Imagen no disponible
Imagen no disponible del
Color:
Color:
-
-
-
- Lo sentimos, este producto no está disponible en
- Imagen no disponible
- Para ver este vídeo, descarga Reproductor Flash
Ritorno A Cold Mountain [Italia] [DVD]
Eileen Atkins
(Actor),
Brendan Gleeson
(Actor),
Anthony Minghella
(Director)
&
0
más Clasificado: Desconocido Formato: DVD
Otras opciones en DVD | Edición | Discos | Precio Amazon | Nuevo desde | Usado desde |
DVD
30 mayo 2011 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | Edición limitada. | 1 | 16,90 € | 16,84 € |
DVD
10 julio 2013 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | 2,90 € | 3,95 € |
DVD
"Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | 8,99 € | 8,99 € | — |
DVD
10 abril 2013 "Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | 1 | 3,00 € | 4,30 € |
Formato | PAL, Importación, Pantalla ancha |
Colaborador | Gabriel Yared, Anthony Minghella, Brendan Gleeson, Donald Sutherland, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Renee Zellweger, Nicole Kidman, Ray Winstone, Natalie Portman, Eileen Atkins, Giovanni Ribisi Ver más |
Idioma | Inglés, Italiano |
Duración | 2 horas y 28 minutos |
Comprados juntos habitualmente
Este producto: Ritorno A Cold Mountain [Italia] [DVD]
8,99€8,99€
Recíbelo Del 17 al 24 de oct
En stock
12,50€12,50€
Recíbelo Del 5 al 9 de oct
Sólo queda(n) 1 en stock.
Precio total:
Para ver nuestros precios, añade estos artículos a la cesta.
Inténtalo de nuevo
Añadido a la cesta
Uno de estos productos se envía antes que el otro.
Elegir artículos para comprar juntos.
Descripción del producto
DVD RITORNO A COULD MOUNTAIN
Detalles del producto
- Relación de aspecto : 2.35:1
- Clasificado : Desconocido
- Dimensiones del paquete : 18,03 x 13,76 x 1,48 cm; 100 gramos
- Director : Anthony Minghella
- Formato multimedia : PAL, Importación, Pantalla ancha
- Tiempo de ejecución : 2 horas y 28 minutos
- Actores : Eileen Atkins, Brendan Gleeson, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Nicole Kidman, Natalie Portman
- Subtítulos: : Italiano
- Idioma : Italiano (Dolby Digital 5.1), Inglés (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Estudio : Miramax Films
- ASIN : B005LZW7M8
- Número de discos : 1
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº131,024 en Películas y TV (Ver el Top 100 en Películas y TV)
- nº33,916 en Drama
- nº81,676 en DVD
- nº126,645 en Películas (Películas y TV)
- Opiniones de los clientes:
Opiniones de clientes
4,6 de 5 estrellas
4,6 de 5
1.630 valoraciones globales
Cómo funcionan las opiniones y las valoraciones de los clientes
Las opiniones de los clientes, incluidas las valoraciones del producto, ayudan a otros clientes a obtener más información sobre el producto y a decidir si es el adecuado para ellos.
Para calcular el desglose general de valoraciones y porcentajes, no utilizamos un simple promedio. Nuestro sistema también considera factores como cuán reciente es una reseña y si el autor de la opinión compró el producto en Amazon. También analiza las reseñas para verificar su fiabilidad.
Más información sobre cómo funcionan las opiniones de los clientes en Amazon-
Reseñas más importantes
Principales reseñas de España
Ha surgido un problema al filtrar las opiniones justo en este momento. Vuelva a intentarlo en otro momento.
Revisado en España el 23 de julio de 2022
Muy buena película, excelente fotografía, muy buen guión y trabsjo de los actores, la recomiendo
Revisado en España el 5 de marzo de 2020
Gran película siempre la he querido tener para la colección. El formato es algo básico pero este título no creo q tenga otro más completo.
Revisado en España el 24 de agosto de 2015
Fantástica obra de Anthony Minghella (El paciente Inglés), en tiempos de La guerra civil estadounidense.
Es un muy buen relato, una odisea completa, en la cual Jude Law intenta regresar a casa luego de desertar del ejército, para entregarse por completo a su amada, pero el destino les tiene algo preparado.Excelente actuación de Renée Zellweger)
Es un muy buen relato, una odisea completa, en la cual Jude Law intenta regresar a casa luego de desertar del ejército, para entregarse por completo a su amada, pero el destino les tiene algo preparado.Excelente actuación de Renée Zellweger)
Revisado en España el 3 de diciembre de 2020
Muy bien
Revisado en España el 4 de julio de 2019
Estoy tratando de hacer una pequeña colección de las películas que más me han gustado y ésta es una de ellas.
Revisado en España el 2 de marzo de 2020
Es fantástica!!
Revisado en España el 8 de febrero de 2019
no entiendo porque en las caratulas de este bluray ustedes ponen en la contraportada que consta de un DVD y un BLURAY, no se corresponde con la realidad del producto pues solo trae en bluray nada más y el la información que dan solo aparece un disco, esto debian ustedes arreglarlo porque da lugar a engaño independientemente que el producto nos guste, llego con el estuche roto
Revisado en España el 29 de agosto de 2021
Hacia tiempo que la quería ver
Reseñas más importantes de otros países
C. Brooke
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Comparing the novel with the film
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 8 de octubre de 2013
This is a comparative critique of Charles Frazier's novel Cold Mountain and the film of the same name. I saw the film when it was first released and it was a gem of a movie. Recently I read Charles Frazier's novel and found the book to be significantly different from the film.
The basic outline of Frazier's story forms the core of the movie but the love story between Ada Monroe and Inman is very different in the novel. The magnetic attraction between the two drives the movie and provides the emotional tension that keeps the viewer alert, almost like a mystery plot. Will the two survive to meet and live happily ever after? Charles Frazier's novel does not use that tension to drive the story.
The first scene in the book is set in the Petersburg hospital and Inman's motivation to desert his regiment after years of loyal service is his disillusionment with the war. Ada Monroe does not enter his thoughts by name until he is well on his way home. The reader puts the two together when the author makes Ada the subject of the next chapter but she, too, is not consumed with longing for Inman. Rather, Ada is occupied with growing up and surviving after her father passes away. When Ruby Thewes enters her life midway through the chapter Ada's attention centers around her relationship with the capable and earthy young woman.
Well past halfway into the novel Inman finally reveals that when (and if) he meets Ada Monroe he will declare his intentions right away and, if he is rebuffed, he will turn back around and keep walking. For her part, Ada only thinks of Inman during quiet moments of solitude and is not sure he is still alive. Whether or not they will live happily ever after - or even meet again - is only inferred by the structure of the novel. Even if I hadn't seen the movie first I would have expected that conclusion but it is not uppermost in the minds of the characters.
Both the book and the movie, then, are beautiful depictions of the same story as if you had heard alternate versions of a story about a neighborhood couple from two trusted friends. The various vignettes that the film's fans know well are mostly all different from the book. The various Home Guards are not half the antagonists in the book as they are in the movie and Captain Teague has no back story, no motivation, in the novel.
Inman, Ada, Ruby, Stobrod and Reverend Monroe are all finely drawn characters and everybody else, including even Esco and Sally Swanger, are background figures. Inman's journey is not so much Homer's Odyssey in the book. Anthony Minghella used the Odyssey as a concept for the film before he wrote the screenplay, as he relates in the Extra Feature interview. The human interactions of the vignettes provide the constant motion that contemporary filmgoers expect but in the novel the geography, the weather, the wildlife, the food and Inman's solitude are all virtual characters in a way that would have ground the film to a halt.
The movie has all that exquisite cinematography and an excellent soundtrack written by Gabriel Yared. The period music is well researched under the experienced guidance of T-Bone Burnett. The extended version DVD includes the feature, "The Music of Cold Mountain", which I highly recommend. One surprise for me was the writer of the song, "My Ain True Love" - Sting. The mysticism of Ada's vision from Sally's well is an invention of screenwriter Anthony Minghella. That minor sub-plot serves to create a subtle tension and a gentle resolution at film's end but Charles Frazier did not intend Ada's vision in the well to be a plot device.
To me, Jude Law fit Charles Frazier's portrait of Inman very nicely and Renée Zellweger was a perfect Ruby Thewes. Every other face fit nicely into Frazier's characters except Nicole Kidman. She was fine in the movie but I do not think Kidman would have been Frazier's pick had he been given the choice, not the way he drew Ada Monroe in the novel. Read the book and see if I'm right. Who would you have rather seen as Ada Monroe?
*Update for Civil War buffs:
Inman was probably a member of the 49th North Carolina Infantry. Charles Frazier does not identify Inman's regiment in the novel but the 49th was everywhere Inman was, including the first regiment north of the South Carolina brigade that was the victim of the Petersburg Mine explosion. They were also in the thick of the fighting at the Battle of Weldon Railroad later where Inman received his neck wound in the book, as opposed to the movie where he was wounded in a night skirmish a few days after the Battle of the Crater.
Then there is a problematic scene in the movie after Inman deserts. He is seen walking on a beach with his right shoulder towards the water - walking north, but that's not the real error. For a Confederate deserter to leave Petersburg from the hospital he would have had to go west toward the Danville Road then turn south. Access to the Virginia coastline was controlled by Yankee troops in 1864. In the book Frazier never traces Inman's route on a map but he never wrote a scene involving an ocean. An appendix in the novel mentions the reference book North Carolina Troops in the Civil War as well as Charles Frazier's extensive hikes in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern Virginia and North Carolina so any historical inconsistencies are a fault of the film, not the novel.
Is the story an anti-war parable? I do not think the novel is anti-war so much as it is historically accurate. After Sherman captured Atlanta and siege warfare settled on the Army of Northern Virginia the fate of the south was sealed. Many North Carolina soldiers deserted in the winter of 1864-65 so Inman's decision would not have been unique. This is just the first fictional story to give voice to those deserters as opposed to the ill-fated men who fought on to Appomattox and had their stories pass into legend. And Inman was still a formidable warrior on his journey, several times engaging adversaries that outnumbered and outgunned him but still he came away victorious. Frazier's story and Minghella's film tell a mostly overlooked tale about the people of a conquered nation and how they dealt with the lives they were forced to live. That is not anti-war, just reality as it was in 1864.
The basic outline of Frazier's story forms the core of the movie but the love story between Ada Monroe and Inman is very different in the novel. The magnetic attraction between the two drives the movie and provides the emotional tension that keeps the viewer alert, almost like a mystery plot. Will the two survive to meet and live happily ever after? Charles Frazier's novel does not use that tension to drive the story.
The first scene in the book is set in the Petersburg hospital and Inman's motivation to desert his regiment after years of loyal service is his disillusionment with the war. Ada Monroe does not enter his thoughts by name until he is well on his way home. The reader puts the two together when the author makes Ada the subject of the next chapter but she, too, is not consumed with longing for Inman. Rather, Ada is occupied with growing up and surviving after her father passes away. When Ruby Thewes enters her life midway through the chapter Ada's attention centers around her relationship with the capable and earthy young woman.
Well past halfway into the novel Inman finally reveals that when (and if) he meets Ada Monroe he will declare his intentions right away and, if he is rebuffed, he will turn back around and keep walking. For her part, Ada only thinks of Inman during quiet moments of solitude and is not sure he is still alive. Whether or not they will live happily ever after - or even meet again - is only inferred by the structure of the novel. Even if I hadn't seen the movie first I would have expected that conclusion but it is not uppermost in the minds of the characters.
Both the book and the movie, then, are beautiful depictions of the same story as if you had heard alternate versions of a story about a neighborhood couple from two trusted friends. The various vignettes that the film's fans know well are mostly all different from the book. The various Home Guards are not half the antagonists in the book as they are in the movie and Captain Teague has no back story, no motivation, in the novel.
Inman, Ada, Ruby, Stobrod and Reverend Monroe are all finely drawn characters and everybody else, including even Esco and Sally Swanger, are background figures. Inman's journey is not so much Homer's Odyssey in the book. Anthony Minghella used the Odyssey as a concept for the film before he wrote the screenplay, as he relates in the Extra Feature interview. The human interactions of the vignettes provide the constant motion that contemporary filmgoers expect but in the novel the geography, the weather, the wildlife, the food and Inman's solitude are all virtual characters in a way that would have ground the film to a halt.
The movie has all that exquisite cinematography and an excellent soundtrack written by Gabriel Yared. The period music is well researched under the experienced guidance of T-Bone Burnett. The extended version DVD includes the feature, "The Music of Cold Mountain", which I highly recommend. One surprise for me was the writer of the song, "My Ain True Love" - Sting. The mysticism of Ada's vision from Sally's well is an invention of screenwriter Anthony Minghella. That minor sub-plot serves to create a subtle tension and a gentle resolution at film's end but Charles Frazier did not intend Ada's vision in the well to be a plot device.
To me, Jude Law fit Charles Frazier's portrait of Inman very nicely and Renée Zellweger was a perfect Ruby Thewes. Every other face fit nicely into Frazier's characters except Nicole Kidman. She was fine in the movie but I do not think Kidman would have been Frazier's pick had he been given the choice, not the way he drew Ada Monroe in the novel. Read the book and see if I'm right. Who would you have rather seen as Ada Monroe?
*Update for Civil War buffs:
Inman was probably a member of the 49th North Carolina Infantry. Charles Frazier does not identify Inman's regiment in the novel but the 49th was everywhere Inman was, including the first regiment north of the South Carolina brigade that was the victim of the Petersburg Mine explosion. They were also in the thick of the fighting at the Battle of Weldon Railroad later where Inman received his neck wound in the book, as opposed to the movie where he was wounded in a night skirmish a few days after the Battle of the Crater.
Then there is a problematic scene in the movie after Inman deserts. He is seen walking on a beach with his right shoulder towards the water - walking north, but that's not the real error. For a Confederate deserter to leave Petersburg from the hospital he would have had to go west toward the Danville Road then turn south. Access to the Virginia coastline was controlled by Yankee troops in 1864. In the book Frazier never traces Inman's route on a map but he never wrote a scene involving an ocean. An appendix in the novel mentions the reference book North Carolina Troops in the Civil War as well as Charles Frazier's extensive hikes in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern Virginia and North Carolina so any historical inconsistencies are a fault of the film, not the novel.
Is the story an anti-war parable? I do not think the novel is anti-war so much as it is historically accurate. After Sherman captured Atlanta and siege warfare settled on the Army of Northern Virginia the fate of the south was sealed. Many North Carolina soldiers deserted in the winter of 1864-65 so Inman's decision would not have been unique. This is just the first fictional story to give voice to those deserters as opposed to the ill-fated men who fought on to Appomattox and had their stories pass into legend. And Inman was still a formidable warrior on his journey, several times engaging adversaries that outnumbered and outgunned him but still he came away victorious. Frazier's story and Minghella's film tell a mostly overlooked tale about the people of a conquered nation and how they dealt with the lives they were forced to live. That is not anti-war, just reality as it was in 1864.
Carmen
4,0 de 5 estrellas
Won't play
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 9 de agosto de 2023
Won't play on my new blu-ray player
Says something about mix matched
Says something about mix matched
Client d'Amazon
5,0 de 5 estrellas
FILM UN PEU CHIANT TOUS VA BIEN
Revisado en Francia el 29 de mayo de 2023
peu étre des bons acteurs, mais lors de la lecture je me suis endormi, c'est peut etre l' age
Cvyogaman
4,0 de 5 estrellas
Interesting and intriguing
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de marzo de 2023
This movie maintained our interest throughout : it's a good movie. The dvd was good, too.
James B. Lineberry
5,0 de 5 estrellas
COLD MOUNTAIN (VHS)
Revisado en los Estados Unidos el 22 de mayo de 2014
Even though the Spring Semester at Spartanburg Community College is over, I plan to use certain clips from the movie, "Cold Mountain," in some of my future US History classes. In this case, the one area which stands out would be the battle sequence at "The Crater."
There could be a number of reasons for choosing FIVE STARS for "COLD MOUNTAIN." One which stands out, is that it is a historical drama centered around 'The War of Northern Aggression.' Southerners, especially those on the home front, had a number of problems to address, one of which was basic survival. The second reason, as a period piece, can be seen in the style of clothing and customs depicted in the film. The third reason, is that the film is very close to reality for the pressures placed upon the average Southern soldier, who realizes that one's family needs him at home, as the South is beginning to fall apart. These soldiers knew the consequences of being caught, and that in itself was not pleasant. But, there was that strong pull of family and loved ones, which is depicted in the film. Then, there was the music which had that down home southern mood, as well as the soundtrack. Enough said.
Basically, I liked the movie because it was a beautiful historical period piece. At the same time, it had a moving story centered around two lovers who were caught up in the historical events of the time. The scenery and sets were beautifully filmed and depicted in the movie and helped to set the mood or atmosphere of the 'Old South'. But, the period clothing and events, which were fairly accurate, was a welcome addition to movies about the 'War Between the States.' Now, was that 'The War of Southern Secession' or 'The American Civil War'? Anyway, to me it was a very good historical period piece.
I highly recommend this video. The movie (VHS) COLD MOUNTAIN allows for one to see other aspects of what people had to
endure on the home front.
Ben L.
There could be a number of reasons for choosing FIVE STARS for "COLD MOUNTAIN." One which stands out, is that it is a historical drama centered around 'The War of Northern Aggression.' Southerners, especially those on the home front, had a number of problems to address, one of which was basic survival. The second reason, as a period piece, can be seen in the style of clothing and customs depicted in the film. The third reason, is that the film is very close to reality for the pressures placed upon the average Southern soldier, who realizes that one's family needs him at home, as the South is beginning to fall apart. These soldiers knew the consequences of being caught, and that in itself was not pleasant. But, there was that strong pull of family and loved ones, which is depicted in the film. Then, there was the music which had that down home southern mood, as well as the soundtrack. Enough said.
Basically, I liked the movie because it was a beautiful historical period piece. At the same time, it had a moving story centered around two lovers who were caught up in the historical events of the time. The scenery and sets were beautifully filmed and depicted in the movie and helped to set the mood or atmosphere of the 'Old South'. But, the period clothing and events, which were fairly accurate, was a welcome addition to movies about the 'War Between the States.' Now, was that 'The War of Southern Secession' or 'The American Civil War'? Anyway, to me it was a very good historical period piece.
I highly recommend this video. The movie (VHS) COLD MOUNTAIN allows for one to see other aspects of what people had to
endure on the home front.
Ben L.
Detalles de cumplimiento de productos
Consulta los detalles de conformidad de este producto(Persona responsable de la UE).