Apocalypse Now – The Complete Dossier (1979/Paramount DVD Set)
Picture:
B+/B- Sound: B Extras: B Film: A- (2001 Redux cut)/B+ (1979 cut)
PLEASE NOTE: This film has been upgraded with
more extras and issued on Blu-ray in the three-disc Full Disclosure Edition, which you can read more about at this
link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/10552/Apocalypse+Now+%E2%80%93+Full
Now, the
original detailed review….
During
the Vietnam
fiasco, the only films that were made were about the soldiers that came
home. The best of them was Bob Clark’s Deathdream (reviewed elsewhere on this
site) which added a dark, honest twist to the horror from afar. By 1978, Michael Cimino’s The Deer Hunter (also on this site)
broke the silence and dealt with the actual experience. A cycle, often lying and revising the truth
about the ordeal, followed into the 1980s and most of the films were awful. Along with Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket (1987, on this site
as well), Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse
Now (1979) honestly captures the deeper truth about what happened using
Joseph Conrad’s book Heart of Darkness as a reference
source. Orson Welles, a filmmaker
Coppola has often been compared to, almost made the book into a film at RKO in
the early 1940s before his ugly break with that studio.
The story
begins with the hazy conscious of Willard (Martin Sheen), a C.I.A. agent in
waiting who is so out of his mind waiting as an almost sleeper agent that he is
getting bored to the point of it being a threat to his health. Suddenly, visited by two soldiers who bring
him to official operatives of the agency, he is told about a brilliant soldier
and leader named Kurtz (Marlon Brando) who has become a rogue operative. Far away from the main conflict, but deep
inside enemy territory, he is told to eliminate Kurtz whose approach to warfare
is the kind that would “win” Vietnam but the U.S. Government is not interested
in. Kurtz knows this and that is why he
has achieved what might be considered the greatest act of going AWOL in cinema
history.
On a
small boat, he takes the long journey and as events unfold, we learn from his
“eyes only” top secret dossier that Kurtz was a very exceptional solider who
was one of their best in picture and classic voice-over narrative
throughout. It becomes a brilliant
parallel narrative in itself, psychologically propelling the audience further
into the world of the film. Coppola at
this point may have been puzzled during the making of the film on how to do it,
but the results betray that fact.
Besides a brilliant performance by Robert Duvall as a surf-loving Lt.
Colonel, Harrison Ford, a young Laurence Fishburne, Frederic Forrest, Dennis
Hopper, Scott Glenn, Bill Graham, R.
Lee Ermey and Colleen Camp as one of the Playmates visiting the troops.
As for
the two cuts, yes, the original cut is strong and will always be the cut that
was the hit. Coppola reportedly went
four times over the original budget, but it was his money, yet the press
complained as if it were theirs. When
the film was part of a huge slate of hits at United Artists in 1979, critics
then turned to destroying Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s
Gate a year later, which their ignorance and cinematic illiteracy killed
along with United Artists as an independent studio. That film too is now recognized as a
classic. With the longer Redux cut, this critic feels the film
has added depth and gives the classic even more cinematic space. In this restored version, the visual
experience is more deeply cinematic in color, depth, detail and especially
warmth rarely seen in any film made after its original release. The extra scenes enhance the narrative and
purists might try to say they are “unnecessary” or the like, but they just
prove the greatness of the film by smoothly and effortlessly fitting into the
storyline. This set gives you both
options, but the Redux cut gives the
film a more realistic trajectory and also offsets the film’s sometimes disturbing
pop trivialization. If you have never
sat through that cut, now’s the time.
Previously,
the anamorphically enhanced 2 X 1 image on the basic Apocalypse Now Redux DVD was the best, based on the three-strip
dye-transfer Technicolor prints that looked so stunning in theaters. This time, you get two transfers. The 1979 version still looks worse than the
old Redux DVD, while the new Redux cut is the best yet. It not only has more clarity and color
fidelity, but has a little more picture area than the old Redux DVD did and is the preferred version until the film arrives
in the new HD formats. The genius
cinematographer Vittorio Storaro (A.S.C., A.C.S.) had the luxury of 70mm
blow-ups for the 1979 release, which at the time was the only way to show off its
early 5.1 soundtrack mix via magnetic stereo striping with Dolby noise
reduction. For the 2001 version, he took
advantage of Technicolor’s sadly short-lived dye-transfer revival (1997 - 2001)
creating stunning prints that are some of the best ever projected in a movie
theater. The film was shot in the
Italian anamorphic Technovision scope format and various aspect ratios were
thought out as it was shot.
The film
was one of the very first ever 5.1 films, with Coppola pushing the envelope of
film sound like few had ever done before.
It followed Richard Donner’s original 1978 Superman as the second-ever 5.1 sound release as we know the
configuration today. Needless to say it
went further and remains one of the all-time great film sound mixes. Francis’ father Carmine did the music, while the
editing of the film and sound mix were by the genius Walter Murch. As compared to most 5.1 mixes of today that
are gimmicky, annoying, lame, silly, pointless and infantilized versions of
amateur hour, this is a mix with a point that is imaginative, innovative and
more than ever, ahead of its time. There
are points where there are as many as 100 tracks in the mix and even the use of
The Doors’ The End is an amazing use
of a multi-channel music track well into the arrival of several music-only
formats (DTS CDs, DVD-Audio, Super Audio CD, etc.) that al had their winners
and losers. The point is that there is
very serious consideration and deep thought about all the uses of sound and how
they cohere to the narrative. It is here
in Dolby Digital 5.1 and note that the center channel is dead center to the
point that you can set a home theater system to it!
The
combination is excellent and the restoration work was well worth it. After subtle sound use on his first two Godfather films and complex use of
sound and narrative in The Conversation,
Coppola and Murch went all out here in a way he never would again, though his
uses of sound would continue to be among the most interesting of any filmmaker.
Extras
include another terrific audio commentary by Coppola and visual markers for the
Redux scenes on both discs, Brando
reading T.S. Elliot’s Hollow Man, 12
additional scenes not used in either version, the separate Monkey Sampan scene and a four-part A/V Club Featurette on DVD 1.
This includes a text essay by synthesizer inventor Bob Moog (see the Moog documentary reviewed elsewhere on
this site), 6-min Birth Of 5.1 Sound
segment, a Technical FAQ (frequently asked questions) section and a great demo
of the opening of the film which shows sound bars to demonstrate the opening of
the helicopter fly-over effect. That
alone is a must. DVD 2 adds 4 minute
segments on the PBR boat actors reuniting for the Redux theatrical release, a “Then
& Now” segment of Coppola at Cannes with Redux and a great piece on the three-strip Technicolor printing
process with Storaro. Also, a four-part
post-production piece in included. The
only thing missing is the documentary everyone keeps asking for and Coppola
even notes, the excellent Hearts Of Darkness
– A Filmmakers Apocalypse. [It was
released later on DVD and is included in the Full Disclosure Blu-ray edition linked at the top of this page.]
Years ago
when Gene Siskel was still alive, he and Roger Ebert picked their favorite film
over a period of what would now be nearly 30 years. Siskel picked Martin Scorsese’s Raging Bull and Ebert picked this film
and does the Cannes interview in the supplement. Why does this film hold up, endure and is
quoted (and too often badly misquoted abusively) all the time? It is because this film starts off with one
of the most memorable, purely cinematic openings ever and just builds and
builds. Rivaled only by The Conversation, this is Coppola’s
greatest achievement. It was the peak of
his movement towards a naturalistic cinema before switching gears to smaller
and studio-bound projects like the underrated One From The Heart (reviewed elsewhere on this site) and smaller
projects that still contained his sense of experimentation and risk.
Apocalypse Now is the epitome of great big
screen cinema about something and still remains a personal film he funded all
on his own. After 9/11, he abandoned the
promising Megalopolis. [He directed several new features since we
first posted this coverage, all reviewed elsewhere on this site, including Tetro and Youth Without Youth]. That
it is not that project is like Kubrick never making his Napoleon film, a big
epic making the biog statement that will never be heard. At least that fate did no befall Apocalypse Now.
- Nicholas Sheffo