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Product Description DVD Special Features Interactive Menus Scene Access Language in Dolby Digital 5.1: English/French Subtitles: English/French/Arabic/Spanish/German/Romanian/English for the hearing impaired desertcart.co.uk Review Having developed his skill as a master of contemporary crime drama, writer-director Michael Mann displayed every aspect of that mastery in Heat , an intelligent, character-driven thriller from 1995, which also marked the first onscreen pairing of Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. The two great actors had played father and son in the separate time periods of The Godfather, Part II , but this was the first film in which the pair appeared together, and although their only scene together is brief, it's the riveting fulcrum of this high-tech cops-and-robbers scenario. De Niro plays a master thief with highly skilled partners (Val Kilmer and Tom Sizemore) whose latest heist draws the attention of Pacino, playing a seasoned Los Angeles detective whose investigation reveals that cop and criminal lead similar lives. Both are so devoted to their professions that their personal lives are a disaster. Pacino's with a wife (Diane Venora) who cheats to avoid the reality of their desolate marriage; De Niro pays the price for a life with no outside connections; and Kilmer's wife (Ashley Judd) has all but given up hope that her husband will quit his criminal career. These are men obsessed, and as De Niro and Pacino know, they'll both do whatever's necessary to bring the other down. Mann's brilliant screenplay explores these personal obsessions and sacrifices with absorbing insight, and the tension mounts with some of the most riveting action sequences ever filmed--most notably a daylight siege that turns downtown Los Angeles into a virtual war zone of automatic gunfire. At nearly three hours, Heat qualifies as a kind of intimate epic, certain to leave some viewers impatiently waiting for more action, but it's all part of Mann's compelling strategy. Heat is a true rarity: a crime thriller with equal measures of intense excitement and dramatic depth, giving De Niro and Pacino a prime showcase for their finely matched talents. --Jeff Shannon
| Actors | Al Pacino, Jon Voight, Robert De Niro, Tom Sizemore, Val Kilmer |
| Asin | B00004CZQV |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 - 2.35:1 |
| Director | Michael Mann |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Language | English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| Manufacturer Reference | Z1 14192 |
| Media Format | PAL, Widescreen |
| Number Of Discs | 1 |
| Producers | Michael Mann |
| Product Dimensions | 19.3 x 13.5 x 1.5 cm; 60 g |
| Release Date | 29 Oct. 1999 |
| Run Time | 2 hours and 43 minutes |
| Studio | Warner Home Video |
| Subtitles | Arabic, Bulgarian, Dutch, English, French, German, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish |
| Writers | Michael Mann |
User
Amazing.
A superb movie great cast and action. Looks amazing on blu ray.
User
"I do what I do best, I take scores. You do what you do best, try to stop guys like me." Two screen giants in a PERFECT film!
PERFECTION! There is simply no other words to describe this film! An impressive, perfectly directed, perfectly casted, psychologically interesting and ultimately heartbreaking story about policemen and criminals, as good as the best film noir classics from the 40s and 50s. Below, more of my impresions, with some limited SPOILERS.This is the story of a gang of ruthless bank robbers, who don't hesitate to kill if they are forced to. There is the impressive leader, Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro), sniper/compulsive gambler and youngest member of the band Chris Shiherlis (Val Kilmer, in one of his best roles EVER!), adrenaline junkie Michael Cheritto (Tom Sizemore) and a stoic, strangely charismatic Latino thug known simply as Trejo (played, of course, by Danny Trejo). They all met in high security prison, they formed the gang after serving their time and they are determined not to go back. Ever.Following some events which you will have to discover by yourself they atract the attention of two people they would rather avoid. The first is an incredibly tough detective, Lieutenant Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino), who heads his own team of veterans with an iron hand. The second is a certain Mr Van Zamt (William Fichtner), money launderer for drug cartels - he is not himself very dangerous and as it turns out not even very bright, but he can throw an almost unlimited amount of money at any problem he wants and that has consequences. Serious ones... I will not say anything more about the story.The casting is perfect, simply perfect. All main actors gave everything they could and even secondary and third range roles were played optimally, like those held by Jon Voight, Ashley Judd and young Natalie Portman. It is a long film (170 minutes) but not even one second was wasted. The amount of work put in making of this masterpiece is staggering as every scene, every decoration, every line of dialog were clearly reviewed and polished with utmost care. The scenario is VERY GOOD, strong, logical, rich in details - a very rare thing nowadays in Hollywood... The director also used some tricks, like a short moment when we see people through a termal vision camera - and that is an AMAZING moment! At one moment the hero and the villain will have a parley - rarely did I see such a great moment of cinema as the calm, polite but filled with deadly meance conversation around a cup of coffee between screen giants Al Pacino and Robert De Niro in "Heat"...There is only a couple of action scenes and they are all good, but THE scene of THE main shootout is breathtaking, simply breathtaking - this is EXACTLY as action but also war movies should be made! This is a violent movie, but violence is also kept under control, at exactly the needed level. This is also a tragic film, exactly as the best American film noir classics from the 40s and 50s but there are also accents taken from French gangster movies from the 50s, 60s and early 70s, which were and still are real monuments of cinema.Finally, there is the ending; it is a long one but the tension is maintained at the maximum level all the time. Also, the ending is right - tragic but morally right and that is another very strong point, too rare in modern cinema...I could go about this film much longer but I will stop here to avoid any temptation to give more spoilers... For my personal taste this is one of those films which simply reached PERFECTION! I will never part with my DVD and I will definitely watch and rewatch it again and again. ENJOY!
User
Twice as nice
I've watched this gripping, fascinating movie a few times since its release, but recently decided I wanted to know more about how it was made, and so bought the two-disc DVD edition. The film itself is a masterpiece: an expertly-wrought portrayal of two men in conflict: Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino), a tenacious, idiosyncratic police officer, and Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro), a smart, calculating thief. The story is ostensibly about Hanna's pursuit of McCauley and his gang following an armed robbery on the streets of LA, but the other components which have been added - including depictions of their women and private lives, their colleagues, the city and environments in which they work - make this a fully-realised, three-dimensional epic which repays repeated viewing. For example, I hadn't previously noticed the link between McCauley's dismissive response when Hanna asks him - in that justly celebrated face-to-face encounter over a cup of coffee in the middle of the chase - whether he'd ever wanted a normal life ("What the f*** is that? Barbecues and ballgames?") and the moment in their next meeting in the parking lot of a downtown supermarket when McCauley's shooting at Hanna, but hits... barbecues (amongst a lot of other things).In addition, there's the pleasure of watching great actors (which includes a very strong supporting cast, featuring Val Kilmer, Ashley Judd, Kevin Gage, Hank Azaria, Dennis Haysbert and others) making their craft appear effortless. In particular, Pacino plays Hanna as a man apparently (or pretending to be) just on the edge, especially in interrogation scenes: there's a classic moment when he does something unexpected when talking to Hank Azaria's character, and Azaria's look of unsettled astonishment is totally genuine. De Niro's reading of McCauley is someone who doesn't want to be recognized or remembered, but who's surprised to find himself making an emotional connection with the innocent Eady (Amy Brenneman). And then there are the intensely realistic action set-pieces - especially the bank heist with the unforgettable sound of gunshots echoing off the sides of the crystal canyons of downtown LA - which make everything else you've ever seen in this genre appear stale or derivative.The extras on this set include a detailed audio commentary film track from director Michael Mann, three trailers, an hour-long documentary about the making of the film, and two short features about the Pacino / De Niro coffee scene and the scouting of locations for the film. They provide a lot of entertaining and interesting detail about how the film came to be and how it was made, so if you're as much a fan as I am, it's a recommended purchase.
User
A near perfect film
This film has never been topped in its genre. Even Mann himself hasn't come close. The pacing is perfect, the music is excellent, the characters are meaty, the performances are unforgettable, the plot is gripping for the full 2 hrs 40 min, the cinematography is icey cool and the bouts of action are hard-hitting realism at its best. All these achievements aside, at the heart of this movie, is a lesson about choices, last chances, and knowing when enough is enough.The parallels drawn between the law and criminals are made throughout, highlighting the similarities of men beholden to a life of danger and risk, living on pure adrenaline, and the sacrifices to their personal lives their actions entail.In many ways, it's a film about commitment, to a job or to intimacy, about single-minded men who are obsessed with 'the work', stuck on a ride they can't get off of and unable to change their ways before their personal lives crash and burn. It's about situations when there are no good or right choices, just a list of things you have to do to get the job done and the things you lose in the process.Likewise, there are no good or bad guys in the traditional sense here, aside from one or two characters. There are only shades of grey. But, you like almost everyone in this film, rooting for the bad guys to get away, whilst wanting the cops to just go home empty-handed but safe with their families. It's an odd dynamic but it works so well.Anyway, this film leaves me in a state of awe at how perfect it is. In an age where content is king and talent is spread out so thin across countless TV shows, streaming services, and interminable superhero franchises, this film makes you fall in love with cinema again. It is stylish, atmospheric, gritty, real, understated, masterful, and made with passion. This is the film Christopher Nolan wanted to make but ended up making Batman movies instead.
User
Utterly brilliant. The film that Blu-ray was invented for!
Having watched Heat more times than I care to remember, due to it being my favourite movie of all time, its release on Blu-ray was my first must-have purchase for the format. And it didn't disappoint; if anything the Blu-ray delivery is in some ways a re-release, because the sheer beauty and technical magnificence of Heat has been reawoken.Seeing it as sharp and crisp as possible on Blu-ray was as close to being able to watch it again as a first-timer - breathtaking. Some movies just don't upscale well; upgrading them to a near-perfect format either exposes faults that were smudged out by the lower-res picturing of VHS or a less than impressive DVD transfer, or the film just doesn't stand up to the kind of intensity required, a better format not necessarily equaling greater enjoyment. Heat, however, is not one of these films.If anything, Mann's epic neo-noir love letter to LA and its brooding electric light of night is arguably the perfect film for the Blu-ray format. The contrast of colour-to-black is genuinely stunning, almost as if the film was made with today's technology (rather than fifteen years ago), and the film serves up even more, now adding its subtleties to any already solid blend of brilliant direction, casting, performance and writing. Like the recent fanfare surrounding the Beatles' remastering, I would argue that Heat reaching Blu-ray is the motion picture equivalent: an already brilliant piece of film-making simply gets deeper and more compelling, proves even more confounding such is its perfection.My one criticism (and the reason this Blu-ray came in on four stars and not five) is that I too had to play around with the sound before I could get a decent balance between dialogue and effects. Fiddling with the balance between my stereo TV and an additional amplifier and stereo speakers was okay eventually, but it would appear that this Blu-ray was single-mindedly balanced for multi-speaker viewing. Which is a bit of a shame, and may impair some people's enjoyment.PS: There was some concern on the internet pre-release that several minutes had been excised. I can confirm that it hasn't; or if it has (and I was keeping a cautionary eye out) I genuinely didn't notice.
User
You don't live with me, you live among the remains of dead people.
Heat is written and directed by Michael Mann. It stars Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Tom Sizemore, Diane Venora, Ashley Judd, Amy Brennerman and Danny Trejo. Music is scored by Elliot Goldenthal and cinematography by Dante Spinoti.Big time thief Neil McCauley (DeNiro) is after one last major score before he retires, but hot on his tail is Vincent Hannah (Pacino), a cop equally and methodically as driven as he is himself.In the build up to Heat's release, much was made of it being the first on screen pairing of DeNiro and Pacino. A mouthwatering prospect for sure, it proved to be worth the wait and unfolds as a lesson in restrained acting with two modern greats affording each other the respect that was due. What we didn't realise in the build up to the film's release, was that it would prove to be one of the greatest cops and robbers movies of all time, brought to us by an auteur director whose kink for realism and commitment to research stands him out from much of the modern directing pack.Rarely does a film come together as one, where all the cogs of the engine are in tune, but Heat is one such picture. From cast performances to visual aesthetics, to screenplay and actual substance of story, Heat is as meticulous as it is thrilling. There are a myriad of characters brilliantly stitched together in one de-glamorised City of Angels, as plot develops, and each character and their crumbling relationships come under inspection, we are witnessing a coarse viewpoint of human nature, where people's lives are ended or defined by their choices. Everywhere you look, here, there are folk cracking under the strain of being exposed to high end crime, dreams, hopes and happiness are unlikely to be achieved, and this is on both sides of the law.For Heat, Mann fuses the tonal and visual ticks of Manhunter with that of the adrenalin rushes from Last of the Mohicans, with the former gorgeously born out by Spinoti's pin sharp photography, the latter thrillingly realised by Mann's skill at action set pieces. Once again word of mouth about the key heist and shoot out in the film led to high expectation, and again there is no disappointment. L.A. becomes a battle ground, rapid gunfire punctures the air, cars swerve and crash, bodies fall, visually and aurally it drags you to the edge of your seat, an extended action sequence fit to sit with the best of them. The kicker as well is that because Mann has been so detailed in his characterisations, we care about what happens to all parties, we understand motives and means. Which in a film with such a huge support cast is quite an achievement.There is enough in Heat to fill out a dozen other cops and robbers films, fans of neo-noir and crime films in general are spoilt supreme here. It's not rocket science really, put a group of great actors together, give them an intelligent script to work from and let them be guided by a director who will not sit still, and you get a great film. Heat, the ultimate predator and prey movie, where from beginning to end it refuses to be lazy or cop out, and energy and thought seeps from every frame. 10/10
User
Hot action
Although Manhunter is my favourite Michael Mann film, Heat is a far more polished exercise in movie making. Stylish, well photographed and fast-paced, but with elements of slower, more thoughtful action. You can often feel more empathy with the villain than the hunter at times. Despite their limited screen time together, you'd feel that Pacino and De Niro had been action opposite each other for years, even though this was their first joint effort as far as shared screen-time goes (they were never together in Godfather II).Val Kilmer receives a lot of heat (pun intended) for his performance, but I feel that is unjustified as his character isn't fleshed out enough, possibly deliberately so as not to detract from the two main stars' roles.The primary extra (along with Mann's commentary) is a hour-ling making of documentary. It's interesting but not an essential watch in my opinion. The picture quality is (as you'd hope) a big step up from my old VHS copy, which I'd never replaced with a DVD.All in all, a very enjoyable watch which should lead to repeat viewings for most people.
User
Finally, a truly Definitive version of Heat (Sort of..)
Arrived a few days early which is great, but what is even better is the quality of the Blu, the 4k restoration is just stunning. I finally have a copy of the film worthy of its excellence (after a VHS, DVD and BluRay copy) and to a certain extent, it was like watching the film for the first time again.An outstanding film of pure excellence the Q&A sections are insightful but the doc is as per previous releases. Surely it is about time there is a comprehensive Mann Documentary.Now all I need is The Insider on R2 Blu Ray, Last of the Mohican and The Keep 3 hour cuts to keep me happy.One slight issue this is the version where two lines, both great are removed and I do not have a reason why? maybe someone can let me know I have not been able to find out. Diane Venora "You sift through the detritus..." and Al Pacino's "Ferocious, aren't I". A minor quibble and the shear brilliance of the visuals make up for it.
User
好きな作品を安く購入出来て満足
UHDが鑑賞出来る様になったので迷っていたのですが日本版の半額で購入できて満足してます。海外版ソフトの紹介サイトでアメリカ版でも日本語が収録されているとの情報があったのですがやはり現物を確認するまでは少し心配でしたが大丈夫でした。これから購入しようと迷っている方はこちらの方が安価で財布に優しいですよ。他の作品だとUHDは日本語対応だがBDは日本語対応ではないパターンがあるのですがこれは大丈夫です!
User
Heavenly Heroes!! The one stop shop for exclusive Blu-ray collection
A big thanks to HeavenlyHeroes!!! For getting this version of HEAT to India!!! Have been longing to buy this since a year!!! The packaging was well done considering the transit time. If you are searching for exclusive list of Blu-ray movies then HeavenlyHeroes is the point of contact!! Endorse and encourage physical media !!!
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HEAT [1995 / 2017] [Director’s Definitive Edition] [2 Blu-ray Discs]
HEAT [1995 / 2017] [Director’s Definitive Edition] [2 Blu-ray Discs] Michael Mann Made His Coolest Film Ever! Michael Mann Shows Two Hollywood Heavyweights Burns As Brightly As Ever!Oscar winners Al Pacino and Robert De Niro both drive one of the most powerful and complex crime dramas of all time and four-time Oscar nominees Michael Mann's classic ‘HEAT’ [1995], and arriving in an all-new Director's Definitive Edition from Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.In the wake of a precision heist of an armoured van, the crew of a fierce, professional thief [Robert De Niro] and an obsessively driven LAPD detective [Al Pacino] are locked in deadly opposition as they vector towards each other in Mann's dazzling, twilight vision of Los Angeles. As the stakes escalate and their lives begin to unravel, the crew initiates it’s most dangerous and complex heist.Taking inspiration from the late Chicago police detective Chuck Adamson, who killed the actual Neil McCauley in a shootout in 1963. ‘HEAT’ was the culmination of years of research by Michael Mann, resulting in its depth and range of characters and choreography of action. With its epic scale and stunning performances from Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Tom Sizemore, Ashley Judd, Amy Brenneman, Diane Venora, Natalie Portman and Jon Voight. ‘HEAT’ is as incendiary as it was 20 years ago. ‘HEAT’ sizzles with hard-hitting action and gripping suspense! The Blu-ray release has been sourced from a NEW 4K Re-mastered negative of the film, supervised by director Michael Mann.FILM FACT: To make the long shootout more realistic they hired British ex-Special Air Service Special Forces sergeant Andy McNab as a technical weapons trainer and adviser. Andy McNab designed a weapons training curriculum to train the actors for three months using live ammunition before shooting with blanks for the actual take and worked with training them for the bank robbery. Principal photography for ‘HEAT’ lasted 107 days. All of the shooting was done on location, Michael Mann deciding not to use a soundstage.Cast: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Tom Sizemore, Diane Venora, Amy Brenneman, Ashley Judd, Mykelti Williamson, Wes Studi, Ted Levine, Dennis Haysbert, William Fichtner, Natalie Portman, Tom Noonan, Kevin Gage, Hank Azaria, Susan Traylor, Kim Staunton, Danny Trejo, Henry Rollins, Jerry Trimble, Martin Ferrero, Ricky Harris, Tone-Lõc, Begonya Plaza, Hazelle Goodman, Ray Buktenica, Jeremy Piven, Xander Berkeley, Rick Avery, Brad Baldridge, Andrew Camuccio, Brian Camuccio, Max Daniels, Vince Deadrick Jr., Charles Duke, Thomas Elfmont, Kenny Endoso, Kimberly Flynn, Steven Ford, Farrah Forke, Hannes Fritsch, Amanda Graves, Emily Graves, Niki Harris, Ted Harvey, Patricia Healy, Paul Herman, Cindy Katz, Brian Libby, Bill McIntosh, Dan Martin, Rick Marzan, Terry Miller, Paul Moyer, Daniel O'Haco, Mario Roberts, Phillip Robinson, Thomas Rosales Jr., Rainell Saunders, Kai Soremekun, Rey Verdugo, Wendy L. Walsh, Yvonne Zima, Monica Lee Bellais (uncredited), Peter Blackwell (uncredited), Trevor Coppola (uncredited), Bud Cort (uncredited), Michele Edison (uncredited), Mick Gould (uncredited), Mary Kircher (uncredited), David Koseruba (uncredited), Darin Mangan (uncredited), Melissa S. Markess (uncredited), Darren Melton (uncredited), Robert Miranda (uncredited), Manny Perry (uncredited), Iva Franks Singer (uncredited), Jimmy Star (uncredited), Gloria Koehn Straube (uncredited), Viviane Vives (uncredited) and Tim Werner (uncredited)Director: Michael MannProducers: Arnon Milchan, Art Linson, Gusmano Cesaretti, Kathleen M. Shea, Michael Mann and Pieter Jan BruggeScreenplay: Michael MannComposer: Elliot GoldenthalCinematography: Dante Spinotti, A.I.C. (Director of Photography)Image Resolution: 1080p [Technicolor]Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 [Anamorphic]Audio: English: 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, French: 5.1 DTS-HD, Spanish [Castilian], German: 5.1 DTS-HD, Português: 5.1 DTS-HD, English: 2.0 Dolby Digital Stereo, Spanish: 2.0 Audio Commentary, French: 2.0 Audio Commentary and German: 2.0 Audio CommentarySubtitles: English SDH, Spanish, French, Spanish [Castilian], Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Norwegian, Português [Brazilian], Swedish, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Mandarin, Português, Romanian and HindiRunning Time: 170 minutesRegion: All RegionsNumber of discs: 2Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment / Regency Enterprises / Warner Bros. / Forward PassAndrew’s Blu-ray Review: ‘HEAT’ [1995] is perhaps the ultimate guy bonding type film. Directed by Michael Mann, the film tells the story of two not-so-very-different men. One, an LAPD homicide detective named Lt. Vincent Hanna [Al Pacino], is so consumed by his work that he is failing his third marriage and prowls the streets of Los Angeles like a wolf, stalking those who would do wrong, while his personal life falls into ruin. The other, a professional criminal named Neil McCauley [Robert De Niro] who is simply doing what he knows best, armed robbery and he also lives a lonely existence, making no personal connections that he couldn’t walk out on at a moment’s notice. Neil McCauley and his crew are after one last score a bank heist that could land them more than $12 million. As these two hardened pros go about their business, they gradually become aware of one another predator and prey and each begins to gain a certain respect for the other. But both also know that they’re on a collision course: In the end, only one will be left standing.There are the questions posed by Heat, which uses the predator-versus-prey narrative of expert thief Neil McCauley [Robert De Niro] outrunning dogged Lt. Vincent Hanna [Al Pacino] to explore these remarkably similar archetypes of lone wolf masculinity. Neil McCauley is introspective, self-contained in his “alone but not lonely” universe, a career criminal with a talent for big money scores. He has an allegiance and understanding with his crew, but no room in his life for any lasting connection. As he says repeatedly, he refuses attachment to anything he’s unwilling to walk out on if he feels the heat around the corner.Vincent Hanna, on the other hand, is explosive and spontaneous. His interrogation of a suspect involves him bursting into song, then musing whether the suspect fell in love last night, then shrieking, “Gimme all you got! Gimme all you got!” He’s hungry for the chase and working all hours of day and night while his third wife Justine [Diane Venora] passes him “on the downward slope of a marriage.” Robert De Niro may have the better role, a tragic protagonist whose moral values get pushed to their limit, whereas Al Pacino gets all the best dialogue. But these characters don’t know how to do anything else, and don’t much want to either. It’s a sentiment that lies in the tradition of American individualists. There’s something comforting about applying knowledge to the point where it becomes instinct, and if these guys weren’t cops or robbers we could admire them the way we admire the mechanic who fixes our car when it’s broken down. As Lt. Vincent Hanna and Neil McCauley prove time and again, unless you happen to be working with them and speaking their language.Michael Mann's masterpiece is a 170 minutes crime epic, a love/hate letter the city of Los Angeles, a scathing Balzacian and literary adjective view of a society corrupt from top to bottom, and a vision of the universe as a space contested over by the fractious armies of crime and the law. Opening with a spectacular armoured-car robbery that degenerates into mass murder, and the film ‘HEAT’ follows the consequences of the raid, the plans for its successor, the response of the police, led by detective Vincent Hanna and the consequences of it all for wives, families, girlfriends and innocent bystanders.The cops and the crooks are both constituted like armies, with generals, ranks and special skills assigned and doppelgangers in the opposing team. Michael Mann is less interested in moral questions than in professionalism as a code worth adhering to, no matter which side of the law one finds oneself on. Michael Mann's equal sympathies for both sides are always evident and say he also loves Los Angeles at night, and rarely has it been evoked as beautifully as it is here, as does the film respect the same genre scenario to great effect.HEAT MUSIC TRACK LISTINGALWAYS FOREVER NOW (Music by Passengers) [Performed by Passengers]LATE EVENING IN JERSEY (Written by Brian Eno) [Performed by Brian Eno]LAST NITE (Written by Terje Rypdal) [Performed by Terje Rypdal and The Chasers]FORCE MARKER (Written by Brian Eno) [Performed by Brian Eno]MYSTERY MAN (Written by Terje Rypdal) [Performed by Terje Rypdal]NEW DAWN FADES (Written by Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Bernard Sumner and Stephen Morris) [Performed by Moby]GOD MOVING OVER THE FACE OF THE WATERS (Written by Moby) [Performed by Moby]THE MONKEY KING (Written by William Orbit) [Performed by William Orbit]THE LAST LAGOON (Written by William Orbit) [Performed by William Orbit]GRINGATCHO DEMENTO (Written by William Orbit and Cleo Torez) [Performed by William Orbit]THE MIGHTY LIMPOPO Written by William Orbit) [Performed by William Orbit]ULTRAMARINE (Written by Michael Brook) [Performed by Michael Brook]ARAB AGONY (Written by Timothy Booth), Lawrence Gott, James Glennie and Brian Eno) [Performed by James]LA BAS: SONG OF THE DROWNED (Written by Lisa Gerrard) [Performed by Lisa Gerrard]CELON (Written by Lisa Gerrard) [Performed by Lisa Gerrard]GLORADIN (Written by Lisa Gerrard) [Performed by Lisa Gerrard]IN NOVEMBER (Written by David Darling) [Performed by David Darling]BLACK CLOUD (Written by Steve Roach and Elmar Schulte) [Performed by Solitaire]ARMENIA (Written by Blixa Bargeld, Mark Chung, Alexander Hacke, Jon Caffery, Frank Strauss and Andrew Chudy) [Performed by Einstürzende Neubauten]THE THRILL IS GONE (Written by Roy Hawkins and Rick Darnell) [Performed by B.B. King]WILL GAINES (Written by Eric Clapton) [Performed by Eric Clapton]BY THE TIME I GET TO PHOENIX (Written by Jimmy Webb)TOP O’ THE MORNING TO YA (Written by Eric Schrod, Leon Demant and Willie Dixon) [Performed by House of Pain]CONCERTO FOR VIOLONCELLO AND ORCHESTRA (Written by György Ligeti) [Performed by Jean-Guihen Queyras and The Ensemble InterContemporain] [Conducted by Pierre Boulez]GET UP TO THIS (Written by Derrick Gumbus and Loren Chaney) [Performed by New World Beat]STEEL CELLO LAMENT (Written by Elliot Goldenthal) [Performed by Elliot Goldenthal]Blu-ray Image Quality – 20th Century Fox’s new Blu-ray disc gives us the ultimate and brilliant 1080p image presentation and especially combined with a spectacular 2.39:1 aspect ratio, and has been remastered from a brand new 4K scan and restoration supervised by Michael Mann himself, and definitely improves over the upon Warner Bros. 2009 Blu-ray image in virtually every bit as good. Something that is obvious right from the start is that the colour timing is much improved and is much more richly saturated now and much more natural also, yet still have that just slightly desaturated look that is true to this films image quality. The night sky and shadows are more truly black in some scenes now. Overall image detail exhibits greater refinement, crisp yet clean looking even given the occasional optical softness and the film was shot with anamorphic lenses, and the grain texture is more subtle and refined. This is a very film-like image, with not a hint of digital filtering. I’d love to see how an actual 4K Ultra HD release could improve upon this and it’s too bad there isn’t one. Nevertheless, this is a significant step up visual upgrade.Blu-ray Audio Quality – 20th Century Fox’s new Blu-ray disc, previously offered us a 5.1 Dolby TrueHD mix, but this new edition has instead presented us with a 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio presentations. The new mix retains the smooth and natural staging of the previous mix, which turns very lively and dramatic in the action and atmospheric scenes, and adds a bit more oomph and sounds much fuller and even more engrossing, which gives the dramatic staging a bit more ambience sound experience. But when it comes to the dialogue scenes when they talk face to face, slightly annoyed me as they talked so quiet I had to crank the sound up a great deal. But when it comes to the surround sound activity it is very satisfying, with a nice mix, and very good all round speaker activity, especially near the end of the film when Al Pacino and Robert De Niro have the cat and mouse shoot out at the airport was totally awesome when the planes come into land, all the speakers are in full swing and you feel the planes are landing in your lounge, it is that realistic and the result is a highly immersive audio presentation and definitely gets a five star rating.Blu-ray Special Features and Extras:Audio Commentary by director Michael Mann: Here Michael man goes straight into talking about the film, and informs us about the first scene we view, which was the Blue line of the Los Angeles MTA [Los Angeles Metro Rail system] and was not open to the public when they shot that scene, and what we witness is actually the end of the line and it was shot two weeks before the official opening of the line. Michael Mann also says that when we start to see the main characters, we get to see an interacting of each character as the film builds up and of course how eventually we see how it all comes together by the end of the film. When we start to see all the criminals coming together at the start of the film, Michael explains that it is all based on real life criminals and their activities. When we first see Jon Voight, Michael mentions why he is called Nate, which relates to a character in the film ‘THIEF’ who was called Nate Grossman and the character of Sam Grossman was based on Nathan Grossman, the grandfather of a friend of Michael Mann, and is homage to someone who passed away a very long time ago. Michael Mann goes into great detail about all the main characters we get to view as the film progresses and also mentions that his daughter got to interview all the real wives of the criminals that have been portrayed in this film and again Michael Mann slowly reveals a much more in-depth histrionics towards all the main characters in the film to make them sound more realistic, even though they are portraying the real people who the film is based on. Michael also goes into great detail about the scene with local police informer and Michael says they never in real life tell the truth, and the scene with Al Pacino being very intimidating, does it to throw the police informer off balance, so it keeps them in check and hopefully will not have the police come back to interrogate them again, to take the heat off. When you see Al Pacino in the helicopter flying over nigh time in Los Angeles seeking out Robert De Niro on the highway, well Michael Mann states that shots of all the lights looks beautiful, well with one shot of inside the helicopter you see a small TV screen Al Pacino is looking at, well Michael informs us that this technology was perfected for the Vietnam War and is called a “FLIR” and means Forward Looking Infrared cameras for night time viewing and is typically used on military and civilian aircraft, use a thermographic camera that senses infrared radiation. I personally found Michael Mann’s audio commentary slightly monotonous and boring, especially half way through the film and near the end of the film with the final shootout with Al Pacino and Robert Di Nero where Michael Mann just states the obvious what we are viewing, in thinking we cannot work out for ourselves what is going on in certain scenes we are viewing. I just wish Michael Mann would stop talking for a while and gather his thoughts and speak again when something more interesting appears in the film that he can divulge some more interesting information about the film and the reason he shot a particular scene or the concept of what his audiences wanted to view. Personally I would have to only give a two star rating for this Michael Mann audio commentary.Special Feature: Filmmaker Panels: Here we get to view two very interesting individual special features and they are as follows:01. 2016 Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences Panel [2016] [1080p] [1.78:1] [63:00] The Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater was rocked with the sounds of applause and high-octane action on 7th September, 2016 when the cast and crew of the epic crime film ‘HEAT’ were reunited for a look at the making of this Los Angeles film milestone and they had just all viewed the film ‘HEAT’ and thirteen people are welcomed onto the stage who were all involved with the film and is moderated by Christopher Nolan [Director] who was greeted by a very enthusiastic sold-out crowd. I have no idea why they invited Robert De Niro, as he is the most boring person in the world and most the time he just sits there looking like he wished he had not been invited as he is useless. Unfortunately Val Kilmer had an infected swollen tongue and he had a terrible job trying to speak or to be understood and he sounded like the cartoon character Donald Duck. All in all this was a fascinating watch and very informative, especially from the guests on the stage, but sadly out of the twelve guests on the stage, sadly there were one or two of them did not get asked any questions, which is a shame. But despite this, it was a really interesting and fascinating session. Contributors include: Al Pacino [Actor], Robert De Niro [Actor], Michael Mann [Writer/Director/Producer], Amy Brenneman [Actress], Pieter Jan Brugge [Dutch Film Producer], William Goldenberg [Editor], Val Kilmer [Actor], Art Linson [Producer], Andy Nelson [Re-recording Mixer], Dante Spinotti, A.I.C. [Italian Cinematographer], Diane Venora [Actress] and Mykelti Williamson [Actor].02. 2015 Toronto International Film Festival [2015] [1080p] [1.78:1] [30:27]. One of the most ground-breaking crime dramas of its time, the film ‘HEAT’ celebrated its 20th anniversary at the Toronto International Film Festival with a screening of the film in a new 35mm print followed by a Q&A session with the director Michael Mann [Writer/Director/Producer], and was moderated by Jesse Wente. Michael Mann talks about how the film came about, which related to a real life crime incident in 1963 via one of Michael Mann’s friend Chuck Adamson [Former Chicago Police Officer] about the story of the notorious Neil McCauley criminal. In 1963, detective Chuck Adamson sat down in a Chicago coffee shop with a convicted bank robber. Rail thin and with careworn features, career criminal Neil McCauley had spent some 25 of his 49 years in and out of prison for a string of crimes ranging from theft to murder. But in spite of his repeated brushes with the law, Neil McCauley had no intention of going straight and with meeting with Michael Mann and Chuck Adamson, started the ball rolling that helped to bring us the awesome film ‘HEAT.’ Although this special feature is just over 30 minutes, it sure packs a lot fascinating information about the making of the film and interesting anecdotes from Michael Mann and is well worth viewing.Special Feature: The Making of ‘HEAT’ [2005] [1080i] [1.37:1] [59:12] Here we have the original documentary which is from the original inferior DVD, and it is split into three separate small documentaries on their own merit and they are TRUE CRIME; CRIME STORIES and INTO THE FIRE. A lot of ground is covered in this thorough and fascinating documentary about the making of the film ‘HEAT.’ The origin and fruition of the story and film is explained in great detail, as well as the overall love shared for this project by everyone involved through the many interviews with cast and crew members and we also get to view a plethora of film clips from the film ‘HEAT.’ I really enjoy these kinds of making-of features, so this was right up my alley. Contributors include: Michael Mann [Writer/Director/Producer], Chuck Adamson [Former Chicago Police Officer], Richard Lindberg [Author/Chicago Historian], Dennis Farina [Actor/Former Chicago Police Officer], Al Pacino [Actor/Vincent Hanna], Tom Elfmont [Technical Advisor/L.A.P.D.], Rey Verdugo [Technical Advisor/L.A. Sheriff’s Dept.], Jon Voight [Actor/Nate], Robert De Niro [Actor/Neil McCauley] (archive footage), Val Kilmer [Actor/Chris Shiherlis], Edward Bunker [Author: No Beast So Fierce], Dennis Haysbert [Actor/Breedan], Tom Sizemore [Actor/Michael Cheritto], Michael Waxman [First Assistant Director], Art Linson [Producer], Amy Brenneman [Actress/Eady], Mykelti Williamson [Actor/Drucker], Ami Canaan Mann [Second Unit Director], Bonnie Timmermann [Casting Director], Tom Noonan [Actor/Kelso], Pieter Jan Brugge [Dutch Film Producer], Dante Spinotti, A.I.C. [Italian Cinematographer], Ashley Judd [Actress/Charlene Shiherlis], Diane Venora [Actress/Justine Hanna], Tom Elfmont [Technical Advisor/L.A.P.D.], Andy McNab [Technical Weapons Trainer], Danny Trejo [Actor/Trejo], Michael "Mick" Gould [Technical Weapons Trainer], Neil Spisak [Film Production Designer], Chris Jenkins [Sound Mixer Engineer], Elliot Goldenthal [American Composer] and Moby [American Musician].Special Feature: Pacino and De Niro: The Conversation [2005] [1080i] [1.37:1] [9:59] Here we take a closer look at the diner scene that features the two leading male actors. The ghastly pan-and-scan released version of the film ‘HEAT’ that was originally released on VHS back in the 1990s led some people to think the actors were filmed separately and did not appear together onscreen in this restaurant scene, but thankfully those days of visually butchered films are long gone and this time Michael Mann explains how they filmed that very intense scene and both actors their performance without a rehearsal, as they felt it would be much more natural performance and it is definitely a tour de force performance. Contributors include: Jon Voight [Actor/Nate], Pieter Jan Brugge [Dutch Film Producer], Michael Mann [Writer/Director/Producer], Robert De Niro [Actor/Neil McCauley] (archive footage), Art Linson [Producer], James Wolcott [American Film Critic/Journalist], Al Pacino [Actor/Vincent Hanna], Ashley Judd [Actress/Charlene Shiherlis], Tom Sizemore [Actor/Michael Cheritto] and Dante Spinotti, A.I.C. [Italian Cinematographer].Special Feature: HEAT: Return to the Scene of the Crime [2005] [1080p] [1.78:1] [12:05] Here we take a visit to the Los Angeles locations used in the film ‘HEAT.’ Location manager Janice Polley and associate producer Gusmano Cesaretti helm this absorbing feature in which they discuss the photography and locales that Michael Mann utilised in the film. The pair gushes over Michael Mann's talent, but they also touch on plenty of topics that aren't explored elsewhere on this Blu-ray disc. What was interesting is that they go back to certain locations that were pivotal to the film and why they were used, which got the green light from Michael Mann and with each location we get clips from the film that relates to the modern day locations, but of course a lot of the locations in Los Angeles have changed dramatically since 1995. One aspect of a certain location that I found interesting, where they filmed the final showdown shoot out at the airport, which had to be filmed at midnight and they say what they did could not be filmed today, as there are too many safety issues, especially where Robert De Niro had to run in front of a Jumbo jet that had just landed. Contributors include: Janice Polley [Location Manager/Scout], Gusmano Cesaretti [Associate Producer], Jayne Mazzochi [Resident] and Lisa Glucksmann [Restaurant Worker].Special Feature: Additional Footage: Deleted Scenes [2005] [480p] [1.37:1] [9:44] Here we get to view a total of 11 deleted scenes, and they are as follows: SCENE 5: SEASON’S STARTING EARLY; SCENE 42: NICEST GUY ON THE BLOCK; SCENE 55: ALBERT AND HANNA [ALTERNATE TAKE]; SCENE 62: SHAKEDOWN; SCENE 76: MURDER IN C-BLOCK; SCENE 96A: LET’S DAMCE; SCENE 125: LATE ARIVAL; SCENE 148/147: WHERE’S ANNA; SCENE 177B: DOUBLE THE WORST TROUBLE; SCENE 191: NATE DELIVERS and SCENE 204A: NO RESPONSE. When viewed in the context of the finished product, they offer a nice lesson into how editing shapes a film of this calibre and how little things can have a big impact. Note that the temporary music was used, so they don’t reflect the final score for those scenes, had they been included. As usual, you can either watch each one individually or Play All.Theatrical Trailers [2005 [1080i] [1.37:1] [6:48] Here you get to view three excellent and dramatic Original Theatrical Trailers, that were entitled as follows: SURPRISE OF A LIFETIME; TWO ACTORS COLLIDE and CLOSING IN. As usual, you can either watch each trailer separately or Play All.Finally, if you haven’t picked up ‘HEAT’ before, or you feel you want to upgrade your inferior DVD, this is a totally worthwhile purchase, especially since you can find it very cheap now in lots of outlets. I’ve said it before and it bears repeating: Heat is just a great film that I can’t speak of more highly. I wish this new edition was available in 4K Ultra HD, but even so the restoration is impressive and the hour of added bonus content is a nice treat. If you’ve never seen Heat before, this is absolutely the version you want to buy on Blu-ray. If you’re already a fan and you have the previous edition, my advice is to sell it and upgrade immediately, as it is even more worthwhile upgrading this brilliant action packed film, even for those who have the earlier Blu-ray release. Very Highly Recommended!Andrew C. Miller – Your Ultimate No.1 Film AficionadoLe Cinema ParadisoUnited Kingdom
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one hell of a suspense film, superbly crafted and meticulously edited -- one of Mann's best, hands down
One of Mann's best, hands-down. The big news of course are DeNiro and Pacino, and they are great -- separately and in their big scene together. But the entire ensemble here is great -- Val Kilmer, Danny Trejo, Tom Sizemore, and Dennis Haysbert in the crew of criminals; Wes Studi, Ted Levine, Mykelti Williamson in the cop crew; Ashley Judd, Diane Venora, Natalie Portman, and Amy Brenneman in the women who suffer collateral damage hanging being involved with single-minded men; Tom Noonan, Hank Azaria, Jon Voight, William Fichtner, and Henry Rollins in bit parts that are nevertheless utterly believable. No one is wasted. The casting just feels so perfect, you can't imagine any other actors in these parts -- and everyone is so convincing in their roles they immerse you in the world of their characters.Pacino is, as usual, kind of over the top in some scenes, but its at least played as the kind of aggression and attitude a cop would use to intimidate criminals and maintain his edge, his authority, and probably his sanity. DeNiro is far more understated, but it serves his character as well -- the master thief, the planner, the plotter, the one who is cautious and canny enough to walk away when he feels the heat around the corner.The tension of the plot builds and builds to an inevitable conflict and confrontation. The people who complain this is too long and too boring are the types who need constant cross cuts and short cuts, who cannot sustain attention for long takes -- products of the music video/video game era. I saw this in theaters when it first came out and my bf and I were riveted and at the edge of our seats. We had no idea it was nearly 3 hours. It didn't feel like it at all.In a way this film is a lot about the consequences of one's actions -- in both the long term and in the long term, eg life long actions and choices. It is a crime film, but it isn't just a heist film. It's a meditation on the way past choices affect present and future choices (both quantity and quality), and affect the people close to us as well, like ripples spreading. It's a thoughtful examination of the relationship of cops and criminals, and the ironic similarities between the most driven of both. It's almost philosophical about the similarities in the single-mindedness and drive of the career criminal and career cop and the way they similarly de-prioritize everything else, including their close relationships with the women in their lives, if they have one.And yet, it's one hell of a suspense film, superbly crafted and meticulously edited. Everything -- the camera work, the composition within the frame, the cinematography, the soundtrack, the screenplay, the editing, the acting -- combines into a sleek greyhound of a story that runs, and keeps running -- and keeps you following, until the very end.
User
Excelente edición para una excelente película.
Sobre el envío:Llego super rápido, varios días antes de lo establecido. Además de venir muy bien empaquetado y en excelentes condiciones.Sobre el producto:Edición imprescindible para todo aquel que le guste este film o sea fan de la carrera de Michael Mann. Por lo que creo que no es necesario dar una descripción sobre la película ya que si piensas comprarla es por ya la has visto y sabes que se trata de una de las mejores películas de atracos y de acción de los noventas.Lo que verdaderamente destaca de esta edición es su material extra, el cual no es poco y brinda una mirada profunda y enriquecedora de la producción del filme y las personas y actores involucrados en su realización.La calidad de la imagen es muy buena así como el audio. Como se indica viene con las opciones de verse con subtitulos o audio en español.
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