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Extended version with nearly 3 minutes of International Release footage not shown in North American theaters; Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1; Theatrical trailer
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Far From the Madding Crowd
1. Overture [2:58]
2. Credits [2:34]
3. Country Courtship [7:47]
4. Lost Sheep [4:01]
5. Soldier's Girl [2:28]
6. Looking for Work [4:21]
7. Leadership Under Fire [4:00]
8. Mistress Will Manage [5:04]
9. No Passionate Parts [4:45]
10. Fanny's Mistake [3:33]
11. Grabbing His Attention [3:36]
12. Boldwood's Proposal [5:03]
13. Unwanted Opinion [3:02]
14. Healing Touch [5:40]
15. Bushes and Briars [6:35]
16. Night Beauty [3:18]
17. Swordplay [7:14]
18. The Things They Say [4:03]
19. Passerby [:06]
20. 50lb Price [4:35]
21. Newlyweds [4:06]
22. Harvest Home [5:00]
23. Sleepy and Stormy [6:47]
24. Intermission [4:53]
25. Entr'Acte [1:06]
26. Mourning After [1:40]
27. Fanny's Return [4:32]
28. Repent of Marrying [4:52]
29. Mother and Child [2:54]
30. Secret Pried Open [4:44]
31. His Very Wife [4:37]
32. The Bold Grenadier [2:53]
33. Sad News [5:35]
34. Promise Me [2:51]
35. Big-Top Blackmail [2:02]
36. Turpin's Ride to Town [3:03]
37. Pre-Party Jitters [5:17]
38. Ringed for Tonight [2:53]
39. Unwelcome Guest [3:32]
40. Bound to Go [3:55]
41. Whenever You Look Up [4:17]
42. Cast List [1:47]
This 1967 version of Thomas Hardy's novel should have done better at the box office than it did, given the star power of Julie Christie and the visual and aural fidelity to its source material. Julie Christie plays Bathsheba Everdene, a country heiress who is loved by three different men: Terence Stamp, Peter Finch and Alan Bates. Convinced that she is the intellectual superior of all three, Bathesheba loses many early opportunities for lasting happiness. Finally shedding herself of her haughty attitude, Bathsheba unconditionally accepts the love of Bates. The euphoric exuberance of Nicolas Roeg's photography is matched by the direction of John Schlesinger and the screenplay by Frederick Raphael. Only the nittiest of nitpickers would complain that some of the medium shots don't match the closeups (watch Terence Stamp's clown makeup in one scene). Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide