The
Royal Tenenbaums DVD Review:
The Movie
Royal
Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman ) and his wife Etheline (Anjelica
Huston ) had three children and then they separated. Chas
(Ben Stiller) started buying real estate in his early teens
and seemed to have an almost preternatural understanding of
international finance. Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) was a playwright
and received a Braverman Grant of fifty thousand dollars in
the ninth grade. Richie (Luke Wilson ) was a junior champion
tennis player and won the U.S. Nationals three years in a
row. Virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums
was subsequently erased by two decades of betrayal, failure,
and disaster. Most of this was generally considered to be
their father's fault. The Royal Tenenbaums is the story of
the family's sudden, unexpected reunion one recent winter.
The Royal
Tenenbaums is purely remarkable entertainment. For those who
enjoy warped and unexpressive humor, The Royal Tenenbaums
has enough to satisfy the desire. Wes Anderson draws out powerful
performance from the whole cast. The film is brilliant and
sophisticated. The manner is dark and pleasantly puzzling
and the thinking observer will unquestionably obtain more
from this film. The Royal Tenenbaums takes family drama into
an invigorating and boisterously entertaining new dominion
with impractical characters and their inept venture to come
to terms with love and forgiveness.
>Read
Angelo's Film Review!
>Read
Craig Younkin's Film Review!
The Video
The Royal
Tenenbaums appears in an aspect ratio of 2.40:1 on this single-sided,
dual-layered DVD; the image has been enhanced for 16X9 televisions.
The picture looked excellent. The film appeared flawless.
Sharpness appeared solid, crisp and precise; no problems with
jagged edges; I did notice a random shake but nothing influential;
no significant edge enhancements issues; no signs of grain
or speckles. Colors remained solid and dazzling. The film
notability furnished a broad array of vivid and active colors.
Black levels were deep and lush.
The Audio
The Royal
Tenenbaums is presented in both Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS.
This film is not a very busy piece, so I dont have much
to voice regarding audio. Forward speakers remain the focal
point for the soundfield the extent of the time. The surrounds
were unnoticeable. Dialogue appeared typical and distinct.
The music presented an expanded substance.
The Extras
Commentary
by director Wes Anderson
Theatrical
trailer
New widescreen
digital transfer, supervised by director Wes Anderson
With the
Filmmaker: Portraits by Albert Maysles, featuring Wes Anderson
Exclusive
video interviews and behind-the-scenes footage of Gene Hackman,
Anjelica Huston, Ben Stiller, Gwyneth Paltrow, Luke Wilson,
Owen Wilson, Bill Murray, and Danny Glover
Outtakes
The Peter
Bradley Show, featuring interviews with additional cast members
The Art
of the Movie: Young Richie's murals and paintings, still photographs
by set photographer James Hamilton, book and magazine covers,
Studio 360 radio segment on painter Miguel Calderón,
and storyboards
Collectible
insert including Eric Anderson's drawings
Criterion
did a great job getting these onto the DVD.
Overall
The DVD
offered very strong picture quality along with rudimentary
sound and a very nice collection of extras. I cant recommend
The Royal Tenenbaums to everyone, for some viewers will clearly
be annoyed by it. However, if this type of film charms you
then this 2-disc DVD comes highly recommend.
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