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BITTER VICTORY (DVD/WS 2.35 ANAMORPHIC/MONO/B&W/JAP-SUB) DVD Movie

BITTER VICTORY (DVD/WS 2.35 ANAMORPHIC/MONO/B&W/JAP-SUB) DVD


2.35:1: Cinemascope

PN: 043396106703IE     Release: 06/27/2006
Starring: Richard Burton, Curd Jürgens, Ruth Roman
Director(s): Nicholas Ray


Bitter Victory
In Nicholas Ray's WWII drama, two British officers, Captain Leith (Richard Burton) and Major Brand (German character actor Curd Jürgens, who would later play Bond foe Karl Stromberg in The Spy Who Loved Me), a South African, are being considered to lead a daring raid to steal crucial documents from a Nazi stronghold in Libya. The two don't seem particularly fond of each other. Brand's wife, Jane (Ruth Roman of Strangers on a Train), arrives on the base. There's an odd awkwardness when Brand introduces her to Leith at the officers' club. It turns out the two already know each other, intimately. They were romantically involved long ago, until Leith broke it off without warning. Jane later met Brand. Leith and Jane keep their relationship a secret from Brand, but he realizes something's up when he goes out for a bit and comes back to find them dancing together. He later gets angry when his wife slips up and refers to Leith as "Jimmy." Brand and Leith are chosen to lead the mission together. Jane says goodbye to Leith, and Wilkins (Nigel Green of The Ipcress File) and some other soldiers see them together. The raid goes fairly smoothly, until Brand can't bring himself to kill a German sentry, and Leith feels compelled to step in and do it for him. Brand's resentment of Leith grows. The team steals the documents and heads out across the desert to make their escape. They're attacked by a German patrol, and after the melee, Brand arouses suspicious when he orders Leith to stay with three badly wounded soldiers while the rest of the group leaves for the rendezvous point. Bitter Victory is based on the novel by René Hardy. Jean-Luc Godard famously said of the film in his review, "Nicholas Ray is cinema." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
Cast
Richard Burton as Capt. Leith
Curd Jürgens as Maj. Brand
Ruth Roman as Jane Brand
Raymond Pellegrin as Mekrane
Anthony Bushell as Gen. Paterson
Sean Kelly as Lieutenant Barton
Christopher Lee as Sgt. Barney
Alfred Burke as Lt. Col. Callander
Crew
Jean Zay - Costume Designer
Lucie Lichtig - Continuity
Christian Ferry - First Assistant Director
Nicholas Ray - Director
Leonide Azar - Editor
Maurice LeRoux - Composer (Music Score)
René Daudin - Makeup
Vladimir Ivanov - Camera Operator
Jean D'Eaubonne - Production Designer
Michel Kelber - Cinematographer
Paul Joly - Production Manager
Paul Graetz - Producer
Robert Laffont - Producer
Joseph DeBretagne - Sound/Sound Designer
Nicholas Ray - Screenwriter
Gavin Lambert - Screenwriter
René Hardy - Screenwriter
Vladimir Pozner - Screenwriter
René Hardy - Book Author

Bitter Victory
"I kill the living, and I save the dead," says Captain Leith (Richard Burton), with a sardonic laugh. This line of dialogue, in which a seemingly heroic character laments the impossibility of true heroism, is a signature moment in Nicholas Ray's powerfully ambiguous take on the war drama, Bitter Victory. In the hands of countless other filmmakers, Leith would have become an unassailably noble figure, with Major Brand (Curd Jürgens), his craven counterpart, as a hateful villain. But Ray and his actors manage to bring out the humanity -- for better or worse -- in each of these characters. Ray's career-long interest in the torments of strong men divided against themselves can't help but transcend Hollywood clichés of honor and cowardice on the field of battle. The dispute between Leith and Jürgens is preordained. It's a part of who they are as individuals to such an extent that the love triangle with Jane (Ruth Roman) that makes their conflict explicitly inevitable seems extraneous. Cinematographer Michel Kelber (who also shot Jean Renoir's French Cancan) provides gorgeous black-and-white Cinemascope images of the harsh desert. But the real power and grace of Bitter Victory is that through Ray's vision -- vigorous in its moral and emotional honesty -- and Jürgens' surprisingly layered performance, Brand becomes recognizably human in his anguish, and sympathetic despite the destructive outcome of his actions. This aspect is what raises Bitter Victory to the level of the director's most memorable films. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 
(no awards)

General Specifications:

Language Options:English
Subtitle Options:
Sound Processing:DD2: Dolby Digital Stereo
Additional Features:none specified
DVD Aspect Ratio:2.35:1: Cinemascope
MPAA Rating:NR
DVD Discs Included:1
DVD Sides:1
DVD DVD Region Code:1
Content Length:102 min
 

DVD Chapters:


Side #1 --
1. Start [:12]
2. Jane Brand [7:02]
3. Mission Commander [11:12]
4. Libyan Strike [7:37]
5. Splitting Up [10:46]
6. The Wounded [8:54]
7. Walk to the Camels [8:47]
8. The Water Problem [7:19]
9. Professional Coward [8:29]
10. The Courage to Kill [9:25]
11. Sandstorm [8:10]
12. Return to Cairo [4:30]


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