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| DVD - Wide Screen / Mono | $29.99 |
Closed Caption; Bloody Business: Making The Long Good Friday; Audio commentary with director John Mackenzie; U.S. and U.K. theatrical trailers; Cockney slang glossary; Poster & still gallery; Talent bios; Screenplay on DVD-ROM
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Long Good Friday
1. The Money (Main Titles) [8:49]
2. Harold Shand [1:05]
3. Victoria [5:26]
4. The Party [5:24]
5. Hands Across the Ocean [4:17]
6. Bad News [7:21]
7. The Bomb [6:42]
8. Cutting the Grass [6:56]
9. Narrow Escape [4:41]
10. Serious Business [5:54]
11. Charlie's Ultimatum [7:41]
12. Alone With Jeff [3:04]
13. Hanging With Harold [6:45]
14. Breakdown [3:43]
15. Putting it Together [5:02]
16. Judas [2:49]
17. Washing Away the Blood [10:36]
18. Payback [4:50]
19. The Last Ride [4:35]
20. End Credits [6:01]
This British gangster movie might not enjoy the historical status of Little Caesar or Public Enemy, but it's a brilliant update of genre conventions distinguished by the star-making performance of Bob Hoskins. Best known as a character actor, Hoskins has demonstrated more than once his ability to carry a film: this one, he picks up and runs with. He's perfectly cast as Friday's protagonist, a highly entrepreneurial mobster named Harold Shand. Although a volatile sociopath, he enjoys relationships with British politicos and legitimate businessmen, and is on the verge of cobbling together a deal that will unite the English and American underworld in a massive London waterfront development. On the verge of this triumph, though, he finds himself locked in a bloody turf war that threatens to decimate his criminal empire. Hoskins, who looks every bit the ferocious bulldog he plays here, makes Harold a modern-day Macbeth, intoxicated by power but surrounded by deceit and treachery. Helen Mirren is superb as his ambitious "moll," and veteran actors Eddie Constantine, Bryan Marshall, and George Coulouris lend excellent support. There's also a nice bit featuring a young Pierce Brosnan as an IRA terrorist. Barrie Keeffe's script isn't always easy to follow, but John Mackenzie's assured direction keeps Friday barreling along. The film is frank and brutal, but it has the kind of raw power that compels viewer attention throughout. Despite years of gangster thrillers since its original 1980 theatrical release, The Long Good Friday remain among the most vital and energetic examples of the genre. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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