Vanilla
Sky DVD Review:
The Movie
David
Aames, (Tom Cruise) is young, handsome, wealthy and a spoiled
rich publishing tycoon, who can have anything his heart desires.
Sofia (Penelope Cruz) is the missing piece in Davids
world, the girl of his dreams. Up until now David has been
casually dating Julie Giani, (Cameron Diaz) who
starts to get a little pyshco on David after she
realizes David is no longer interested in her. David ignores
his fatal attraction and spends the night with Sofia, but
all they do is talk and get to know each other. When David
leaves the next morning, he runs into to Julie. Julie convinces
David to get into her car, which ultimately changes David
life - a life which sends him into a shocking final awakening
that questions his reality of love, hate, life, work, friendship
and sex. David finds himself desperately trying to piece things
together, questioning whether what's happening to him is a
dream or reality.
The message
of this film is simple; having it all, not being happy, finding
what you want to make you happy, losing it and then figuring
out why this is happening to you. This really begins to loose
its power and it just goes on and on, forcing the viewer into
the point of restless aggravation. Once the film explains
its purpose, your at a point were you just dont
care anymore. The film spent so much time trying to confuse
the viewer that in the long run it confused itself until it
just didnt make any sense.
I can
only describe this film as Cameron Crowe's first attempt at
an "artsy fartsy" film. It's visually beautiful
and thought provoking, but after awhile it just needed to
end. I mean I felt I was being tortured enough by watching
Penelope Cruz trying to act and now this. My major gripe with
this film was the ending. The writers spent so much time building
up the suspense that you end up expecting a huge conspiracy
to be unleashed at the end, instead it just seems to end leaving
the viewer wondering about all the plotlines that were obviously
left as clues and then left unanswered. This movie had the
potential to be a great film, unfortunately the ending resulted
in a downward spiral.
The Video
Vanilla
Sky appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on
this single-sided, dual-layered DVD; the image has been enhanced
for 16X9 televisions. The movie portrayed a terrific picture
with no problems. Sharpness looked perfect at all times. The
movie remained crisp and well defined. No concerns with jagged
edges, print flaws were nearly non-existent. A couple of speckles
and grit here and there, but otherwise the film appeared wonderfully
clean and fresh. Colors appeared vibrant throughout the film.
Black levels seemed rich and deep, and shadow detail was appropriately
heavy but never excessively dense. Ultimately, Vanilla Sky
offered a great visual experience.
The Audio
The film
is presented in a Dolby Digital 5.1 mix, audio quality appeared
positive. Dialogue seemed natural and accurate; sounds were
well localized and they moved neatly across the channels.
Clarity had no issues, rich and deep. Overall, Vanilla Sky
does exactly what it needs to do and it does it well. All
audio, dialogue, music, and effects sound very clean and natural.
The Extras
The extras
here are satisfying to only a degree, since the inclusion
of existing deleted scenes is missing from this DVD release.
Here are the extras we do get:
Prelude
to a Dream: Behind-the-scenes footage from the film's casting
and pre-production.
Hitting
It Hard : Feature about the movie's press tour which took
them to Australia, Hong Kong and England. It runs a good ten
minutes with great insights and footage from director Cameron
Crowe, Tom Cruise and Penelope.
Interview
with Paul McCartney: Why?!? For those of you who care, the
interview runs a very short 2 mins.
Music
Video: "Afrika Shox" by Leftfield and Afrika Bambaataa.
The rest
is just photo galleries, gag reel and finally Vanilla Sky
trailers.
Overall
Vanilla
Sky is interesting, stylish, ambitious and in some cases a
brilliant film, but the movie seems to lie somewhere in the
middle of it all. I really wasnt up for psychologically
dissecting this film when I saw it. Should you rent it or
buy it? First and foremost, Vanilla Sky represents a journey,
which unravels its true meaning in the final fifteen
minutes of the film Twilight Zone style.
It answers
some of the questions it poses and wraps up most of the dangling
plots, leaving you with a very empty unsettling feeling. I
was too disappointed at the ending to be able to recommend
this film. However, I still feel this film is not totally
without value. The ending just leaves you wondering a little
bit too much, but if you already like this film then it's
worth your purchase! Paramount has done an exceptional job
with this DVD presentation. For everyone else, rent "Open
your Eyes."
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