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S E A R C H D V D B e a v e r |
(aka "Twelve Angry Men")
directed
by Sidney Lumet
USA 1957
The
4K UHD of 12 Angry Men is reviewed HERE
12 Angry Men, by Sidney Lumet, may be the most radical courtroom drama in cinema history. A behind-closed-doors look at the American legal system that is as riveting as it is spare, this iconic adaptation of Reginald Rose’s teleplay stars Henry Fonda as the dissenting member on a jury of white men ready to pass judgment on a Puerto Rican teenager charged with murdering his father. The result is a saga of epic proportions that plays out over a tense afternoon in one sweltering room. Lumet’s electrifying snapshot of 1950s America on the verge of change is one of the great feature film debuts. *** Following the closing arguments in a murder trial, the twelve members of the jury must deliberate, with a guilty verdict meaning death for the accused, an inner-city teen. As the dozen men try to reach a unanimous decision while sequestered in a solitary, sweltering room, one juror (Henry Fonda, The Ox-Bow Incident) casts considerable doubt on elements of the case. Personal issues soon rise to the surface, and conflict threatens to derail the delicate process that will decide one boy’s fate. In addition to Fonda (who also co-produced with writer Reginald Rose), the cast includes Lee J. Cobb as his main opposition; Ed Begley as a hateful bigot; E.G. Marshall as a cold, logical stockbroker; Jack Warden as a baseball fanatic and Jack Klugman as the disturbed blood-brother to the defendant. The feature directing debut of Sidney Lumet (Serpico, The Verdict), 12 Angry Men remains “one of the best pictures ever made” (The Hollywood Reporter), a searing examination of race, justice, family and morality. |
Posters
Theatrical Release: 13 April 1957 (New York City, New York)
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
Comparison:
MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) - Region 1 - NTSC vs. MGM - Region 1 - NTSC vs. MGM - Region 2 - PAL vs. Criterion - Region 'A' - Blu-ray |
Big thanks to Pavel Borodin for the Region 2 captures !
Box Covers |
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Coming to Blu-ray in the UK from Criterion May 15th, 2017: | |
Distribution |
MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) Region 1 - NTSC |
MGM Region 1 - NTSC |
MGM Region 2 - PAL |
Criterion - Spine #591 Region 'A' - Blu-ray |
Runtime | 1:36:00 | 1:36:06 | 1:32:06 (4% PAL speedup) | 1:36:21.817 |
Video |
1.66:1 Original Aspect Ratio
16X9 enhanced |
1.66:1
Original Aspect Ratio Average Bitrate: 5.53 mb/s NTSC 720x480 29.97 f/s |
1.66:1 Original Aspect Ratio |
1.66:1 - 1080P Dual-layered Blu-rayDisc Size: 45,704,767,528 bytes Feature: 19,988,398,080 bytes Video Bitrate: 23.99 MbpsCodec: MPEG-4 AVC Video |
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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Bitrate:
MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) |
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MGM NTSC |
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Bitrate:
MGM PAL
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Bitrate:
Blu-ray
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Audio | English (Dolby Digital Mono), DUB: French, Spanish (Dolby Digital Mono) | English (Dolby Digital 4.0), English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround) |
English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), DUB: French, German, Italian, Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) |
LPCM Audio English 1152 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 1152 kbps / 24-bit |
Subtitles | English, Spanish, and none | English, Spanish, and none | English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, Danish, English For The Hard of Hearing, German For The Hard Of Hearing, and none | English and none |
Features |
Release Information: Studio: MGM Home Entertainment
Aspect Ratio:
Edition Details: • Featurette: Beyond a Reasonable Doubt - the Making of 12 Angry Men
• Featurette: Inside the Jury Room |
Release Information: Studio: MGM Home Entertainment
Aspect Ratio: Edition Details: |
Release Information: Edition Details:
DVD Release Date: May 17th, 2001 |
Release Information: Studio: Criterion
1.66:1 - 1080P Dual-layered Blu-rayDisc Size: 45,704,767,528 bytes Feature: 19,988,398,080 bytes Video Bitrate: 23.99 MbpsCodec: MPEG-4 AVC Video Edition Details: Transparent Blu-ray Case Chapters: 18 |
Comments: |
The 4K UHD of 12 Angry Men is reviewed HERE
NOTE: These Blu-ray captures were taken directly from the Blu-ray disc.
ADDITION: Criterion - Region 'A' Blu-ray (November 11'): Well - we move from looking simply 'better' to looking incredibly superior. This is far beyond was I was expecting. The Criterion 1.66:1 1080P image is rife with beautifully consistent grain and improves significantly in detail and contrast over the much flatter SD renderings. There may be a shade of black boosting. This Blu-ray looks... amazing. Huge thumbs up on the appearance. I am really impressed.
Audio is a linear PCM mono track that seems like an authentic representation of the original - very clean and Kenyon Hopkins' sparsely utilized, simple, score is piercing and crisp. There are optional English subtitles on the region 'A'-locked Blu-ray disc.
Supplements include Frank Schaffner’s television version of 12 Angry Men, with an introduction by Ron Simon. It runs 50-minutes and was written for the series Westinghouse Presents by Reginald Rose. It first aired September 26th, 1954 and is shown here in 1080i. There is a 25-minute interview, conducted by Criterion - from August 2011 - with film scholar Vance Kepley who looks at 12 Angry Men's evolution from teleplay to film. Presented are a compilation of Sidney Lumet interviews from various stages of his career with Lumet friend and collaborator Walter Bernstein. It runs in two parts over 30-minutes in total. There is a new interview with Simon about writer Reginald Rose who was one of the most renowned figures of televisions' 'Golden Age'. He was know for work that explored controversial social and political issues. In the 15-minute piece included here Ron Simon, curator at the Paley Center for Media, examines Rose's importance. Also featured is Tragedy in a Temporary Town, written by Rose and directed by Sidney Lumet. It premiered as part of The Alcoa Hour on NBC, February 19th, 1956. There is a wonderful new interview with cinematographer John Bailey in which he discusses cinematographer Boris Kaufman (filmmaker Dziga Vertov's younger brother. He photographed some of the most beloved films of all time, including Jean Vigo's Zero de conduite, Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront and Baby Doll and Sidney Lumet's 12 Angry Men and The Fugitive Kind. In this 40-minute piece cinematographer John Bailey discusses Kaufman's overall visual style and his work with Lumet. We also get a original theatrical trailer in HD and the package contains a liner booklet featuring an essay by writer and law professor Thane Rosenbaum.
Giving this beloved film such a complete package with sterling image and extensive extras - is almost more than film fans could have hoped. It has our highest recommendation and will be noted in our Year End Poll. Buy this Blu-ray with extreme confidence! *** ADDITION: MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) - Region 1 - NTSC - February 08': The short story is that this is now anamorphic, retains the same strong contrast and sharpness (perhaps a notch higher) and is a wonderful treatment. It has VOB files dated for Oct 07'. The mono audio is clean and clear and there are still optional yellow subtitles (see sample below). Bottom line is that it looks great in the 16X9 1.66 ratio, it is progressive, dual-layered, coded for region 1 in the NTSC standard. Greytones are excellent and the package is a ridiculously essential one at about $13. In the commentary historian Drew Casper hardly seems to take a breath, with a few short gaps, - he eloquently narrates at times but also inputs vast extraneous details about Lumet, Fonda and much of the cast (shot in 20 days for a mere $250,000). I suspect he is reading at times, from notes (so many specific dates mentioned), but it is still a very good commentary. There are two, relatively weak featurettes - Beyond a Reasonable Doubt - the Making of 12 Angry Men and Inside the Jury Room. They run respectively 23 and 15 minutes long and input comes from some left-field resources with even George Wendt ('Normie') giving some comments (he played a juror in the updated theatrical version). Also included are Klugman, Robert Osborne and Patricia King Hanson and many others. Anyway, I preferred Casper's commentary and his enthusiasm about blocking and staging of one early scene. This package has wonderful value for cost. The transfer looks great - there are some relevant supplements and the price sure is right. Thanks goodness MGM didn't mess this up. Strongly recommended! ***
About the Old vs. the PAL: The MGM Region 1 NTSC is marginally
superior with the image being sharper, greater detail, and better
contrast. The Region 2 PAL version is slightly brighter (probably
boosted) and marginally cropped on the left and top edges. The higher
bitrate of the Region 2 is no doubt die to the extensive Audio dubs
available (remember our bitrate reader reads audio as well as video). It
also includes 12 subtitle options.
There are no valuable extras on either edition. Unless you require the
language or subtitle options of the Region 2 DVD, obviously the NTSC
version is the top choice.
It would be reasonable to se
this anamorphized one day in an SE version with possible commentary and
some decent extra features, but I don't suspect it will happen soon.
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50th Anniversary Edition
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(MGM - Region 1 - NTSC LEFT vs. MGM - Region 2 - PAL - RIGHT)
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Criterion - Region 'A' - Blu-ray
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CLICK EACH BLU-RAY CAPTURE TO SEE ALL IMAGES IN FULL 1920X1080 RESOLUTION
1) MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) - Region 1- NTSC TOP2) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC SECOND 3) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - THIRD4) Criterion - Region 'A' - Blu-ray BOTTOM . |
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1) MGM (50th Anniversary Edition) - Region 1- NTSC TOP2) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC SECOND 3) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - THIRD4) Criterion - Region 'A' - Blu-ray BOTTOM . |
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