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The International [Blu-ray] [2009]

The International  [Blu-ray] [2009]Director: Tom Tykwer
Actors: Brian F. O'Byrne, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Clive Owen
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £24.99
Buy New: £7.30
as of 25/11/2009 01:24 GMT details
You Save: £17.69 (71%)



New (22) Used (6) from £7.30

Seller: filmsmk
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 982

Format: PAL
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: Blu-ray
Region: 2
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 118 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: SBR50944
EAN: 5050629094411
ASIN: B001XUR1EO

Release Date: July 6, 2009
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Clive Owen, Naomi Watts, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Ulrich Thomsen, Brian F. O'Byrne, Victor Slezak, Luca CalvaniDirector: Tom Tykwer

Amazon.co.uk Review
emThe International/em is actually two movies in one: A highbrow thriller about a sprawling bank that resorts to murder and arms sales to retain its power, and a sleek visual essay on how architecture and interior design shapes your perceptions. Interpol agent Louis Salinger (Clive Owen, still not quite a star despite Inside Man and Children of Men) has been on the brink of conclusive evidence against the villainous international bank, but his sources always end up dead. With the aid of a Manhattan district attorney (Naomi Watts in a woefully underwritten part), he stumbles on the trail of the bank's favorite hit man, who might provide the (literally) smoking gun Louis needs. emThe International/em starts out smooth and silky, with visual style to burn and Owen's intense fervor. The plot gradually bogs down in incoherent moralising, but along the way there are some taut sequences, including a bloody shootout in the Guggenheim Museum where alliances shift unexpectedly. But what makes emThe International/em worth seeing is director Tom Tykwer's astute eye for public space: Chic postmodern buildings, broad Italian plazas, Turkish rooftops like mountain paths--Tykwer orchestrates actors through these architectural shapes, his hypnotic visual sense creating far more tension and excitement than the plot. Also featuring Armin Mueller-Stahl (Eastern Promises) and Ulrich Thomsen (The Celebration) as malevolent Europeans. --emBret Fetzer/embr / p/p pspan class="h1"strongStills from emThe International/em (click for larger image) /strong/span table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="4" width="100%" p/p p/p tbody tr align="center" valign="top" tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02/uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_1.jpg" width="300" //td p/p tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02/uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_2.jpg" width="300" //td tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02//uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_3.jpg" width="300" //td p/p /tr tr align="center" valign="top" tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02//uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_4.jpg" width="300" //td p/p tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02//uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_5.jpg" width="300" //td tdimg src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/02//uk-dvd/images/theinternational/International_6.jpg" width="300" //td /tr /tbody /table /p


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 9



5 out of 5 stars Brilliant action thriller, beautiful to watch   September 2, 2009
F. L. P. Souza (Amstelveen, The Netherlands)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Tom Twyker has made a beautiful film, each scene is a pleasure to watch, while at the same time the film has a density and a rhythm that draws you in from the first five minutes until the very end. It combines depth and high adrenaline with amazing action scenes in fantastic locations. I don't want to spoil the fun of watching it for the first time (I've seen it three times already), so just let me say that the film contains the best shoot-out of any thriller on the past 20 years. "Heat", by Michael Mann, pales by comparison. Plus my wife and daughters also loved it, it's not just a mindless string of violence, on the contrary. I highly recommend it, both as a fast-paced action film and as a "thinking man's thriller".


5 out of 5 stars The International   August 19, 2009
Mathew Philip Vernon Palmer
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

This was one of the better new films out. Clive Owen played an excellent part and made this thriller film gripping. I was pleased I bought it and have recommended it to friends.


5 out of 5 stars the international   November 3, 2009
Bruno Brambilla
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

blu ray perfetto audio da manuale immagini senza la minima compressione semplicemente sbalorditivo


4 out of 5 stars Stylishly shot action thriller   October 26, 2009
Mr. Blu (Europe)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is a film full of great cinematography and breathtaking, super-sharp HD shots, accompanied by a compelling HD soundtrack. Tom Tykwer, the German director best known for his film version of Süsskind's "Das Parfum", often seems to have more of an eye for the architecture than for his actors, but both are usually impressive. Clive Owen originally did not convince me in this kind of role, but he is getting steadily more believable. He is of course dwarfed by the acting talents of Armin Müller-Stahl, who recently also starred in the filming of Thomas Mann's "Buddenbrooks", but that's seniority for you. br / br /The plot is not particularly complex but quite refreshing; it tackles finance with almost as much invention and sophistication as "Syriana" tackles the oil-business. In trying to be a cut above the average thriller, there are scenes where they self-consciously try to work-up the dialogue and hover around pseudo-philosophical areas. This works at some times better than others. Clive Owen occasionally stumbles on duff dialogue such as the "I'm the one you burn" metaphor about crossing and burning bridges. I didn't really find the plot twist concerning a certain character's change of heart that convincing either. br / br /Nevertheless this is a fast-paced film that easily fills 2 hours with events rather than trundling along. It is a joy to look at and to listen to on Blu-Ray, and has enough imagination to keep you gripped throughout. Not the world's best ending ever, but better than an unrealistic one, I suppose. Solid four stars. I took one star off for the occasionally queasy dialogue when the film tries to wax philosophical and falls well short of the depth it seems to be aiming at.


4 out of 5 stars "...There's What People Are Given...And Then There's The Truth..."   July 17, 2009
Mark Barry at Revival Records, West End (London, UK)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

"The International" opens with a close-up of Clive Owen's bedraggled and unshaven face staring intently on a dodgy transaction that's taking place in a car park in the pouring rain across the street from him. As it cuts to his British colleague in a German car (played by an excellent Ian Burfield) negotiating the release of dangerous information from a nervous businessman in the driver's seat, you are immediately aware of a number of things - the stunning picture quality, the clever story and the cool cast. "The International" is beautiful to look at on BLU RAY and it's what you'd expect from a film like this - a well-paced espionage Bourne-like thriller that's both entertaining and striving to say something (though not always achieving either). br / br /Roughly based on true events that rocked the banking system in the 80s and 90s, "The International" has been given a contemporary upgrade by Director TOM TYKWER and Writer ERIC SINGER - and in light of the avalanche of less-than-honest activities surrounding the recent global meltdown, it doesn't look the least bit out of place. In fact "The International" looks like it's arrived just in time - and with a really good point to make. Is it really the terrorists we need to be scared of - or the shady filth in suits that finance them? And what are their ultimate motives? br / br /Clive Owen and Naomi Watts play Louis Salinger and Eleanor Whitman, two investigators from either side of the pond with a similar burning goal - for years they've been trying to expose a European bank they believe to be the number one choice for 90% of the world's dirty money. Toppling governments, controlling populations - it's a cesspool of hurt for ordinary people everywhere - and has clients said to include 'everyone' from Hezbollah to the CIA. But when Salinger and Whitman try to get close to an 'insider' who could give them a case, that person and their entire family gets removed by a no-loose-ends professional - and the agents subsequent investigations into the dead bodies then gets bogged down in endless amounts of convenient red tape and police bureaucracy. br / br /After a while it becomes obvious that it's time to take chances, live dangerously and go outside the law. And on the movie goes to Istanbul and a newspaper collage in the end credits that depressingly reads more like the truth rather than fiction... br / br /As you can imagine the cast is huge and the locations many. Keeping with buildings - the pristine yet detached architecture peppering so many affluent cities around the world especially in their financial sectors is used as a sort of subtext - as Agent Salinger climbs the steps of yet another sleek but soulless headquarters, he's little David making his way towards a mighty Goliath and with no real certainty that he's going to wound the beast, let alone kill the seemingly indestructible monster. br / br /Owen is a great leading man if not too ludicrously handsome to be believable, while Watts is an actress of calm beauty and intelligence that most leading men would want to work with. Ulrich Thomas is superb as the intelligent yet clinically detached head of the shady bankers conglomerate that talk on laptops and meet in museums. Felix Silis and Jack McGee (the Chief in Rescue Me) turn up as low-level detectives in New York just doing their job with tenaciousness and heart, while Watts plays it straight throughout - a woman who is committed, but scared out of her wits for herself and her young family (the writing is thankfully too intelligent to set up the inevitable romance between her and the lead). br / br /But the movie's secret weapon is Armin Mueller-Stahl. Stahl is the kind of actor who has monumental gravitas - he makes every sentence seem like an event - he's like Europe's acting equivalent of Anthony Hopkins. Armin plays Wilhelm Wexler - a man who exudes old-world power and corruption stretching back a lifetime. But Salinger detects something else in Wexler's advanced years - here is a once-principled man who started out with ideals and dreams, but has ended up defending a nightmare that kills real people in the real world and with sickening passionless detachment. There's a brilliantly written face-to-face showdown between Owen and Mueller-Stahl - a meeting of two minds - both of whom are tired of being beaten to a pulp by a huge lie. Wilhelm wants redemption - a way of making his life count - and perhaps both men are smart enough to work out a way of mutual interest. br / br /The BLU RAY has a commentary by the Director that's fantastically detailed; there's a very interesting "Making Of" feature which has location footage in Berlin, New York, Istanbul, Milan and even a deserted warehouse in Germany where the spectacular Guggenheim Museum set was built for a huge shoot out between Salinger and the assassin he's trying to keep alive - the excellent Irish actor Brian F. O'Byrne. br / br /If I was to put up a failing - it would be that there's too much style over substance - and you just don't care enough for the characters to have the movie make a real impact on you. And some of the shoot-outs border on the silly rather than the believable - put in there to up the action quotient and provide enticing trailer fodder. Or perhaps its just that the subject matter is frankly too real for most of us...and it's outcome too depressing... br / br /For all that "The International" is an impressive and entertaining thriller - not great - but definitely worth a punt. br / br /And could someone please give Clive Owen ugly tablets - it only seems fair to the rest of us mere mortals...

Showing reviews 1-5 of 9


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