Dead ManDead Man

Retail: $14.99
Our Price:
$9.99
Save: $5.00

Stock Status: No Longer Available!!!

 

  • Aspect Ratio:
    Widescreen
  • Rating:
     R — for moments of strong violence, a graphic sex scene and some language
  • Language:
      English
  • Studio:
      Miramax
  • UPC:
      786936141788
  • Year of Release:
      1995
  • Item Number:
      BVD021364
  • Release Date:
      09/07/2004
  • Genre:
     

    Hybrid Western

    Psychological Western

    Western

  • Format:
     

    DVD

MOVIE DESCRIPTION:

    A dark, bitter commentary on modern American life cloaked in the form of a surrealist western, Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man stars Johnny Depp as William Blake, a newly-orphaned accountant who leaves his home in Cleveland to accept a job in the frontier town of Machine. Upon his arrival, Blake is told by the factory owner Dickinson (Robert Mitchum) that the job has already been filled. Dejectedly, he enters a nearby tavern, ultimately spending the night with a former prostitute. A violent altercation with the woman's lover (Gabriel Byrne), also Dickinson's son, leaves Blake a murderer as well as mortally wounded, a bullet lodged dangerously close to his heart. He flees into the wilderness, where a Native American named Nobody (Gary Farmer) mistakes Blake for the English poet William Blake and determines that he will be Blake's guide in his protracted passage into the spirit world. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi

DVD FEATURES:
  • Region: 1
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 (Alternate Wide Screen)
  • Audio: Dolby Digital Surround
  • Screen: Enhanced Wide Screen Letterbox for 16x9 TV, Black and White
  • Subtitle: French
  • Features:
      • Theatrical trailer
      • Deleted scenes/outtakes
      • Music video
      • French subtitles
      • 2.0 Dolby Surround
      • Widescreen [1.78:1] enhanced for 16x9 televisions
AWARDS
  • Independent Spirit Awards
  •     Nominated Best Cinematography - 1996 (Robby Müller)
  •     Nominated Best Picture - 1996
  •     Nominated Best Screenplay - 1996 (Jim Jarmusch)
  •     Nominated Best Supporting Actor - 1996 (Gary Farmer)
  • National Society of Film Critics
  •     Won Best Cinematography - 1996 (Robby Müller)
  • New York Film Critics Circle
  •     Won Best Cinematography - 1996 (Robby Müller)
  • Screen International
  •     Won Five Continents Award - 1996 (Jim Jarmusch)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
REVIEW:
  • The interesting thing about Western movies is that they are the oldest genre in the cinema and yet, because of that status, every couple of years there seems to be a reinvention or new take on what is, by definition, the most American of stories. Dead Man, putting it mildly, ain't your grandfather's Western. In fact, it breaks the Western stereotype in so many ways, maybe Westerns should be defined by more than just their setting. To begin with, the director is indie darling Jim Jarmusch, who would be associated with Westerns in much the same way that Jerry Lewis would be associated with Holocaust dramas. This is, after all, the same man who gave us such classics as the Elvis homage Mystery Train and Down by Law, which introduced Roberto Benigni to American audiences. Add to that the character of William Blake, a bookish accountant played by Johnny Depp, who is most decidedly not your typical Western hero. In fact, Blake is the type of character who would most likely have been comedy relief to John Wayne not too many years ago. Briefly, Blake is hired by a corrupt industrialist (Robert Mitchum, in his last screen role) to serve as his company's accountant. Upon spending everything he has to reach the West, he is told his job has been given to another, thus sending into motion a series of events where Blake is wounded and on the run from a gang of bounty hunters, including Lance Henriksen. While there are bits of adventurism, the film is really a much quieter character study of a man forced to survive in an unfamiliar place by unfamiliar means and how it changes him as a human being. As a consequence, the film applies layer upon layer of subtext, some of which is as meaningless as the rest is meaningful. Blake encounters a loner Indian named, appropriately enough, Nobody, who believes Blake to be the great English poet William Blake and attempts to save his soul before Blake can expire from his wounds (not to give anything away, but the title of the film says it all). The film does follow some classic Western traits, in that it is gorgeously shot; the black-and-white cinematography is excellent, particularly in the opening sequence that chronicles Blake's journey west. Dead Man can be a little slow-moving at times, but it definitely engages both the senses and the philosophical portions of the brain that sometimes need a good, swift kick. ~ Dan Friedman, Rovi

Dead Man - Available now from DVDPlanet.com, join our mailing list and receive special offers and promotions.

BROWSE BY GENRE

NOW PLAYING

Drive (2011) Thing (2011) Transformers: the Dark of the Moon 3d Big Year

 

 

 

 

 

Specials

TOP 10 Last 2 Weeks

 

TOP 10 PRE-ORDERS

  1. Harold and Maude – 02/21/12 – $9.11
  2. Reds [25th Anniversary Edition] [2 Discs] – 02/21/12 – $10.64
  3. Nashville – 02/21/12 – $9.14
  4. A Place in the Sun – 02/21/12 – $10.23
  5. To Catch a Thief [Special Collector's Edition] – 02/21/12 – $10.04
  6. Three Days of the Condor – 02/21/12 – $8.24
  7. Barbarella: Queen of the Galaxy – 02/21/12 – $10.04
  8. Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express – 02/21/12 – $8.24
  9. Stalag 17 [Special Collector's Edition] – 02/21/12 – $10.34
  10. Romeo and Juliet – 02/21/12 – $9.14