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Cold Mountain [Blu-ray]
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February 3, 2009 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $20.00 | $14.79 |
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Format | DVD, Blu-ray |
Language | English |
Runtime | 2 hours and 35 minutes |
Color | Color |
Number Of Discs | 1 |
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Product Description
Sweeping American Civil War drama based on the novel by Charles Frazier, directed by Anthony Minghella (The English Patient, The Talented Mr Ripley). Jude Law stars as Inman, a wounded Confederate soldier who is slowly making the perilous journey back to his home town of Cold Mountain in North Carolina, meeting a string of colourful characters along the way (played by actors including Philip Seymour Hoffman, Natalie Portman, Ray Winstone and Kathy Baker). At home waits Ada Monroe (Nicole Kidman), the pre-war sweetheart to whom he has vowed to return. In his absence Ada, the shy and reserved daughter of a preacher (Donald Sutherland), has befriended the feisty Ruby (Renée Zellweger), a tough-talking young woman who can work the land as well as any man. Ruby supports Ada both emotionally and practically as she waits for Inman's return - but as the war drags on and her letters go unanswered, Ada finds it increasingly difficult to keep the faith.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : Unknown
- Product Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.59 x 6.77 inches; 2.93 ounces
- Media Format : DVD, Blu-ray
- Run time : 2 hours and 35 minutes
- Release date : September 26, 2011
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : Optimum Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B005GJTL14
- Number of discs : 1
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2013This 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.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2025Excellent movie. Poetic, romantic, war, and fun
- Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2025Great movie!
- Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2014Even 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.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2013I found this movie to be one of the best written and directed for this particular subject that I have seen in a long time. The acting was superb. Jude Law was nominated for an Oscar and rightfully so. He did an outstanding job in his role as Inman. I was especially pleased by Ren`ee Zellweger's acting. The story following a man who must leave the woman he has fallen in love with to fight a war he does not want to be a part of speaks of that particular time in our history. People who watch this movie as just entertainment do not understand that these things happened in the civil war. Very young men were forced to fight and die for a cause they did not understand or believe in. The progress of Inman after he decides to make his way back to Cold Mountain, North Carolina is at times riveting. At home, Ada ( Kidman) must keep her hopes alive that Inman is still alive and will come home to her. As the war turns what was once a comfortable lifestyle into poverty she is joined by a rather strange character ( Zellweger) who helps her bring the small farm back to life and made it possible to survive. The added truth to this war of men who stayed behind to kill or enslave men who did not want to serve or as Inman did, leave there post as the war became an obvious lost cause was hard to watch. How men could be so cruel and arrogant was disheartening. The end left me very sad except for the one happy surprise at the very end. I hope everyone who reads this review will purchase this movie and enjoy the gifted actors, writer and the excellant directing of Anthony Minghella. I promise it will not be a waste of your time.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2023This movie maintained our interest throughout : it's a good movie. The dvd was good, too.
Top reviews from other countries
- Suman Chamaria PrimeReviewed in India on April 9, 2017
1.0 out of 5 stars I'm in avid collector of Blu-ray discs but buying this was a big mistake because when you buy a Blu-ray movie expected to have c
I'm an avid collector of Blu-ray collector but buying this was a big mistake because when you buy a Blu-ray movie u expect it to have certain bonus features but this one came with nothing. On top of that a good 10-15 minutes of the movie was edited out. By the way the scenes which were cut out were not even the Love scenes but just general scenes which were pivotal to story continuity.
Anyway I should have known better after all Eagle are not exactly known for producing good home entertainment
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 16, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Magic film
Great story
-
natsukiReviewed in France on March 4, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars vraiment à voir
j'avais peur d'un film plan plan mais ce film est magnifique, une fin un peu trop romantico-drama mais tout le long est passionnant (et je suis pas du tout fan de nicole kindman soit dit en passant) une rené zelweger (connais pas bien l'orthographe) hilarante, juste et vraiment touchante, je le reregarde avec plaisir
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MarikaReviewed in Italy on January 22, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Dvd cold mountain
Consiglio venditore e il film è bellissimo
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yossiReviewed in Japan on October 23, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars 女は強く男は弱い
男が勝手に始めた戦争で男は勝手に死んでゆく。
そんな混乱した状況下でも女はたくましく生きられる。
土地を手放し落ちぶれた男が脱走兵狩りで己の優位性を
誇示するざまは弱さの象徴として描いているのか。
身勝手なルビーの父親しかり、インマンでさえ不確かな愛を
信じて数百キロを旅する姿は弱さなのか。
その旅で助けてくれるのはたくましく生きる二人の女性。
弱い男と強い女の対比は見事である。
ラストの女の子でさえ。
語られる詩と美しい自然は感動的だ。