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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Comedy > The Sting (1973/HD-DVD)

The Sting (1973/HD-DVD)

 

Picture: B-     Sound: B-     Extras: B-     Film: B

 

 

Why is George Roy Hill’s The Sting (1973) so celebrated, yet does not have a big following today?  It has the same leads as Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, Paul Newman and Robert Redford, yet you never hear about it as much.  Sure, it has always been in print in just about every video format imaginable, while con artistry, card playing and gangsters on the take are as popular as ever.  So why no respect, celebration or revival?

 

Is it racial?  No, because The Godfather and Scorsese’s films are popular, even with the Hip Hop crowd and it cannot be age because many of the stories celebrated are of gangsters and gamblers of the past to begin with.  Is it the studio?  No, because Universal has both this and Scarface, so it must be something else.  The number one reason is that the pace of the film is too slow and involving for younger audiences, who would probably love this as much as any of the films if they knew it existed.

 

There is also this knowing connection between the leads of the fix being in continued from Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid that set this film up nicely.  However, there is one other thing going on here than no other Hollywood film achieved in its time besides the fact that the sets and costumes remain some of the most impressive period work in any film portraying 1930s Chicago.  It is the synthesis of an intelligent and witty class and style merging from two directions.  One is the British sensibility Hill is able to exercise more explicitly than he could on Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid and the other is a quiet victory of Americana the film boldly celebrated at the height of Vietnam and Watergate.

 

Also, everyone gives performances that mesh exceptionally well together and with the production itself in a very rare synergy that no one seems to be able to pull off anymore.  Robert Shaw gives one of his best performances as a mob boss, but performances by Ray Walston, Charles During, Eileen Brennan, Harold Gould, Dana Elcar, Sally Kirkland, James Earl Jones, Arch Johnson, Leonard Barr, Larry D. Mann and Pauline Myers do not get enough credit.

 

The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image is not bad, but has some limits and issues with detail that demonstrates maybe the film needs some more work.  The reissue DVD (reviewed by another critic on this site) was not great, reminding us that the 1.66 (or 1.33, whichever the original aspect ratio might have been) had a good narrow-vision look to it the widescreen cannot offer like Kubrick’s The Shining.  With that said, this is the best this has ever looked on video and considering how often it has been reissued, that is a good thing.

 

However, the sound is more of an issue, since the film was always monophonic and the Dolby Digital Plus 5.1 mix boosting the standard version Dolby upgrade shows the limits of the old recording.  Marvin Hamlisch’s score with the classic piano music of Scott Joplin benefits the most, including The Entertainer, so good that it was a #1 hit single.  Extras include the same four making of/reflective featurettes and original theatrical trailer that the Legacy upgrade offered, so this is your best bet if you want to own the film.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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