Cover art and specs

Out on February, 7th.

This seems like a colossal mistake. Why would Warner's think people want to break up the rhythm of the movie to change discs? After reading about the similar situation with Ryan's Daughter, I hope this doesn't become a trend.tavernier wrote:the movie is spread out over both discs (1:55 on disc one, 58 minutes on the second disc)
This film didn't originally have an intermission, did it? And where exactly does the break occur?tavernier wrote:I just saw this set: the movie is spread out over both discs (1:55 on disc one, 58 minutes on the second disc). It looks good, an improvement over the old Criterion disc.
That's not true: the criterion disc is anamorphic.kieslowski_67 wrote:Gary made a mistake. The Criterion disc, like lots of its earlier releases, is NOT anamorphic.
Did you check your criterion?kieslowski_67 wrote:That is the single biggest reason that I sold the Criterion DVD and bought the new Warner release.
I'm not sure where you got your copy from, but my Criterion ULoB is without a doubt anamorphic. It says on the packaging "Enhanced for 16:9 Televisions". I just watched it last week, and I can positively say that it is anamorphic.kieslowski_67 wrote:Gary made a mistake. The Criterion disc, like lots of its earlier releases, is NOT anamorphic. That is the single biggest reason that I sold the Criterion DVD and bought the new Warner release.
Always a danger to revisit the past but always a temptation. I couldn't resist seeing Veronique for one last time at the cinema but I have resisted revisiting the breathtakingly beautiful parts of Scotland around Torridon and Shieldaig which I last saw 40 years ago because the memory could never be the same and the memory is so sweet I want to keep it that way.Tommaso wrote:I finally watched this again after having seen it in the cinema when it came out in the late 80s, and am not entirely sure what to make of it now. Yes, the acting is wonderful, and so is Sven Nykvist's photography and the re-building of Prague in the studio, but as a whole it seems to lack a little in focus. I don't know how far the Kundera novel is responsible for this, but the film is trying to tell too many stories at once.
Hmmmm..... it's a nice film nevertheless, but still I can't help it.... I remembered it to be better.