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S E A R C H D V D B e a v e r |
(aka "Hour of the Wolf" )
The strangest and most disturbing of the films Ingmar Bergman shot on the island of Fårö, Hour of the Wolf stars Max von Sydow as a haunted painter living in voluntary exile with his wife (Liv Ullmann). When the couple are invited to a nearby castle for dinner, things start to go wrong with a vengeance, as a coven of sinister aristocrats hastens the artist’s psychological deterioration. This gripping film is charged with a nightmarish power rare in the Bergman canon, and contains dreamlike effects that brilliantly underscore the tale’s horrific elements. *** Twenty-two years ago (Crisis) Bergman was telling the story of a man torn between two women; ten years ago (The Face) he was showing a performer being stripped of his mask, and five years ago (The Silence) he was revealing a single human coin by the examination of both its sides. All these were present in Persona, and they recur again in Hour of the Wolf, augmented on the immediate visual level by such familiar Bergman phrases as the bleached flashback (Sawdust and Tinsel), the errant eyeball (The Face), and the corpse that rises laughing from its slab (Wild Strawberries). Yet there are new departures, too—the dizzying revolve by Nykvist's camera around the dinner-table, the hideous ambivalence of the murder scene, the startling levitation of the Baron (a joke that is delicately capped by von Sydow's nervous glance at the ceiling as he hurries on his way), the jump-cuts with the firing of the gun, the rapturous Lester-style burst of sunlight on the lens as Veronica flings herself into her lover's arms. 'Awful things can happen,' she murmurs. 'Dreams can be revealed.' Nightmares as well, it seems. In the hour before dawn, Bergman's imagination remains the finest, and the most disturbing, of all the cinema's modern visionaries. Excerpt of review from Excerpt from Philip Strick's Review in Sight & Sound located HERE |
Posters
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Theatrical Release: February 19th, 1968
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
Comparison:
MGM (Special Edition) - Region 1 - NTSC vs. MGM - Region 2 - PAL vs. Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray
Big thanks to Per-Olof Strandberg for the Region one Screen Caps and Stan Czarnecki for the review!
1) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - LEFT2) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - MIDDLE3) Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray RIGHT
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Distribution |
MGM Region 1 - NTSC |
MGM Region 2 - PAL |
Criterion (Ingmar Bergman's Cinema) - Region FREE - Blu-ray |
Runtime | 1:27:24 | 1:23:48 (4% PAL speedup) | 1:28:14.0804 |
Video |
1:1.33 Original Aspect Ratio |
1.33:1 Original Aspect Ratio |
1.37:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-rays Disc One: 49,940,047,586 bytesFeature: 23,680,260,096 bytesVideo Bitrate: 31.83 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
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Bitrate:
MGM
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Bitrate:
Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray
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Audio | Swedish (Dolby Digital 2.0) |
Swedish, DUB: Italian (Dolby Digital 2.0) |
LPCM Audio Swedish 1152 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 1152 kbps / 24-bit |
Subtitles | English, Spanish, French, None | English, Dutch, Greek, Rumanian, Italian, none | English, none |
Features |
Release Information: Studio: MGM Aspect Ratio:
Edition Details: Chapters 20 |
Release Information: Studio: MGM Aspect Ratio:
Edition Details: Chapters 16 |
Release Information: Studio: Criterion
1.37:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-rays Disc One: 49,940,047,586 bytesFeature: 23,680,260,096 bytesVideo Bitrate: 31.83 MbpsCodec: MPEG-4 AVC Video
Edition Details: • shares the Blu-ray Disc with From the Life of the Marionettes
Chapters 17 |
Comments |
NOTE: The below Blu-ray captures were taken directly from the Blu-ray disc.
The Criterion
Blu-ray
of
Hour of the Wolf is part of
their Ingmar Bergman’s Cinema 100th Anniversary 30
Blu-ray Boxset
(reviewed, as a work in-progress,
HERE).
Hour of the Wolf shares this
Blu-ray with
From the
Life of the Marionettes.
See comparative captures, a listing of technical details, extras etc.,
on this page.
NOTE:
Yes, as has been leaked, we can now confirm that
this
Blu-ray
set is Region FREE! *** ADDITION: Region 1- May 08': I
can't find any reason why someone should buy the PAL version of
this particular DVD. If you are Region 2-locked and don't have a
multi-region player, it's time to purchase one. The R1 version
is vastly sharper and has superior contrast. The R1 disc is a
little bit cropped on the top of the image. On capture # 6 it's
quite noticeable, especially when at the same time the R1 has
more information at the bottom.
ON THE PAL EDITION: A fine, but somewhat
disappointing release by MGM. The image, though, is very
satisfying. The contrast is always apt. Bergman experimented
a lot with contrast in this period of his career, so there
are scenes which are intentionally very dark (Ullmann and Sydow's conversations in the cottage at night), as well as
scenes with perfectly balanced contrast (the dinner party)
or sequences with a very strong contrast (the murder by the
lake). The black and white image is also very crisp and
sharp, displays a moderate amount of grain and has no
digital noise whatsoever. So there's really nothing to
complain about. |
DVD
Menus
(MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - LEFT
vs. MGM - Region 2 - PAL - RIGHT)
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Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray
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CLICK EACH BLU-RAY CAPTURE TO SEE ALL IMAGES IN FULL 1920X1080 RESOLUTION
Screen Captures
1) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP2) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - MIDDLE3) Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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1) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP2) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - MIDDLE3) Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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1) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP2) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - MIDDLE3) Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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1) MGM - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP2) MGM - Region 2 - PAL - MIDDLE3) Criterion - Region FREE - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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