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DVD includes three featurettes, commentary by screenwriter Doug Wright, a still photo gallery, and U.S. and Spanish theatrical trailers.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Scene Selection
1. A Naughty Story [:53]
2. Charenton Asylum (Main Titles) [3:20]
3. Smuggled Stories [:21]
4. Visiting The Marquis [2:54]
5. The Asylum Appraiser [1:10]
6. The Published Word [7:01]
7. The Doctor's Bride [8:11]
8. A Farce [4:45]
9. The Punishment [3:21]
10. Creative Writing [2:13]
11. Written In Blood [4:10]
12. Woman's Desire [1:27]
13. The Doctor's Revenge [6:04]
14. Writing By Proxy [4:50]
15. Bedlam [1:21]
16. A Victim [5:47]
17. Silenced [3:01]
18. A New Administration [4:09]
19. A Legacy [6:30]
20. End Titles [:47]
Academy Award winner Geoffrey Rush deserves another gold statuette for his bravura turn as the Marquis de Sade in Quills, a provocative period drama that unfolds in an environment of madness and depravity. Rush portrays the Marquis as a tormented genius, confined in a madhouse and driven obsessively to commit his lewdest fantasies to paper. Kate Winslet, in her best role since Titanic, plays a laundress who smuggles his manuscripts to eagerly waiting printers, and Joaquin Phoenix is quietly persuasive as the progressive priest who tries to accommodate the Marquis and runs afoul of a tyrannical doctor (Michael Caine). Screenwriter Doug Wright, adapting his own play, twists historical events and characters for dramatic purposes, turning the 18th-century asylum into a charnel house of chilling perversion and casting the Marquis in a vaguely sympathetic light. Director Philip Kaufman (The Unbearable Lightness of Being) is even less ambiguous: He sees de Sade as a martyr in the crusade for freedom of expression, and his keepers as deluded or sinister agents of a repressive society. While certainly titillating in its depictions of de Sade's fevered dreams, Quills doesn’t wallow in muck for sensationalistic purposes; it has a more serious message -- one that’s conveyed with consummate skill from both sides of the camera. The DVD edition includes three separate featurettes covering the film’s production and subject, along with a full-length commentary by Wright and a gallery of stills. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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