Don't Look Now with Julie Christie: DVD Cover

    Don't Look Now
    a.k.a. A Venezia... Un Dicembre Rosso Shocking Director: Nicolas Roeg Cast: Julie Christie, Donald Sutherland, Hilary Mason, Clelia Matania

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    • DVD Release Date: 09/03/2002
    • Original Release: 1973
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 18,737
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    DVD - Wide Screen$3.99
     
    • Overview
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    Features

    Closed Caption; Widescreen version; Dolby Digital Mono English; Dolby Digital Mono French; English subtitles; Theatrical trailer

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Ominous Prescience [8:22]
    2. The Sisters [8:49]
    3. Swift Recovery [7:58]
    4. Lovers [8:47]
    5. Lost in Venice [3:08]
    6. Mumbo Jumbo [11:07]
    7. Scared for You [5:08]
    8. An Accident [11:26]
    9. Prophecy [7:12]
    10. Going to the Police [8:29]
    11. Followed [5:27]
    12. Perfectly All Right [5:02]
    13. Too Many Shadows [6:26]
    14. Fetch Him Back [5:18]
    15. Coming Together [7:17]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Venice is definitely not for lovers in Nicolas Roeg's 1973 gothic chiller. Based on a Daphne du Maurier short story, Don't Look Now tells the story of a married couple, superbly portrayed by Julie Christie and Donald Sutherland, whose to visit that romantic Italian city is tainted by their grief over their recently deceased daughter. Their stay in the familiar tourist destination takes on a nightmarish aura as they are overcome by eerie, synchronistic forebodings of worse things to come. Roeg unfolds the narrative slowly, with a subliminal seductiveness that gives sinister undertones to the simplest gestures and creates an overpowering aura of lurking danger. The wounded couple appears emotionally frozen in the aftermath of their loss, and they are believably susceptible to a blind old woman who claims to have visions of their daughter. But Venice is the real star here. It is not the sunny Italian playground of movies like Summertime or A Little Romance but the menacing city of films like Paul Schrader’s The Comfort of Strangers and, of course, Visconti’s Mahler-soaked adaptation of Death in Venice. Roeg presents Venice as a great, ancient maze, its gray decay freighted with Jungian archetypes and psychological metaphors. The result is one of the most enigmatic and unsettling thrillers of all time. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    • Viewer Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Don't Look Nowby Anonymous

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    March 26, 2003: The 1st time I say this film I was mesmerised. A truly magnificent film that has stood the test of time.

    Don't Look Nowby Anonymous

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    July 04, 2002: This is a truly artistic work of the macabre, from ''Walkabout'' director Nicholas Roeg. The story is of a couple, John and Laura Baxter (played by Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie), grieving over the accidental drowning of their small daughter. They move to Venice, where John works on the restoration of a church. The couple meet two sisters in a cafe, one blind and a psychic, who tells them their daughter is ''happy'' in her new world. Laura is comforted by this, but John scoffs, but is haunted by visions of a small figure darting around the canals, dressed in the same red rain coat his daughter used to wear.... The backdrop of Venice is not shown romantically here. It is crumbling and old in the dead of winter, depressing and emotionally draining and perfectly suits this film. There is a fantastic use of colour,(black and red notably) and good shock moments, including jerkey, quick images. There is also an equisite and well crafted love scene, one of the most famous in film history, which Donald Sutherland supposedly said was ''Absolutley horrible to shoot.'' The chilling finale, fine acting and and beautiful filming make this an ingenious erotic, supernatural thriller, that is highly understated today. All members are at their peak in this picture and it is truly emotionally affecting. While it is not a frightening as it used to be, it is still a masterpiece.