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Vampyr (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]

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Mex $639.10

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Género terror_y_sobrenatural
Formato Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Colaborador Rena Mandel, A Babanini, Jan Hieronimko, Albert Bras, Carl Th. Dreyer, Maurice Schutz, Sybille Schmitz, Carl Theodor Dreyer, Jane Mora, Julian West, Nicolas Degunzburg, Henriette Gerard
Idioma Alemán
Tiempo de ejecución 1 hora y 47 minutos


With Vampyr, Danish filmmaker Carl Theodor Dreyer channeled his genius for creating mesmerizing atmosphere and austere, unsettling imagery into the horror genre. The result a chilling film about a student of the occult who encounters supernatural haunts and local evildoers in a village outside Paris is nearly unclassifiable. A host of stunning camera and editing tricks and densely layered sounds creates a mood of dreamlike terror. With its roiling fogs, ominous scythes, and foreboding echoes, Vampyr is one of cinema's greatest nightmares.BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES- High-definition digital transfer of the original German version of the film, from the 1998 restoration by Martin Koerber and the Cineteca di Bologna, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack- Alternate version with English text- Audio commentary featuring film scholar Tony Rayns- Carl Th. Dreyer, a 1966 documentary by Jorgen Roos chronicling Dreyer's career- Video essay by scholar Casper Tybjerg on Dreyer's influences in creating Vampyr- Radio broadcast from 1958 of Dreyer reading an essay about filmmaking- PLUS: A booklet featuring essays by critics Mark Le Fanu and Kim Newman, a piece by Koerber on the restoration, and a 1964 interview with producer and actor Nicolas de Gunzburg - AND: A book featuring Dreyer and Christen Jul's original screenplay and Sheridan Le Fanu's 1872 story 'Carmilla,'; a source for the film


J. Wilson
Comentado en Canadá el 17 de enero de 2025
Good service and wonderful movie, thanks, Joanie, Bayfield
jf
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de abril de 2025
great blu ray.
José Rogelio Chavez Gómez
Comentado en México el 10 de junio de 2024
Esta edición doble en blu-ray de Criterion es una joya, viene con un slipcase de lujo que incluye un librito con el guión de la película y el relato en el que se basa. La película está cuidadosamente curada con varios y nutridos extras en los que se incluyen un entretenido video ensayo y entrevistas. Un absoluto goce sin desperdicio.
Sean Fitzpatrick
Comentado en Canadá el 26 de noviembre de 2018
Super thorough packaging, lots of supplemental material and bonuses. Great looking film, really spooky.
alali
Comentado en el Reino Unido el 11 de noviembre de 2018
It arrived a few day later then the top day estimate. But it is exceptional and perfect. Thx to the saller!
Ramiro Alvarado
Comentado en México el 14 de noviembre de 2017
Excelente edicion en Digipack como todas las de CriterionEn este caso es excelente que incluya un libro en el cual la mitad del mismo el guion de la pelicula original y la segunda mitad sea copia de la historia en la que se basa libremente.
Swifty
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 30 de septiembre de 2008
Carl Dreyer is a film-maker's film-maker. His films resonate, and are imbued not just with striking images, mise-en-scene and editing choices, but with a numinous nexus of meaning. I'll watch a Dreyer film, and in the course of the days and weeks to come, a moment or moments from the film: a notion, a face, a dramatic epiphany, (or all these things), will return to haunt me. Fortunately it's not usually a spooky haunting, but an artistic one: the mastery of Dreyer as a cineaste strikes notes which always resound in this viewer's soul.Oddly enough, in the case of Vampyr it is a spooky haunting. Sort of. As the wonderful supplemental features in this Criterion edition of Vampyr make clear, Dreyer wanted to make a "popular" (or at least commercially successful) film after the financial disaster of The Passion of Joan of Arc. Vampires had made at least a modest bite into the popular culture of the 1920s: Nosferatu, London After Midnight and the stage production of Dracula with Bela Lugosi all exploited the public interest in the undead. Dreyer had his subject.I won't repeat the story of the production tribulations of Vampyr, where Dreyer worked both as a producer and director. Suffice it to say that Vampyr was also a commercial flop. Dreyer had a nervous breakdown and checked himself into the Joan of Arc Sanatarium to recover. He didn't make another film for about another 10 years. As for the film: the original negative for Vampyr no longer exists. The soundtrack, especially in those early days of European sound-film making is horrible. When I first saw this movie long ago back in college, I was entirely put off. The sound sucked, the acting seemed stilted and the print lookedfuzzy, scratchy and just plain terrible. Worse still, it just wasn't scary.It's still not scary. But it's eerie, and this eeriness is worth consideration. Criterion has cleaned up the movie's sound, and, to the best extent possible, restored the image. Vampyr was a low-budget production and, though it looks antique to us, it was deliberately set in contemporary times. Dreyer found an abandoned factory for the scene where the vampire calls an abrupt halt to the fleeting shadows dancing across the walls during a witches' ball.These scenes feature startlingly modern compositions, evocative lighting and a fluidly gliding use of camera by Dreyer's gifted cinematographer Rudolph Mate. The musical score has been cleaned up as well, and contributes much to the disconsolate mood of the piece. I won't analyze the plot of the film, (loosely based on Sheridan Le Fanu's short novel "Carmilla") or the character relationships, whose opacity seems as much a characteristic of Dreyer's approach as of his largely non-professional cast's shortcomings as actors. The reason why Vampyr is worth watching is because this film succeeds astonishingly in conveying the surreal, illogical yet poetically thematic experience of dreams and nightmares. The episodes here don't link at all well in terms of narrative structure. However, the quality of light in one sequence (the boat caught in the fog) visually evokes the cascading flour in the mill sequence with which it's intercut. The parallel cutting suggests there may be a meaning linking the two sequences, but there is no overt narrative or even character link. We're left with the soft slow clouds of fog, the briskly tumbling suffocating clouds of flour, and the knowledge that the characters in these parallel scenes are lost. It's a dreamlike, poetic moment, evoked beautifully by cinematic means. Vampyr is the film poetry of unquiet dreams, and worth a visitation. (The special features of this fine two-disk set include interesting critical analyses, a wonderful short feature about the production of Vampyr, a filmed interview with Dreyer, and--- in a supplemental booklet--- the shooting script and a reprint of Le Fanu's "Carmilla." Film school in a coffin-box without the school! Enough to make any self-respecting movie vampire drool!)
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