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Dirty
Harry
Being
one of Warner Home Video's core assets, Don Siegel's 1971 Clint
Eastwood film, Dirty Harry, has long since undergone stereophonication
and upgraded image transfers. Warner released the title initially in
the beginning days of DVD and then put together a collector's edition
with improved colors and a few supplementary features. Warner has now,
however, upgraded the movie once more, issuing a Two-Disc Special Edition
with even better colors and a stronger soundtrack, and a Blu-ray release
that is better still. The film was made during a time when the quality
of film stock took a real dive, and the movie has always been somewhat
grainy, particularly in its many night sequences. The night sequences
on the new release, however, are solid black, and anything illuminated
in that blackness is, at the most, a touch soft. Colors are rich and
precise. Eastwood's complexion, which appears pale on both older releases,
has a healthy tan on the new release, and in the opening credits, the
word, 'Dirty,' which was brown before, is now blood red. The differences
between the DVD and the BD are subtler, but colors are more finely detailed
on the latter. The 5.1-channel Dolby Digital sound also seems to have
been overhauled. The music is deeper and more dimensional, and other
sounds, such as helicopters and gunfire, are more dimensional. It is
here that the BD, especially on its True HD audio track, shines, delivering
a sound mix that is as dimensional and engrossing as any contemporary
release. Lalo Schifrin's jazz score-which dovetails his San Francisco
jazz score for Bullitt perfectly-makes the movie seem larger
and more intimate at the same time, and the atmosphere it creates contributes
directly to the film's suspense. The DVD has French, Spanish, Portuguese,
and Japanese audio tracks in mono and optional English, French, Spanish
Portuguese and Japanese subtitles. The BD has 5 alternate foreign language
tracks and twelve optional subtitling tracks including English. The
DVD's movie platter also holds a trailer, a 7-minute promotional documentary
from 1971, and 27 minutes of retrospective interviews covering all of
the Dirty Harry films, all of which appeared on the previous
DVD release.
Additionally, film
critic Richard Schickel provides a relaxed but informative commentary
track, for the first time. He has thoroughly picked Eastwood's brain
on the film's creation and identifies the contributions Eastwood made
in choosing locations, actions and story points, as well as what Siegel
was responsible for. There are gaps in his talk and he is not adverse
to using double negatives as a way of softening his opinions, but his
talk is entertaining and he has many rewarding insights. On a complicated
night scene that Eastwood himself directed because Siegel was incapacitated:
"Clint was terribly pleased that he'd gotten this thing squeezed
out in a night. He kind of enjoyed sort of sticking it to the studio
and the studio bureaucracy, which had decreed that they'd have to spend
an expensive six days on this thing. So there is an analogy, I suppose,
between Eastwood's attitude toward bureaucratic authority, which has
never been a happy one, and the attitude of Dirty Harry, involved
as he is with a much more deadly and potent bureaucracy." He also
has many kind words for Andy Robinson's over-for-the top but
nevertheless underrated turn as the insane villain. "It's a terrific
performance. He really creeps right up to the edge of breaking down
on camera. I mean there is a notable lack of control in his portrayal
of psychopathy, when he's under pressure, in particular. It's a terrific
piece of nut job acting."
The second platter
holds two retrospective documentaries that are geared as much to marketing
home video product as they are to providing a historical perspective
upon the film at hand. The better of the two is a 58-minute profile
of Eastwood and his career, from 1993. The program is selective in the
films that it analyzes, but looks at both Warner and Universal releases
(as well as the United Artists Sergio Leone pictures), and gives attention
to such films as Honkytonk Man and High Plains Drifter,
as well as the more expected inclusions, such as Dirty Harry
and Unforgiven. The other is an original 25-minute retrospective
look at the Dirty Harry films and the first movie in particular,
drawing parallels to (Warner) westerns and providing an appreciation
of how well the series has held up over time. It is interesting to note,
however, that none of the supplements mentions David Fincher's
Zodiac (Feb 08), even though that movie provided an excellent
deconstruction of Dirty Harry and its source inspirations.
The BD contains
all of the special features found on the two DVD platters, as well as
a 30-minute retrospective documentary on the series that appeared on
the earlier DVD, and another Eastwood career profile, this one a PBS
American Masters program from 2000, running 87 minutes and looking at
an even wider array of Eastwood films.
August 14, 2008
DVD
Roundup: This Week's DVD Releases
The
Review Vault
- by
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Pratt's DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter
is published monthly.
For a free sample, call (516)594-9304 or go to his
website at www.DVDLaser.com