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| The Hunchback Of Notre Dame (Ultimate Edition) | 
enlarge | Director: Wallace Worsley Actors: Lon Chaney, Patsy Ruth Miller, Norman Kerry, Kate Lester, Winifred Bryson Studio: Image Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $12.99 You Save: $6.99 (35%)
New (36) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $10.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 10605
Format: Black & White, Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Special Edition, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 117 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: ID3046DSDVD UPC: 014381304626 EAN: 0014381304626 ASIN: B000TEUSI6
Theatrical Release Date: 1923 Release Date: October 9, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!
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Product Description Lon Chaney stars as the gentle outcast Quasimodo in the first film version of Victor Hugo's classic novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Paris of 1482 was meticulously recreated on the back lot of Universal Studios for this powerful drama that turned Chaney into a screen legend -- now presented in the ultimate special edition of this timeless classic. Mastered in high definition from an original multi-tinted print. New symphonic score compiled by Donald Hunsberger adapted and conducted by Robert Israel. Recorded in Europe in digital stereo. Insert essay and optional audio essay through the film both by Michael F. Blake author of two books on Lon Chaney. Facsimile reproduction of original souvenir program. Gallery of Original 3-D stills (3-D viewing glasses are included with this DVD). Extensive gallery of 2-D stills including production shots scenes and advertising materials. Behind-the-scenes footage of Lon Chaney out of makeup on the set.System Requirements:Running Time: 118 Mins. Genre: HORROR Rating: NR UPC: 014381304626 Manufacturer No: ID3046DSDVD
Amazon.com Lon Chaney, the man of a thousand faces, was best known for playing Quasimodo and the Phantom of the Opera. But the former role was clearly the most ambitious of his illustrious career, full of such longing and anguish. It's as though his entire being was consumed by this ugly outcast with a heart as big and beautiful as Notre Dame itself. And the makeup is still astonishing. The rest of this unrequited love story is pretty effective as well, with the re-creation of medieval Paris a standout for its lavishness. Like all great silent films, it delivers a poetry of life that is abstract and tangible at the same time. --Bill Desowitz
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
Not Quite The "Ultimate Edition"... October 9, 2007 29 out of 30 found this review helpful
...although this new Image release which replaces their 1999 edition is likely the best that we'll see until someone can afford to do a full scale restoration. David Shepard and Film Preservation Associates are to be commended for making this look as good as they have considering the limited funds they have to work with (Shepard once said that what Kevin Brownlow and Photoplay Productions spend on one reel he spends on an entire film) and the source material which appears to be 16mm. There is no significant new footage here but the film has been speed corrected which accounts for the longer running time. The print seems to be the same as the 1999 release with lots of scratches throughout but the image is sharper and the toning of certain scenes is better. Aside from the condition of the print what really keeps this from being the "Ultimate Edition" is the score by Donald Hunsberger. Hunsberger is a fine conductor (check out his Eastman Wind Ensemble recordings) but the music he compiled is too lighthearted overall and not sombre or medieval enough to enhance what's going on during the movie especially toward the end (the compiled score used for the 1999 version was far more appropriate). A darker score like the one Ennio Morricone did for the 1912 RICHARD III would help to undercut the melodramatic elements of the story and some of the performances. Once again a score can make or break a silent film. Lon Chaney remains a marvel as Quasimodo, fully inhabiting the character beneath the makeup and the natural speed transfer restores his performance to what it should be. The medieval sets and vast army of extras also continue to inspire awe 80+ years later. The disc comes with program reproductions, 3-D glasses for old stills, and commentary from Chaney scholar Michael F. Blake. So fans of HUNCHBACK and Chaney rush out and be sure to get this edition for your DVD collection. I just wish that someday someone with unlimited funds can really produce the ultimate edition (ala METROPOLIS, BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN, PHANTOM OF THE OPERA) that this classic deserves.
This IS The Expanded Restoration That Was on TCM July 23, 2007 28 out of 30 found this review helpful
Good: By a long shot, this is the most clear print EVER; for the first time the actor's facial expressions are clearly visible. They've added over 20 minutes from any previous edition
Bad: No scratch removal.I assume they didn't have the funding for it; but as this is such an important piece of American history, it should have been done right. At least in the future, someone can load this dvd into a professional pc with scratch removal software & fix it right.
Good Lon Chaney silent film. July 21, 2004 19 out of 20 found this review helpful
The Hunchback of Notre Dame is quite a good silent film, starring the famous Lon Chaney Sr. as the eccentric and tortured Quasimodo. The story slightly follows Victor Hugo's novel, and the acting is fine for this type of genre. The story flows well, though the movie is rather overlong for 1925. There are two DVD's and several VHS versions of the film sold on the market. The two DVD versions differ in quality. I own the earlier, unrestored release by Alpha Video. This edition is the one NOT to purchase. The picture quality is grainy and snowy. The screen is also difficult to see at times, and the picture is so bright that you are looking at a white screen. True, the film is over 75 years old, but it deserves a better restoration. The more recent DVD, released by Republic Pictures, has been restored and cleaned up. The Alpha DVD price is also cheaper. To appreciate the film and Lon Chaney in full glory, purchase the restored Republic DVD and nothing else. P.S. Ignore the retarded Disney version.
Great Film, Sub-Standard Film Elments November 14, 2001 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
I know, I know. "The film's nearly 80 years old"; "what did I expect??"; "there's only so much you can do to restore old films..." I've heard it all, and this transfer from Image still gets only 3 stars. Why? Because I've seen better transfer elements on VHS, for crying out loud, elements that possessed far better image clarity than we're given on this disc. In several areas, the image is nearly washed out, leaving only tiny black pixels in its stead. Clearly, this is a problem with the version that Image has chosen for the transfer, and is not a problem that is attributable to the age of the picture. Having said that, however, it should be noted that there are no truly superb prints of this silent "Hunchback," and that the picture is worth spending a few hundred thousand-or a million or two-bucks to restore, if not with an entirely new negative, then at least via digital means. It is a fine rendition (I won't argue the point of whether Laughton's fine portrayal is 'better'...this is in the eye of the beholder) of Hugo's novel, and Lon Chaney's characterization is one of the most startling ever put on film. Mr. Chaney's use of his hands conveys subtleties that his face does not, providing us with one of the silent silver screen's most moving performances. He is Quasimodo, the hunchback, just as he was Erik, the Phantom, Blizzard, the underworld mastermind, and the tough sergeant in "Tell It To The Marines." If you're looking for a film with a thrilling story that is punctuated by pathos, and the kind of catharsis that can only come from witnessing the triumph of love and the human spirit, there is no better viewing than the 1923 "Hunchback of Notre Dame." Just be ready for the inevitable "who dragged this print through the Liquid Paper factory" question you'll be asking yourself when you view this DVD. PLEASE, Image, or Criterion--do something to rescue this classic movie so that my grandchildren can enjoy it, too.
The Hunchback of Dilettantism February 5, 2004 11 out of 44 found this review helpful
This is a terrible, terrible adaptation of Victor Hugos novel. The novel is one of the great landmarks of Humanist Litterature, while this is simply an uptight morality-play of the somewhat Victorian orientation. Claude Frollo, one of the great villains of litterature, is in this version meek as a lamb (he's a catholic priest for God's sake), while his villainy is rendered to his secular brother, Jehan, thus creating a dualism (good/evil) that is totally foreign to the humanism of the novel. Jehans villainy is consisting of his base lust after Esmaralda, the sexy gipsy girl (bad people are horny, good people are in love). But alas, her sexuality is hampered too, even her familiar, the goat, is missing! Phoebus, who in the novel seduced Esmaralda simply because he was able to, taking advantage of her girlish admiration for his manners and shiny armour, is turned into a coy and rather laughable vaudeville-jeune premier, his intentions are quite honorable and poor Esmaralda want's to go to a nunnery to save his honour. Even worse, Clopin, the leader of the rebellious crowd fighting the decadent aristocracy, is portraied as a sneering creep, thus forcing us to question his heroic ambitions on a somewhat unjust grounding. And Quasimodo? Well, Lon Chaney does his usual routine, twitching under a mass of make-up. This is really just one of his "thousand faces". Nothing works, apart from the spectacular setpieces of medieval Paris. And old age can't be blamed (in the same period the germans were creating expressionist masterpieces still working) but simply bad storytelling. Watch the 1939-version instead, starring Charles Laughton and Maureen O'Hara, that's a true classic. Or better still: read the novel.
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