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Ned Kelly
Review:

Synopsis
Hounded
by the police, together with his first-generation Irish immigrant
family, Ned Kelly rebelled against a system that sought to punish
his family on trumped-up charges of attempted murder. Leading
a small gang of men including his young brother, Dan and two
friends, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne they gained support through
the towns they plundered despite their criminal reputation.
The folk hero status
of the Kelly gang posed such a threat to the government of the
day, that a law was passed that allowed ordinary citizens to
take arms against them in exchange for a large reward. However,
Ned and his friends became heroes of the underclass and, whilst
betrayed by some, no civilian drew a pistol against them. The
final dramatic showdown at the Inn at Glenrowan gave Kelly legendary
status.
Heath Ledger (A Knight's
Tale) takes up the title role alongside Naomi Watts (The Ring,
Mulholland Drive), Orlando Bloom (The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy)
and Laurence Kinlan (Angela's Ashes).
The
Films
The
story of Ned Kelly, a man who transcended from first-generation
immigrant to hero of the lands, has long captivated Australia.
A sweeping tale of injustices and flights from the law, culminating
in all-out war with the authorities and an emotional showdown
with the law are in store for viewers...
Kelly and his gang
have been immortalised in all manner of media and this film
from Gregor Jordan is the latest take on the tale. Heath Ledger
delivers his most serious and impressive performance to date
in the title role, while Orlando Bloom, Laurence Kinlan and
Phil Barantini play the remaining members of the history-making
group of outlaws.
As engrossing as
the historical chain of events may be, Jordan's film fails to
live up to its expectations. The flow of scenes often feels
unnatural, with jarring fluctuations in pacing or mood arousing
suspicions of heavy editing or rewriting at very late stages.
The middle section needs much lengthening and, although the
final third of Ned Kelly boasts the most action, the most coherent
viewing is to be found at the very beginning.
Ledger absorbs himself
admirably into his Kelly persona, albeit with periodic accent
struggles but Orlando Bloom, however, cannot shake off his prettyboy
reputation to convince with his tough character. Geoffrey Rush
and Naomi Watts, usually two class acts (particularly the former),
also disappoint, although through faults of the script and not
by their own doing. Rush needed more screen time to build up
his nemesis status against Kelly, while Watts has woefully little
impact upon the plot.
Overall, Ned Kelly
features striking cinematography, a stirring score and a number
of good scenes, but the end result fares less well than the
sum of its parts and the film is ultimately average.
Video
The
2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer accurately reproduces
the film on the small screen. The stylised colours are consistently
on target, while the black levels and sharpness are equally
strong.
The only grain is
that inherent from the film stock, leaving the only significant
complaint to be the small handful of ugly aliasing instances.
Overall, this is another very competent transfer from Universal
with only a few slip-ups.
Audio
Universal
have to be praised for their apparent admiration of the DTS
format, but, as is the case here, this love can often be a touch
overzealous. On this DVD, viewers are presented with a choice
between Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 audio streams but the
latter is not remotely required since this is a non-action film
with standard sound design - wasting space on such an upgrade
only serves to limit the quantity of supplements.
The tracks themselves
perform at the expected level of quality. Dialogue is clear
from the front, albeit poorly dubbed on occasion, while the
surrounds are used fairly well for score and a few directional
effects. In conclusion, the 5.1 tracks are solid given the genre,
but the DTS option was overkill and not worthy of a place on
the DVD.
Extras
In
light of the exclusion of a bonus disc and the inclusion of
the afore-mentioned DTS soundtrack, very little DVD data capacity
remains to store extras. As a result, fans will need only a
few moments to fully explore all of the bonus material on offer.
None of the cast
and crew feature in any audio commentary, so the 'Ned Kelly
In Popular Culture' featurette gets the ball rolling instead.
This broad 14 minute featurette contains a few snippets from
the world premiere, as well as explanation of the Kelly legend
and how earlier attempts to film the tale fared.
Up next are 'The
Real Kelly Gang' gallery and the poster gallery, both of which
are laughably unsubstantial, followed by the teaser trailer
and theatrical trailer. The final item is an 'Artist To Feature'
comparison that compares storyboards and costume designs with
their final feature equivalent.
Overall, the extras
will barely take 20 minutes to trawl through and fail to add
much added value to the title for purchasers - scrapping the
DTS soundtrack to make way for a commentary and/or additional
featurettes would have been a step in the right direction.
Feature 6/10
Video 8/10
Audio 7/10
Extras 3/10
Overall 6/10
DVD Bulletin
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Ned Kelly
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Ned Kelly
Info: |
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Stars:
Heath Ledger
Orlando Bloom
Naomi Watts
Geoffrey Rush
Director:
Gregor Jordan
Running Time:
105 minutes
Certificate:
15
Released:
9th February
Reviewed
by:
DVD Bulletin
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