Daredevil (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)
Mark Steven Johnson: Writer
Arnon Milchan: Producer
Avi Arad: Producer
Becki Cross Trujillo: Producer
Bernard Williams: Producer
Bill Carraro: Producer
Bruce Devan: Producer
20th Century Fox
| List Price: |
$19.98 |
| Amazon Price: |
$14.99 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$2.10 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$0.34 |
| Total New: |
73 |
| Total Used: |
225 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner, Colin Farrell, Michael Clarke Duncan, Jon Favreau
- Director: Mark Steven Johnson
- Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Live, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Studio: 20th Century Fox
- Theatrical Release Date: Feb 14, 2003
- DVD Release Date: Jul 29, 2003
- Run Time: 103 minutes
- ASIN: B00005JLXE
- UPC: 007863675482
- Sales Rank: 16729
Amazon Customer Reviews:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
    Blu Ray Director's Cut, 2008-11-05
This film didn't have much of a chance when it came out. Fans of the comic were disdainful of the casting choices, Ben Affleck was in a paparazzi mess with J-Lo, the theatrical cut was hacked up to appeal to a younger audience..
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br /and yet, 5 years later, the director's cut is out on BluRay, and does not include the original theatrical version, a silent admission that Mark Steven Johnson's vision was the better of the two.
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br /'Daredevil' is an unusual superhero movie. It is a truer film-noir than most. The essential aspect of film noir not being just a dark visual palette, but a main character becoming more tightly ensnared in a web of tragedy that he can't escape from. Matt Murdock loses his sight, his father, his love, and as the violence escalates, finds little but faith to console him, and asks if it's enough. In the opening shot, he is bleeding, clinging to the concrete cross of the catholic church, and the film backtracks from his origin to his character's 'Dark night of the soul'.
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br /This reviewer found the vulnerability of the character, the fact that he's not 'super' much more interesting from an acting standpoint. Ben Affleck did get alot of bruises doing the stunts in the film and his performance has a true humility in certain scenes that hasn't been seen from him before or since.
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br /It's not perfect, though. There are many scenes that are meant to lighten the mood that seem sophomoric, Colin Farrel as Bullseye comes off as a psychotic irish clown rather than the smug, gritty villain he was on the page, Elektra gets nearly no backstory here that would add depth to her(though Jennifer Garner is certainly no slouch on the athletics). The restored plotline of the murder of prostitute Lisa Tazio makes the final fight between Daredevil and Kingpin alot more meaningful, but it lacks oomph... the film is trying to sell you the idea that by looking out for the little guy, you can beat the big guys.. and the origin scene punches this theme.. as does the finale.. it just stumbles a little with it in between.
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br /Blame Marvel for the issues, though. You can glimpse brilliance all throughout this picture, if only they had let the director do his job without burying the whole thing in marketing.
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br /As for the transfer, this film has never looked or sounded better, the night scenes are perfectly lit, very sharp, and the sound design, particularly in the 'radar sense' sequences is stunning in 5.1.
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br /Like the comic book character himself, this film is flawed, yet has hidden excellence(I privately add one star).
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    Sound that Shakes the Devil, 2008-10-22
If you are looking for 'earthquake' shaking bass, then get this movie. If your system can handle it this is a "DEMO"--show off your system quality soundtrack. If one complains that the bass is "boomy" it is because their SUB cannot handle the volume of EXTREME lows. From the opening credits and all throughout this film my concrete foundation shook with clean powerful gut-punching bass. The 24 bit DTS HD MA sound is reference quality. The sound design is reference quality. The use of surrounds is in a word "involving". It draws one into the action. Subtle (and not so subtle) surround usage brings the action aggressively into your room. You will find yourself ducking as Bullseye works his evil, deadly aim. If you can, engage the EX on your system, you will add another dimension to this excellent soundtrack. (In addition to my system sub, I have a 15" sub dedicated to the "surround" channels that thunders with this track)
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br /And while the video is not quite up to the audio standard, this film, which is shot mostly at night, reveals very good shadow detail and exhibits inky blacks without black crush. Day shots can be soft, but not enough to distract. The FX of Daredevil's "radar" sound produces a CGI visual explosion as it details what his visual mind extracts from his ultra sensitive hearing.
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br /The director's cut explores more character development than the theatrical cut. It makes the storyline more personal on all levels. It reveals the "story" behind the story. The pace is somewhat slower, but that slower pace raises the tension in the action scenes. Getting the detail on a character's motivation simply makes for better story telling. If you're looking for non-stop slam bang comic book action, then you might want to stay with the theatrical cut, which unfortunately is not available at this time on BD.
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