The Pianist with Adrien Brody: DVD Cover

    The Pianist Director: Roman Polanski Cast: Adrien Brody, Thomas Kretschmann, Frank Finlay, Maureen Lipman

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    • DVD Release Date: 08/22/2006
    • Original Release: 2002
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 8,790

    Viewer Rating: (30 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Intellectual Stimulation" See All

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    DVD - Full Frame$14.99
    Blu-ray - Wide Screen$31.99

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    • Overview
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    Scenes

    Features

    Insight into the making of the film and its authenticity; Roman Polanski's own story of survival during WWII; Behind-the-scenes interviews with Oscar winners Roman Polanski, Adrien Brody and Ronald Harwood; Clips of Wladyslaw Szpilman playing the piano

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    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Pianist
    1. Warsaw, 1939 [8:14]
    2. No Jews Allowed [6:21]
    3. Segregated [6:03]
    4. A Visit From Itzak [8:05]
    5. The SS [8:06]
    6. To the Labor Camps [12:26]
    7. Itzak Again [12:53]
    8. Potatoes and Bread [9:29]
    9. In Hiding [11:59]
    10. On the Run [9:51]
    11. In the Lion's Den [5:11]
    12. No Food [5:00]
    13. The Uprising [11:00]
    14. Mass Destruction [6:08]
    15. The Pianist [9:41]
    16. A Benefactor [7:11]
    17. A New Life [4:51]
    18. End Titles [6:26]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    After a string of mediocre movies that hardly hinted at Roman Polanski's early glory, The Pianist represents a dazzling comeback -- the director's best work since Chinatown. Call it the anti-Spielberg Holocaust movie. Like Schindler’s List, The Pianist is based on a true story -- in this case, the autobiography of classical pianist Wladyslaw Szpilman (Adrien Brody), a Polish Jew who escaped the Nazis and spent World War II hiding out in Warsaw. But where Spielberg’s film is operatic and ultimately sentimental, Polanski’s is austere, tightly focused, almost clinical in the way it details Szpilman’s quest for survival. An upper-class dandy whose interests in life are limited to music and women, Szpilman is miraculously spared when his entire family, along with the rest of the Warsaw Ghetto, is carted off to the death camps. Brody, in an Oscar-winning performance, is magnificent as a man who is single-minded in his obsession with his music and tenacious in his will to live but hardly heroic: Szpilman’s initial salvation is a stroke of sheer luck. Later, in a stunning and lyrical scene that the entire film builds toward, we see that ultimately his talent as a pianist is the only thing that saves him. If many of the early images from The Pianist are familiar from other Holocaust films, once Szpilman is alone, holed up in a series of empty apartments, peering helplessly through the windows at the war’s devastation, Polanski brings a fresh perspective. The shots of an emaciated, barely alive Szpilman, wandering like a ghost through the rubble of the bombed-out ghetto, are unforgettable. A Polish Holocaust survivor himself, the director films Szpilman’s story with a clarity and authority that clearly derive from his own experience. Both Polanski -- who fled the U.S. decades ago after statutory rape charges -- and newcomer Brody scored upsets at the 2003 Academy Awards, winning the Best Director and Best Actor awards, respectively. Their surprise triumphs are testaments to the power of this remarkable film. Kryssa Schemmerling, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    The Pianistby ibizan

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    August 23, 2009: Evocative and thought provoking!Adrien Brody outdid himself!

    Hard-Hitting and Realisticby Anonymous

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    September 10, 2006: THE PIANIST is a very fine movie about the survival experiences of a Polish pianist during the Nazi occupation of Warsaw in World War II. The film contains many memorable scenes reflecting both the worst and best of humanity under extremely trying conditions. One such scene shows German soldiers bullying and mocking elderly Jewish refugees and another depicts a Russian tank blasting a building in which the pianist is hiding. In contrast, there is a scene in which a German officer finds the pianist playing the piano in an otherwise vacant building. The German officer seems mesmerized by the music and grateful to be able to experience such a pleasant interlude in the midst of the horrors of war. Immediately a bond is struck between the two men. The role of the pianist is played by Adrien Brody. Also in the cast are Thomas Kretschmann, Frank Finlay, Maureen Lipman, Emilia Fox, Ed Stoppard, Julia Rayner, Jessica Kate Meyer and Michal Zebrowski. THE PIANIST was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture. Oscars were won by Adrien Brody for Best Actor in a Leading Role and Roman Polansky for Best Director. Ronald Harwood won an Academy Award as well for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published. In addition, Polanski won a Golden Palm for this motion picture at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival.

    This review was written about the DVD Full Frame edition.


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