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| DVD - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $27.19 |
Deleted Scenes; Extended Scene -- Haruma, Play in Kibera; Embracing Africa -- Filming in Kenya; John Le Carre -- From Page to the Screen; Anatomy of a Global Thriller -- Behind the Scenes of The Constant Gardener
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Constant Gardener
1. Unfirtunate News (Main Titles) [5:04]
2. Aggressive Diplomacy [5:13]
3. Yes or No? [3:44]
4. New Discoveries [8:00]
5. Known By Reputation [4:18]
6. For Keeps [6:11]
7. Digging Deeper [4:10]
8. Vile Promise [5:18]
9. In African Soil [7:43]
10. A Small Cup of Tea [6:45]
11. Gentlemen's Club [8:47]
12. Tapping In [9:39]
13. Anonymous Traveler [10:24]
14. Betraying Tessa [1:14]
15. Kind Warning [5:40]
16. Disposable Drugs [5:28]
17. Survival [6:38]
18. Regrettable Deaths [7:15]
19. Coming Home [5:56]
20. End Titles [2:05]
One of the most intelligent films of 2005, The Constant Gardener demands much from its viewers but more than amply compensates them for the effort. Masterfully indicting the unholy alliance between business and government, this suspenseful drama, adapted from a John le Carré novel, avoids the standard thriller tropes and instead derives its narrative strength from unusually well drawn characters and the shocking real-life political conditions underlying the plot. Ralph Fiennes plays a British diplomat stationed in Kenya, where his activist wife (Rachel Weisz) is found brutally murdered; her suspected killer is a prominent doctor thought to have been her lover. Haunted by the rumors of his wife's infidelities, the remorseful widower launches an investigation into the killing -- even though his superiors have warned him to leave the matter to the proper authorities. There's good reason to keep him away: The murder is tied to corporate corruption and government malfeasance at the highest levels. Director Fernando Meirelles (City of God) takes a nonlinear approach to the story, with sequences set in the past juxtaposed with those unfolding in the present. It's not easy to figure out when certain scenes take place, but it's clear Meirelles has full command of the narrative, and his anguished portrayal of sub-Saharan Africa -- riddled with poverty and disease, exploited by outsiders for its valuable resources -- is undeniably powerful. Initially, Fiennes comes off as more than a bit inscrutable, but his character is eventually galvanized by the tragedy of his wife's death, rejecting the traditions of his office to do the right thing. Rachel Weisz really scores with her turn as the idealistic wife whose selfless crusade sets things in motion. Danny Huston lends admirable support as a weak, duplicitous colleague, and Bill Nighy delivers a blood-chilling performance as the activists' corrupt supervisor. The Constant Gardener is unusually rich in both content and texture -- and it'll certainly get you thinking. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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