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The Man Who Fell to Earth
1976 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 02/11/2003
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
2-Disc Set
Anamorphic
Audio:
DTS Surround 5.1 - English
Dolby Digital THX EX 6.1 - English
THX Mastered Audio
Additional Release Material:
Featurette - 1. WATCHING THE ALIEN
Trailers
Interactive Features:
Scene Access
Interactive Menus
Text/Photo Galleries:
Stills/Photos
Poster Art
DVD-ROM Features:
Screenplay
Time:
139
mins.
J&R Item # 1013204_8
UPC # 013131147797
Label: Anchor Bay Entertainment
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Buying Info
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The Man Who Fell to Earth
1976 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 09/27/2005
Features:
DVD Features:
Notes: This release is a newly restored High-Definition digital transfer supervised and approved by director Nicolas Roeg.
Region 1
Keep Case
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo - English
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - Nicolas Roeg - Director, David Bowie - Actor, and Buck Henry - Actor
Introduction - 1. David James (Stills, Photos, Introduction)
Audio Interview - 1.May Routh - Costume Designer
2. Brian Eatwell - Production Designer
Production Interview - 1. Paul Mayersbert - Screenwriter (New)
Trailer
T.V. Spots
Text/Photo Galleries:
Costume Sketches
Stills Gallery
Behind The Scenes Photos
Production And Publicity Stills
Gallery Of Posters
Additional Products:
Booklet Featuring New Essay By Film Critic Graham Fuller And An Appreciation Of Tevis By Novelist Jack Matthews
Time:
139
mins.
J&R Item # 1013204_9
UPC # 715515016629
Label: Criterion Collection
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Buying Info
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The Man Who Fell to Earth
1976 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 03/04/2008
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Widescreen
Audio:
Dolby Digital - English
Time:
139
mins.
J&R Item # 1013204_10
UPC # 013131578799
Label: Anchor Bay Entertainment
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Buying Info
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The Man Who Fell to Earth
1976 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 11/18/2008
Features:
Blu-Ray Disc Features:
Anamorphice Widescreen 2.35
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - English
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - David Bowie, Actor; Buck Henry, Actor
Interview - 1. Paul Mayersberg, Screenwriter - Video
2. PERFORMANCE - Candy Clark, Actor; Rip Torn, Actor - Video
3. May Routh - Costume Designer; Brian Eatwell; Production Designer
4. Walter Tevis, Author; Don Swaim, Interviewer
Trailers
Text/Photo Galleries:
Galleries
Posters
Stills/Photos
Additional Product:
Booklet - Essay - Graham Fuller, Critic
Time:
139
mins.
J&R Item # 1013204_11
UPC # 715515034128
Label: Image Entertainment, Inc.
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Buying Info
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In Nicolas Roeg's sci-fi tale based on the novel by Walter Tevis, a humanoid alien from a dried-up husk of a planet falls to Earth in a spaceship--and later falls again metaphorically through alcohol abuse and the manipulations of a hostile culture. Arriving as a secret ambassador from a dying world, the masquerading Mr. Newton (David Bowie) patents several basic devices, including a self-developing color film and music recordings in the shape of small silver balls, in order to amass the tremendous capital necessary to build a spaceship. Along the way he solicits the help of a crack patent lawyer (Buck Henry) and a country-fried small-town girl (Candy Clark) who introduces him to gin, which he soon begins to substitute for his customary glass of water. Newton debates the reality of returning to his dead world only to have the choice made for him when he is swept from the launchpad by government agents. After serving his time with men in black, he is released, blinded by x rays, into the world. As a last drunken hurrah, he records an album under the name the Visitor with the hope that it may someday be broadcast and heard by his family and friends back home.
Connected throughout by intercut clips of television programs, classic movies, and film soundtracks, THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH is an fine example of the postmodern technique of work referring to its own medium and history. Like much 1970s sci-fi, it is heavily indebted to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY; a scene in which an upset tray of cookies is juxtaposed with flying bodies echoes the film's flying bone and spaceship. Juxtaposing the free love enjoyed by Dr. Bryce (Rip Torn) with post-Altamont, pre-Reagan paranoia, Roeg's film manages to be at once artistically groundbreaking and a crystallization of the post-Summer of Love era.
4 stars out of 5 -- "[A] 1976 sci-fi masterpiece....[It] probes environmental degradation and the corporate state in ever-relevant terms."
-- Peter Relic
, (Rolling Stone)
"It remains visually stunning..." -- Grade: B -- Dalton Ross , (Entertainment Weekly) 3.5 stars out of 4 -- "Roeg is a true cinematic poet, but he's a determinedly modernist one..." -- Glenn Kenny , (Premiere) 4 stars out of 5 -- "THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH crowned Roeg as the heir to '60s time-tweaking experimental mentalists like Godard and Resnais." -- Andy Lowe , (Total Film) 3 stars out of 5 -- "[E]ntirely of its own kind, and at times mesmerising." -- Jonathan Romney , (Uncut) "[A] kaleidoscopic jumble of images and ideas....[With] some bravura camera and editing tricks..." -- Matthew Leyland , (Sight and Sound)
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