Dead Poets Society with Robin Williams: DVD Cover
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Dead Poets Society Director: Peter Weir Cast: Robin Williams, Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke, Josh Charles

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/17/2006
  • Original Release: 1989
  • Rating: Rated PG
  • Sales Rank: 2,998
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Features

"Dead Poets": A look back- Featuring new interview footage with director Peter Weir, Ethan Hawke, Robert Sean Leonard, and many others; Raw Takes; Master of sound: Alan Splet - New interviews with David Lynch and Peter Weir; Cinematography master class- an intensive and inspirational lighting workshop with cinematographer John Seale; Audio commentary -with director Peter Weir, cinematographer John Seale and writer Tom Schulman; Theatrical trailer

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Dead Poets Society
1. Opening Titles / A New Semester [:00]
2. Seize The Day [:00]
3. Understanding Poetry [:00]
4. The Reconvening Of The Dead Poets Society [:00]
5. A Different Prespective [11:17]
6. Chances [9:44]
7. Find Your Own Walk [15:05]
8. Unorthodox Ideas [6:49]
9. Neil's Dream [7:28]
10. "Oh Captain, My Captain" / End Credits [13:08]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Unconventionality and nonconformity are often desirable qualities, but attaining them occasionally carries some risk, especially when the society around you seems to value them insufficiently. That's the message of this earnest, uncompromising drama, which won the 1989 Oscar for Best Original Screenplay and reminded viewers just how effective veteran funnyman Robin Williams could be when applying his considerable talents to a dramatic role. Under the direction of Peter Weir, Williams abandoned his sometimes annoying, hyperkinetic performance style to play iconoclastic English teacher John Keating, who labors overtime to fan the flames of creativity and freethinking in his New England prep school students, most of whom seem destined for Ivy League colleges and soul-deadening careers. Captivated by Keating's ebullience and enthusiasm, outgoing student Neil Perry (Robert Sean Leonard) revives the aged school's secret club, the Dead Poets Society, and enlists among its members the deeply withdrawn Todd Anderson (Ethan Hawke). The story is predictable up to a point, but it has a shattering climax that even today, more than 15 years after the film's theatrical release, retains the power to shock and dismay audiences. The young actors are uniformly excellent in their sharply drawn characters, and Kurtwood Smith is outstanding as Neil's domineering father, but it's Williams who makes this Society worth joining. The film soars whenever he's on camera, and even the most jaded home viewer will be moved by the influence his character wields over the impressionable students. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

"O Captain, My Captain"by Anonymous

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November 27, 2006: One of the great inspiring films of the decade in which there was a real sense of hope and idealism. The ending was terribly sad, but somehow vindicating with Ethan Hawke, the shy kid defying "the System" and giving Robin Williams his props. I would say the most loving film and heartwrenching pieces of cinema of the 90's. Too bad Whitman or Shelley or especially Harte (no pun intended) or Shakespeare was there.

I loved this movie!!!by Anonymous

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October 14, 2005: I loved this movie! It was just so moving! And why does everyone else just talk about the message, everybody already knows it's there and plenty of other movies have it too. I loved the poetry and feeling of the movie, and the characters were so likeable. The movie has feeling behind it, not just a lesson.


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