
but they're mostly up front. But listen to the panning during the
title shot, as the Cowboys race right by you from the distance into
the left rear corner of your home theater - very nice. And Bruce
Broughton's thunderous score is well blended into the mix. The DTS
track, as one would expect, provides a slightly greater measure of
sonic clarity, along with smoother, more natural panning. It's not
tremendously better, but I preferred it. Still, the Dolby Digital
track delivers the goods plenty well. You're not missing much if you
can't use the DTS.
The new DVD, being a two-disc set, also delivers some nice extras.
To start with, you get a full-length audio commentary track by
director George P. Cosmatos. The guy isn't overly charismatic,
talking as he does in his appropriately gruff, heavily
Italian-accented, baritone voice. But he delivers some good
anecdotes about the production, his cast and the tremendous effort
that was made to stay true to historical detail during the making of
this film. Disc Two provides a trio of short behind-the-scenes
featurettes, which total about 27 minutes in length (when you select
the "play all" option). These are a bit fluffy, but manage
to be surprisingly substantiative. They're filled with interviews
excerpts with almost all the major cast members (even Charlton
Heston, who has only a small role here), and provide a look at the
real historical events the film is based upon. There's an
interactive timeline of the real events, in which (when you select
each date) an appropriately cheesy "old timer" voice reads
the onscreen text to you. This would have been cool, except that
it's isn't nearly detailed enough. And I couldn't find anything in
here indicating when the actual O.K. Corral gunfight took place.
That's okay, however, because one of the best extras on the second
disc is a high-resolution scan of all four pages of the actual issue
of The Tombstone Epitaph in
which the report of the gunfight appeared. You navigate around the
paper (using your remote) looking at sections of each page at a
time. The scan is good enough that you can actually read the real
eyewitness accounts of the gunfight. There's even testimony by the
real Sheriff Behan, along with a map of the starting positions of
the gunfighters when the shooting began. It's very, very cool and a
nice touch.
Also on Disc Two is a video of the director's own storyboards for
the gunfight scene (set to music from the film), the film's teaser
and theatrical trailers complete with music by Peter Gabriel (sadly,
neither is anamorphic), some seven TV spots for the film and a
DVD-ROM interactive card game called Faro
at the Oriental. Finally, there's an easy to find Easter
egg on the second disc that allows you to access a still gallery of
poster art and production design sketches. All in all, it's a decent
little package of extras.
Now then... there are just a few things I don't like about this
two-disc set. First of all, given that the Vista Series has taken
its place as Buena Vista's elite line of DVD product, having
previews for other films on DVD play automatically when you start
the disc is insulting. Even if it's only Pearl
Harbor, and you can skip the trailer by pressing the "menu"
button on your remote, this kind of shameless marketing should NEVER
appear on a Vista Series disc. Period. My second complaint is minor,
but I would really have loved to see a second audio commentary,
featuring Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer and other cast members. Russell
recently recorded one for Big Trouble in
Little China, so unless scheduling or money was an issue,
there's little reason one couldn't have been included. And my last
complaint may be valid or not - I'm not sure. I haven't seen the
laserdisc version of this film, but from what I understand, it
included an extra series of outtakes from the film (with
introduction by Cosmatos). If you view the trailers, there are a
couple of scenes that appear to have been shot, but were not added
back into this cut. These include a scene with the Cowboys gathered
around a campfire and an extended version of the "fortuitous
meeting" between Wyatt and Josephine (in which they actually
get physical instead of just talking). Now... I don't know if these
were among the outtakes on the laserdisc, but there are no outtakes
at all on this DVD (unless they're hidden as a second Easter egg,
and I just can't find it). If they do exist and they aren't here,
that's disappointing.
All that aside, the Tombstone:
Director's Cut - Vista Series is, at long last, a DVD
re-release I can appreciate. No... I'll go a step further than that.
I love this disc, imperfect though it is. It's easily among the
favorite titles in my collection. Tombstone
is a great Western and a modern classic. And now I can finally watch
it in the kind of quality it deserves. If you like the film even
half as much as I do, my advice is to get the new disc as soon as it
becomes available. Then take that earlier DVD and run over it with
your car. Now there's an enchanted moment.
1/5/02 Update: I've since
heard from a number of readers who have the original Tombstone
laserdisc I mentioned above. Apparently, that outtakes included on
it are basically the scenes were restored into the film for this new
director's cut, with one exception. There is apparently an
additional scene on the laser in which Billy Breckinridge (played by
Jason Priestley) kills one of the Cowboys to avenge Fabian and
delivers the body to Wyatt. This hasn't been restored to the new cut
and it isn't available on the DVD as an outtake or deleted scene. On
the laserdisc, Cosmatos also mentions the additional footage seen in
the trailers (though the full scenes aren't included there) and
indicates that his original cut of the film was nearly three hours
long. I'm disappointed that more of this deleted footage wasn't
included separately on the DVD.
Bill Hunt
billhunt@thedigitalbits.com |
Tombstone:
Director's Cut - Vista Series
Tombstone
(original)
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