Frida
DVD Review:
Synopsis
Julie
Taymor directs this Oscar-winning biopic of Mexican painter
Frida Kahlo (Salma Hayek), focusing on her often rocky relationship
with husband Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina). Also known for
her controversial political and sexual reputation (she was
a communist and a bisexual), Frida struggled with a life of
wracking pain following an accident, the amputation of a leg,
and finally, drug and alcohol abuse that killed her at age
47.
The Video
FRIDA
appears in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1; the image has been enhanced
for 16X9 televisions. The picture is absolutely sharp and
certainly spotless. FRIDA proved to be consistently positive
in respects to its video transfer. Sharpness was solid.
The film looked crisp and detailed. I noticed no signs of
softness or fuzziness through out the presentation. Jagged
edges offered no concerns, and I noticed no signs of edge
enhancement. In regards to print flaws, I saw a couple of
spots but they were small and pretty inconsequential. Color
was accurate. All tones were clear, natural and brilliant.
Black levels and shadow detail was appropriately thick but
not overly deep. Ultimately, EMPIRE presented a very satisfying
picture.
The Audio
FRIDA
is presented in a Dolby Digital 5.1 track, which for the most
part provided a a solid encounter. The film predominantly
came across as a quite drama, however the mix showed nice
ambiance and created a convincing atmosphere during the appropriate
scenes. Dialogue was crisp and natural, with no signs of edginess.
Music was brilliant and clear, and it showed nice dynamic
range, as did the sound effects. Those effects always came
across as apparent and realistic, and during those louder
scenes, they packed a genuine thrash. All in all, FRIDA provided
a dependable listening event.
The Extras
Disc 1:
Feature film with commentary by director Julie Taymor
Selected
scenes commentary with composer Elliot Goldenthal
A conversation
with Salma Hayek
Disc 2:
American Film Institute Q&A with director Julie Taymor
Bill Moyers
interview with Julie Taymor
Chavela
Vargas interview
The voice
of Lila Downs
The vision
of Frida: with Rodrigo Prieto and Julie Taymor
The design
of Frida: with Felipe Fernandez
The music
of Frida: with Elliot Goldenthal and Salma Hayek
Salma
Hayek's recording session
Bringing
Frida Kahlo's life and art to film: a walk through real locations
Portrait
of an artist
"Amobea
Proteus" visual FX
"The
Brothers Quay" visual FX
Frida
Kahlo facts
Theatrical
trailer(s)
Summary
Nominated
for six 2002 Academy Awards including Best Actress for Selma
Hayek; FRIDA archives the true-life story of renowned Mexican
painter Frida Kahlo (Salma Hayek) who was crippled at a young
age and suffered through massive amounts of pain due to her
twisted back. Astonishingly Frida comes back from her injuries
and marries her mentor and famed painter Diego Rivera (Alfred
Molina) and their life together echoed their many works in
explicit detail. Diego had an unquenchable taste for sex and
women which tormented there lifelong bond. Frida lived a daring
and sorrowful life but produced some of the most attention-grabbing
art of her generation.
As a film,
FRIDA is bold and appealing. Its a film that captures
the mind of this tormented soul. Hayek is incredible as Frida.
Besides the performances there is quite a triumph in direction
as there are phenomenal blends between Fridas art and
real-life. The demanding part about FRIDA is the films
duration; it feels long as it constantly keeps slugging at
Frida's agonizing existence with and without Diego. In general
the performances were excellent but it was just way too long
to keep a viewer enthralled.
The DVD
presents excellent picture quality, basic audio and a very
reasonable amount of extras. I can only recommend the DVD
to individuals who enjoy this type of biographical drama.
DVD Rating:
4 out of 4
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of Frida and intellectual copyright holders of the
movies mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie,
characters, merchandise & storyline.