Halo 3 (Xbox 360)
Kingston Technology 2GB SD Secure Digital Card
Braun Oral-B EB17-8 Refill Pack
|
|
|
|
Withnail And I [1986] | ![Withnail And I [1986]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/517d4Z5pHnL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Bruce Robinson Actors: Paul Mcgann, Richard E. Grant, Richard Griffiths, Ralph Brown, Michael Elphick Studio: Starz Home Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: £5.99 Buy Used: £2.02 You Save: £3.97 (66%)
New (35) Used (10) from £2.02
Rating: 91 reviews Sales Rank: 337
Format: Pal, Widescreen Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Region: 2 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 103 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5060020700675 ASIN: B000MGAW28
Theatrical Release Date: June 19, 1987 Release Date: February 19, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Most orders delivered within 2-3 days. All orders are fully guaranteed and sent from a UK located business. Email support for all customers.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Set in 1969, the year in which the hippy dreams of so many young Englishmen went sour, 1986's Bruce Robinson's Withnail and I is an enduring British cult. Fellow enthusiasts cry immortal phrases from the endlessly brilliant script to one another like mating calls; "Scrubbers!", "We want the finest wines known to humanity and we want them now!" Withnail is played by the emaciated but defiantly effete Richard E Grant, "I" (i.e., Marwood) by Paul McGann. Out-of-work actors living in desperate penury in a rancid London flat, their lives are a continual struggle to keep warm, alive and in Marwood's case sane, until the pubs open. A sojourn in the country cottage of Withnail's gay Uncle Monty only redoubles their privations--they have to kill a live chicken to eat. The arrival of Monty spells further misery for Marwood as he must fend off his attentions. This borderline homophobic interlude apart, Withnail and I is a delight, enhanced by an aimless but appallingly eventful plot. Popular among students, it strikes a chord with anyone who has undergone a period of debauchery and impoverished squalor prior to finding their way onto life's straight and narrow.--David Stubbs
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
This is the most cultest of cult films! January 31, 2007 DangermouseZilla (Doncaster, Yorkshire, UK.) 23 out of 23 found this review helpful
The first time I saw this film I was expecting the finest of British comedy. I was left pretty disappointed by it. I was about 12 at the time. A few years later (I was about 15) I watched this film again and absolutely loved it. Since then, I have considered this film to be my favourite film of all time (I'm 26 now). This is said to be one of the most quotable films of all time - and it really is! I couldn't even start to say which my favourite one is! Whenever I recommend this film to people, I always say that it might not blow you away first time round. But once you've watched it and given it a second chance - you realise the sheer genius in this film. Paul McGann is one of my favourite actors, and he is the perfect on screen contrast to Withnail's neurotic ramblings. This isn't just a film, it's a series of contagious quotes held together by the best dialogue available on screen. The actors don't just act - they ARE the characters. Richard E Grant is allergic to alcohol yet his character is the most believable I have ever seen. SPECIAL FEATURES: This disk is worth the money alone for the score (as other reviewers have said) - there aren't many tracks, and the tracks are short. But instead of listening to a low quality version of Withnail's theme, I now have the beautiful crisp version! This contains the same documentary and interview as the previous DVD release, and also a new interview with Bruce Robinson, a fan made featurette, and the Withnail drinking game. It also has black and white stills which are frankly beautiful. I would love to have some framed and hung on the wall. There is a booklet in the DVD case too which gives various facts on the film. The box is a lovely metal one, it feels great in the hand, looks great on the shelf! All in all there are 3 disks: 1 DVD of the main film, 1 DVD of features, 1 Audio CD of the score. **************************************** If you only have a couple of hours left to live - make sure you make time to watch this film.
Shakespeare and I July 14, 2007 Gordon Charles Ros (Germany) 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
There's not much else to add to the glowing reviews of this film which is by far the best movie I have ever seen (and I've seen quite a few) except to draw a parallel between the character of Withnail and a Shakesperian tragic hero. I know that there are students of literature out there who will baulk at the very idea but that's probably because they are too snobby to consider a film like this a work of art. But it is. I must have watched this film 50 times but I never cease to feel a cathartic chill run down my spine when Marwood says goodbye to Withnail in the end: 'I shall miss you Withnail.' 'I shall miss you too. Chin chin.' This scene is one of the most moving I have ever seen. The drunken fool Withnail, at whom and with whom with have laughed, and who has spent the whole film not giving a toss about his friend, is suddenly and breathtakingly turned into the tragic hero he is and all the laughing gets stuck in your throat so suddenly that you feel shocked and guilty that you have laughed at all. Withnail's pathetically sad attempts to get Marwood to have one last drink are shockingly tragic. 'There's always time for a drink.' If that is not Shakespearian, I don't know what is. But it gets better (or worse depending on how you look at it) with Withnail's final solioquy, delivered in the pouring rain to a pack of miserable wolves...it is his final great act and the tragedy is no-one is there to see it except the wolves. When he walks off into the distance, you are left stunned (well I am) just like when you see Othello unexpectedly stick the dagger in his own heart. Withnail and I is described and reviewed as a comedy, but I see it as a tragi-comedy. If Withnail and I was just a comedy, we would have long forgotten it. In many ways, it is a brilliant comedy but it is much more than that. I guess we all take out of art what we want and according to how we see the world. I can only speak for myself when I say that Withnail and I is the most beautifully crafted film I have ever seen. I happily confess that it helps to be British (esp. English) and male, but I would argue that anyone over, say, 18 who doesn't feel that carthatic chill at the final scene, is not fully human. For those of you (and there are a couple) who say they don't like the film, all I can say is: 'Very, very, foolish words man.'
I demand a DVD version with better quality and here it is. September 11, 2006 russell clarke (halifax, west yorks) 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
This is a welcome re-release of Bruce Robinson's seminal film about two out of work (or resting) actors hanging around the Camden Town of the late 60,s. It's welcome because the version I currently own is of lamentable quality. Poor visually, with no menu to speak of and with absolutely no extras the DVD I currently own is barely better than the video it replaced. My current DVD will soon be winging it's way to the charity shop to be replaced by this 20th anniversary edition complete with commentary from writer/director Bruce Robinson as well as a soundtrack CD and sundry other goodies. The film itself is eminently quotable though as with all eminently quotable things it's best not to over do it. Featuring a truly titanic performance from Richard E Grant as the heroic imbiber of various mind altering substances Withnail, it's a film that while profane and hilarious for the most part actually concludes on a melancholic and slightly poignant note. That said it's not as downbeat as the original novel version of the story which had the character of Withnail blow his brains out. In truth the film belongs to Grant whose performance as a raging drunk is put into even greater perspective by the fact that he is actually tee total. (Though he did at one point down a tumbler of vodka just so he could gain insight into the character) Paul McGann provides exemplary low key support as I ( his character in the script is called Marwood) and there are superb cameos from Richard Griffiths as Uncle Monty , a predatory camp ham, Ralph Brown as drug dealing Danny and Michael Elphick as Jake who threatens the pair with a fish. Autobiographical to a degree that may have had many a writer writhing in embarrasment, but thankfully not Robinson, the movie sees the pair- after descending to truly bacchanalian levels of squalor (Withnial even covers himself from head to toe in deep heat in order to get warm) before heading off to the country retreat of Withnails uncle Monty who then follows them in order to facilitate a romantic encounter with I, who does not reciprocate. The pair upset the locals including a memorable encounter in a tea room before heading back to London for an unexpected parting of the ways. It's a simple concept but the entire movie is better for it because it allows the characters to take centre stage and the characters are what the movie is all about. Wonderfully acted with a script that produces more sound bites than a century of political Party conferences "Withnail And I" is one of the greatest British films ever made and now has a DVD worthy of it.
DVD is essential since VHS wears out after about 200 watches June 5, 2003 Touring Mars (London, UK) 20 out of 22 found this review helpful
Bruce Robinson's "Withnail and I" is a modern classic, beloved by its cult following, and can be rewatched so many times that most people feel the need to have a spare copy handy just in case one wears out. Indeed, if you can hold on to your copy without lending it to someone and never getting it back, you're doing better than the rest of us!Loosely based upon his own life, this is a story of two 'resting' actors and how they try in vain to escape the festering stink-hole that is Camden Town in 1969 by having a weekend out in country. Richard E. Grant's astonishing performance as the brilliantly sarcastic, cynical and eloquent anti-hero Withnail, is counterbalanced by the aloof Marwood (better known as 'I'), from whose perspective the film is based around. Richard Griffiths amazingly camp performance as Uncle Monty is one of his greatest roles, and when thrown into the mix with the scheming Withnail and the unsuspecting 'I', it makes for one of the most fascinating menage-a-trois ever to be caught on camera. Aside from the three main characters, there isn't really many other people in the film, but they include the late Michael Elphick as a poacher (who threatens Withnail with a dead fish), Withnail's dodgy mate Danny (who invents the legendary 'Camberwell Carrot', a joint that utilises up to 12 skins) and Presuming Ed (who doesn't say anything in the film except for 'Hare Rama'). Probably the most quoted movie in British history, nearly every single line is like a sound-bite. It has also spawned the most infamous drinking game in movie history, which involves trying to keep up with Withnail's drinking throughout the movie, which in reality is actually impossible. It is the mark of how great an actor Richard E. Grant is to point out that he doesn't drink himself, yet manages to portray drunkenness to absolute perfection, even to the point of giving one of the most convincing portrayals of a hangover in history. The DVD contains a great documentary which has plenty of Bruce Robinson himself, and discusses how the characters came about, and how the film has earned cult status among other things. It also offers you a couple of different sound options just incase you have a fancy 5.1 system or something similar. There is also some nice stills of Grant and McGann being stupid in a bathroom, and a commentary track by McGann and Ralph Brown (who plays Danny in the film) which is worth a listen. Don't just buy this movie... buy two or three, you're going to need them!
18 Certificate DVD / Film Score CD October 3, 2006 Ewan 18 out of 20 found this review helpful
A couple of things to add to the excellent review above: 1) This DVD edition has been given an 18 certificate due to the content of the extras on Disc 2 (The main feature on Disc 1 has a 15 certificate). 2) Disc 3 only contains the tracks from the Film Score. The Jimi Hendrix / Beatles / King Curtis tracks that were included on the Original Soundtrack CD are not included.
|
|
| | |