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Posts with tag BernardoBertolucci

DVD Review: The Last Emperor - The Criterion Collection

Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor won nine Oscars out of nine nominations, sweeping every category except acting (stars John Lone, Peter O'Toole and Joan Chen weren't nominated). It was chosen as one of the year's ten best films by Cahiers du Cinema, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Roger Ebert, Richard Corliss, and even the National Board of Review. Gene Siskel voted it the year's best film, as did Judy Stone of the San Francisco Chronicle. Filmmaker Samuel Fuller chose it as one of his ten favorite films of all time. In 1998, it received a major theatrical re-release, supervised by cinematographer Vittorio Storaro, with nearly an hour's worth of footage edited back into the film, bringing the total from 160 to 219 minutes. Yet, it has somehow fallen into the list of hard-to-find films. For years, it has only been available on VHS or import DVDs. Now the Criterion Collection has come along and corrected this oversight by delivering perhaps 2008's most spectacular DVD release so far. (Blu-Ray be damned!)

Criterion's four-disc release includes both cuts, as well as two more discs full of extras. (Many are from 1987 and some were created more recently; the bonus is a series of "video postcards" shot by Bertolucci in China while preparing for the film.) Personally, I like getting to decide which version to watch, rather than having someone else choose the definitive version for me. The 160-minute version is the one that garnered all that praise, but the longer version -- here called the "television version" -- is great, too. The extra scenes don't particularly work to "drive" the movie forward, but they give a richer understanding of Pu Yi and the emptiness of his life.

Continue reading DVD Review: The Last Emperor - The Criterion Collection

Bertolucci Will Get a Hollywood Star

This whole Hollywood Star, Walk of Fame phenomenon amuses me. Almost every time I hear about a name being added, I'm surprised that they haven't been added yet, or that some other people have gotten a star first. Granted this is partially because people are often added during their pique celebrity times, rather than for their overall accomplishments. I mean, here is news from Variety that Bernardo Bertolucci is getting a star, although someone like Kirstie Alley already has one for her involvement in motion pictures. It is certainly not a flawless system.

Nevertheless, the Italian director is finally getting his star for LA residents and tourist to trample on, joining the likes of other big Italian names like Sophia Loren and Rudolf Valentino. The star will be unveiled in front of Mann's Chinese Theater on February 19th, concurrently with the LA Italia pre-Oscars Italian cinema showcase (running February 17-23). Along with the star, a tribute is planned that will screen his rare 1968 documentary La via del petrolio as well as a restored print of his 1970 film, The Spider's Stratagem. I wonder what finally got him on the list. Was it his latest film, the sexy Eva Green-starring The Dreamers? Or, was it the realization that the man behind the 9-Oscar-winning The Last Emperor didn't have a star yet? Whatever the reason, congratulations, Bertolucci!

Bernardo Bertolucci Takes on the Life of Gesualdo da Venosa

Carlo Gesulado (aka Gesualdo da Venosa) was a man of many talents and honors. Living in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, he was the Italian Prince of Venosa and Count of Conza, as well as a noble musician known for his madrigals. Yet, his handiwork extended beyond music because what really made him famous was his grisly murder of his wife and her lover in a fit of rage. She'd had a man on the side for some time, and got careless one night when her husband was away. Carlo came back, saw his wife in a rather compromising situation and murdered them both. Now word has it that Bernardo Bertolucci is going to bring the story to the big screen.

For the most part, this project should be a smooth jump for the director. His forays with The Dreamers and his short Ten Minutes or Older: The Cello are good primer, and he just has to top it with some vengeful violence. I'm curious to see how much of that fateful night Bertolucci will show -- accounts say that Carlo stabbed his wife repeatedly while shouting "she's not dead yet!" and that she was "viciously stabbed in the parts which it is best for a woman to keep modest." Obviously, this Prince was definitely of the lovely, charming variety. The director is currently writing the script with Mark Peploe, who collaborated with the director on the Oscar-winning The Last Emporer. Peploe wrote a first draft called Heaven and Hell (not to be confused with John Jakes' text that was part of North and South), which has since been "radically redone." Once the script is finished and producer Jeremy Thomas secures financing, Bertolucci direct the piece, having slid his previous project Bel Canto, on indefinite hold.

Bertolucci is back

According to reports from Munich, Bernardo Bertolucci (who hasn't actually been around for as long as it seems - he's only 65) has announced plans for his first film since 2003's The Dreamers. His next project, though it is currently in very, very early stages, will be an adaptation of Ann Patchett's enchanting novel, Bel Canto. The book starts out as a tale of terrorism in a South American country, as all the attendees of a politician's party for a wealthy Japanese businessman are taken hostage. Instead of a story about terror and violence, though, it "slowly evolves into something quite different, as terrorists and hostages forge unexpected bonds and people from different countries and continents become compatriots." Plus, there's a lot of opera.

Bertolucci, who is also writing the screenplay, seems like the perfect man to undertake this story. His films - good and bad - are almost always incredibly lyrical, and he's very skilled at creating emotionally-charged worlds that exist only for his characters (see, for example, both The Dreamers and a little picture called Last Tango in Paris). Patchett herself must be thrilled by this news.

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