Re: Werner Herzog Collection
Posted: Fri Feb 14, 2014 2:27 am
I dunno, I know the image is representative of his work and symbolically relevant, but I'd have preferred a portrait or something less tied to a specific film.
Knives, I'm not eager to defend Herzog, and I think it's healthy that you have differing views on a lot of things, but you gotta quit coming into threads and dropping shocking opinions like they don't need justification despite being far from the typical response to the film you're dissing/building upknives wrote:Or at least a better film.
Product Description
NOSFERATU, THE VAMPYRE (Limited Edition Blu-ray Steelbook)
A Film by Werner Herzog
Jonathan Harker (Bruno Ganz, Downfall) lives with his young wife Lucy (Isabelle Adjani, Possession in the idyllic town of Wismar, where he works as an estate agent. In spite of grim omens, Harker ventures deep into the Carpathian Mountains to close a property deal with Count Dracula (Klaus Kinski, Aguirre, Wrath of God), a sickly, wrath-like creature with sunken eyes and pallid skin. While dining that night at the Count's ghostly castle, Harker cuts his finger, provoking a disturbing reaction to his host.
Werner Herzog's masterful contribution to the vampire canon is both a discerning tribute to F W Murnau's 1922 silent classic, and a singularly atmospheric and thoughtful horror film in its own right. Kinski's central performance, Herzog's images and Popul Vuh's music combine to create a darkly hypnotic and seductive experience.
This specially-designed, limited edition SteelBookTM is released ahead of an extensive Werner Herzog box set from the BFI, which will include newly remastered HD presentations of 17 of his greatest feature films and shorts.
Special features
Limited Edition SteelBookTM
Newly remastered presentations of the English and German versions
Original mono audio (German and English)
Alternative 5.1 Surround audio (German)
Feature-length audio commentary with Werner Herzog
On-set documentary (1979, 13 mins): promotional film featuring candid interviews with Werner Herzog and Klaus Kinski
Original theatrical trailer
Stills gallery
Fully illustrated booklet with a new essay by Laurie Johnson, full film credits and on-set photographs
Germany, France | 1979 | colour | German language, with optional English subtitles; English language | 107 minutes | Original aspect ratio 1.85:1 | BD50 | 1080p | PCM 1.0 mono audio (48k/24-bit) and 5.1. DTS-HD Master Audio | Cert 15 (contains moderate horror and gore | Region B Blu-ray
Nosferatu the Vampyre
A film by Werner Herzog
Starring Klaus Kinski, Isabelle Adjani and Bruno Ganz
Werner Herzog’s masterful contribution to the vampire canon is both a discerning tribute to FW Murnau's 1922 silent classic, and a singularly atmospheric and thoughtful horror film in its own right.
It comes to Blu-ray for the first time on 19 May 2014, released in a Limited Edition SteelBookTM ahead of its inclusion in mammoth Herzog Blu-ray and DVD box-sets in July.
The SteelBook™ contains both English and German versions of the film, a full-length audio commentary with Werner Herzog, an on-set documentary and more.
Jonathan Harker (Bruno Ganz, Downfall) lives with his young wife Lucy (Isabelle Adjani, Possession) in the idyllic town of Wismar, where he works as an estate agent. In spite of grim omens, Harker ventures deep into the Carpathian Mountains to close a property deal with Count Dracula (Klaus Kinski, Aguirre, Wrath of God), a sickly, wraith-like creature with sunken eyes and pallid skin. While dining that night at the Count’s ghostly castle, Harker cuts his finger, provoking a disturbing reaction in his host...
Kinski’s exquisite central performance, Herzog's painterly images and Popul Vuh's ethereal music combine to create one of horror cinema's most hypnotic and seductive experiences.
Special features
• Limited Edition SteelBook™;
• Newly remastered presentations of the English and German versions;
• Original mono audio (German and English);
• Alternative 5.1 Surround audio (German);
• Feature-length audio commentary with Werner Herzog;
• On-set documentary (1979, 13 mins): promotional film featuring candid interviews with Werner Herzog and Klaus Kinski;
• Original theatrical trailer;
• Stills gallery;
• Illustrated booklet with a new essay by Laurie Johnson, full film credits and on-set photographs.
Product details
RRP: £22.99 / cat. no. BFIB1172 / Cert PG
Germany, France / 1979 / colour / German language, with optional English subtitles; English language / 107 mins / Original aspect ratio 1.85:1 / BD50 / 1080p / PCM 1.0 mono audio (48k/24-bit) and 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio
Aguirre, Wrath of God
A film by Werner Herzog
Starring Klaus Kinski
A visceral, ambitious exploration of megalomania and savage beauty, Aguirre, Wrath of God remains one of Herzog's most brilliant achievements and one of German cinema’s totemic masterpieces.
Coming to Blu-ray for the first time on 19 May 2014 in a Limited Edition SteelBook™, it will also be included in mammoth Herzog Blu-ray and DVD box sets released in July. The SteelBookTM contains both English and German versions of Aguirre, four other Herzog films, including Last Words and Fata Morgana, and feature-length audio commentaries with the director for both Aguirre and Fata Morgana.
Shot entirely on location in the wild Amazonian jungle near Machu Picchu, Aguirre, Wrath of God stars the legendarily volatile Klaus Kinski as Don Lope de Aguirre, a power-crazed sixteenth-century explorer who leads a troupe of conquistadors on a doomed expedition in search of El Dorado, the fabled ‘City of Gold’.
This was Herzog’s first of five tempestuous collaborations with Kinski who gave what is arguably his greatest ever performance as Aguirre. With his sinister, tilting walk and demonic gaze, Kinski endows Aguirre with an eerie restraint, a threatening unpredictability.
Integral to the film is the hypnotic score by Florian Fricke of Krautrock band Popol Vuh.
Special features
• Limited Edition SteelBook™;
• Original mono audio (German and English);
• Alternative 5.1 Surround audio (German);
• The Unprecedented Defence of the Fortress Deutschkreuz (Werner Herzog, 1967, 16 mins): symbolic drama about four young men hiding from an imagined enemy;
• Last Words (Werner Herzog, 1968, 13 mins): short film about the last man to leave a former leper colony;
• Precautions Against Fanatics (Werner Herzog, 1969, 11 mins): short satire about horse-racing enthusiasts;
• Fata Morgana (Werner Herzog, 1971, 77 mins): hallucinatory film exploring mirages and the Mayan creation myth;
• Feature-length audio commentaries with Werner Herzog for both Aguirre, Wrath of God and Fata Morgana;
• Original theatrical trailer;
• Stills gallery;
• Illustrated booklet with a new essay by Laurie Johnson, full film credits and on-set photographs.
Product details
RRP: £22.99 / cat. no. BFIB1169 / Cert PG
Germany / 1972 / colour / German language, with optional English subtitles; English language / 93 mins / Original aspect ratio 1.33:1 / BD50 / 1080p / PCM 1.0 mono audio (48k/24-bit) and 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio
I just saw the DCP of this, and it's utterly beautiful. Given that it was originated on 16mm, you're seeing practically everything that was originally captured on film, and probably more than you've ever seen before, in any format. I have extremely high hopes for the BFI Blu.MichaelB wrote:Full specs announced for Aguirre: Wrath of God:
Wow, so they were actually lugging a 35mm camera up and down those mountains? I'd always believed it was 16mm, with all that big, beautiful grain.David M. wrote:This is actually 35mm, not 16.
This looks terrific. Plus, my first Steelbook.MichaelB wrote:The Beaver on Nosferatu.