The Aviator (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)

The Aviator (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)
by Martin Scorsese

The Aviator (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)
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DVD Cover Information

Actor: Alec Baldwin, Cate Blanchett, John C. Reilly, Kate Beckinsale, Leonardo DiCaprio
Director: Martin Scorsese
Brand: Warner Brothers
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 5.1; English (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Subtitled); English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 5.1; French (Dubbed), Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
Picture Format: Widescreen, 2.35:1
Running Time: 170 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2005-05-24
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Studio: Warner Home Video

Movie Reviews of The Aviator (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)

Movie Review: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE AMAZING HOWARD HUGHES
Summary: 5 Stars

STATED BRIEFLY: BEST BIOPIC I HAVE EVER SEEN WITH THE EXCEPTION OF CITIZEN KANE!

Of course, "Citizen Kane" is about a fictional character, so it is not really the same. Nevertheless, somehow, this film depicts Howard Hughes as being a kind of self-made Citizen Kane.

"You get a sense of Howard Hughes being Icarus with the wax wings. Those wings were great for a while, but he flies too close to the sun." - Director, Martin Scorsese

BRILLANT EXECUTION OF A FILM THAT'S TOO LARGE FOR LIFE:

Scorsese's undertaking, a sympathetic portrait of the rise and fall of a great-though-enigmatic American, needed a special formula which Scorsese executed, making "The Aviator" all the more compelling in the process.

Unlike films like "Giant" with James Dean which featured a strong beginning which then needed a rushed second reel to meet time constraints, "The Aviator" fleshed out that first reel without constraint and effectively touched on all the salient issues that made Howard Hughes great while clearly and fairly illustrating the tragic darkness which progressively sowed the seeds for his eventual fall. Having seen his trials and tribulations which fairly depicted the reel meat of his life climaxing with his subcommittee testimony, we're ready for a fast-though-appropriate ending using the device provided by his illness -- "THE WAY OF THE FUTURE". It was a very clever device to thematically end the movie while, at the same time, including everything the film needs in what essentially could be considered the first reel. In this manner, Scorsese was able avoid compromise in the content, scope, and length of the film while keeping the studio and easily-bored moviegoers from coming out of their skin due to the film's length. The nearly-3-hour film went fast and played like a tragic Comet or like the "Icarus" of mythology, which is exactly the way it should have been as its style seemed to be a complement to Howard Hughes' life.

-----* AT THE END - IT WAS ALL OVER --

SCORSESE SPARED US THE PAIN OF WITNESSING HUGHES' WANING YEARS -

Without having to see the next 25+ years of the amazing aviator's life, we had enough good lifestyle material and retrograde hints to see where Hughes' life would eventually take him. Having already seen the major and most interesting highlights of Hughes' life, we had enough to fill in the conclusion without actually seeing it. In so doing, Scorsese avoided what would have been tedious, painful, overly long, and redundantly superfluous. It is truly another Oscar-worthy turn at directing for Scorsese.

ABOUT THE ACTING: NO SHORTAGE OF TALENT - BIG NAMES OR EFFORT

Here is an incomplete list of the superb cast of "The Aviator":

Leonardo DiCaprio - Howard Hughes
Cate Blanchett - Katharine Hepburn
Kate Beckinsale - Ava Gardner
John C. Reilly - Noah Dietrich
Alec Baldwin - Juan Trippe
Alan Alda - Sen. Ralph Owen Brewster
Ian Holm - Professor Fitz
Danny Huston - Jack Frye
Gwen Stefani - Jean Harlow
Jude Law - Errol Flynn
Adam Scott - Johnny Meyer
Matt Ross - Glenn Odekirk
Kelli Garner - Faith Domergue
Frances Conroy - Mrs. Hepburn
Brent Spiner - Robert Gross
Stanley de Santis - Louis B. Mayer
Edward Herrmann - Joseph Breen
Willem Dafoe - Roland Sweet
Kenneth Walsh - Dr. Hepburn
J.C. MacKenzie - Ludlow

There was a lot of sensational acting here, but Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes truly makes the movie and becomes "The Aviator"!

ABOUT SCORSESE'S APPROACH TO DIRECTING THIS MASSIVE PROJECT:

Scorsese effectively uses a neat device in fictionalizing where the beginning and usually the end of a dramatized occurrence or theme of a scene is framed by events we can see are clearly biographical facts. For example, we see Howard Hughes burning all his clothes in a very dramatic scene after Katherine Hepburn informs him that "she has found someone else". Scorsese makes it clear by the consistent manner of his presentation that this did happen. The break-up was 100% certain while the burning of the clothes in the manner depicted was probably extrapolated from the kind of facts that detectives use. The scene is closed with a 2 A.M. phone call from Hughes' to his trusted business manager Noah Dietrich (John C. Reilly). Hughes demands that Dietrich go to J.C. Penney's and get him some clothes. He describes the garments needed and then vacillates between J.C. Penney's and Woolworth's, finally deciding on Sears. This part of the scene probably happened exactly as shown and Scorsese makes that clear with hints like "Are you taping me?" permeating the phone conversation. That simple "Are you taping me?" puts a fine point on the growing paranoia that has always been present in Hughes' mind and represents just one of the many methods Scorsese utilizes to get the most mileage out of his script.

-----*- OVERALL

This is one of the best films I have ever seen. "The Aviator" is a superbly appropriate treatment of the life of a great man who most definitely can be defined by his rise and fall and the components that influenced both. This film most dramatically and effectively casts a bright light on the character of the man that was a giant of very different proportions from anyone who has come into the light before or after him. Scorsese clever portrayal of balance in Hughes character by illustrating the fluctuating emotional states that influenced many of the important events of Hughes' life, is what really puts this film ahead of other epic biopics.

THE DVD: 2 DVD SET is a best buy!

PERFECT AUDIO AND VIDEO - MANY FEATURES: some pertained to Hughes' mental illness etc.

Summary of The Aviator (Two-Disc Widescreen Edition)

An epic biopic depicting the early years of legendary director and aviator Howard Hughes' career from the late 1920's to the mid-1940's.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA UPC: 085393893927

From Hollywood's legendary Cocoanut Grove to the pioneering conquest of the wild blue yonder, Martin Scorsese's The Aviator celebrates old-school filmmaking at its finest. We say "old school" only because Scorsese's love of golden-age Hollywood is evident in his approach to his subject--Howard Hughes in his prime (played by Leonardo DiCaprio in his)--and especially in his technical mastery of the medium reflecting his love for classical filmmaking of the studio era. Even when he's using state-of-the-art digital trickery for the film's exciting flight scenes (including one of the most spectacular crashes ever filmed), Scorsese's meticulous attention to art direction and costume design suggests an impassioned pursuit of craftsmanship from a bygone era; every frame seems to glow with gilded detail. And while DiCaprio bears little physical resemblance to Hughes during the film's 20-year span (late 1920s to late '40s), he efficiently captures the eccentric millionaire's golden-boy essence, and his tragic descent into obsessive-compulsive seclusion. Bolstered by Cate Blanchett's uncannily accurate portrayal of Katharine Hepburn as Hughes' most beloved lover, The Aviator is easily Scorsese's most accessible film, inviting mainstream popularity without compromising Scorsese's artistic reputation. As compelling crowd-pleasers go, it's a class act from start to finish. --Jeff Shannon


DVD Features
In his commentary track, director Martin Scorsese offers his own impressions of Howard Hughes and rattles off his memories of experiencing Hughes's films. He mentions how he made Cate Blanchett watch every Katharine Hepburn film from the '30s on the big screen, and observes that Kate Beckinsale had "a real sense of the stature of a Hollywood goddess." But in general he doesn't talk much about the craft of making the film. That area is covered better by editor Thelma Schoonmaker, who also appears on the commentary track, and producer Michael Mann makes a few appearances (all were recorded separately). The picture is brilliant, but the 5.1 sound is not as aggressive in the rear speakers and subwoofer as one might expect, other than some nice surround effects in the Hell's Angels flying sequence.

The second disc collects almost three hours of features. There's one unnecessary deleted scene, and an 11-minute making-of featurette that's basically the cast and director heaping praise on each other. More interesting are the short featurettes on visual effects (including the XF-11 scene, of course), production design, costumes, hair and makeup, and score, and Loudon Wainwright discusses his and his children's musical performances. Historical perspective is provided by spotlights on Hughes's role in aviation and his obsessive-compulsive disorder, and a 43-minute Hughes documentary from the History Channel (part of the Modern Marvels series, it focuses on his mechanical innovations and spends less than a minute on his movies). More unusual are DiCaprio and Scorsese's appearance on an OCD panel, and a half-hour interview segment DiCaprio did with Alan Alda. --David Horiuchi

The Personalities of The Aviator

Click the links to explore more movies by these stars.

Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes
"Sometimes I truly fear that I... am losing my mind. And if I did it... it would be like flying blind."
Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn
Howard Hughes: "You're the tallest woman I have ever met."
Katharine Hepburn: "And all sharp elbows and knees. Beware."
Kate Beckinsale as Ava Gardner
Howard Hughes: "Does that look clean to you?"
Ava Gardner: "Nothing's clean, Howard. But we do our best, right?"
Gwen Stefani as Jean Harlow
Jean Harlow in Hell's Angels: "Would you be shocked if I put on something more comfortable?"
Jude Law as Errol Flynn
Errol Flynn in Captain Blood: "Up the riggings, you monkeys! Break out those sails and watch them fill with the wind that's carrying us all to freedom!"
Director Martin Scorsese
"You get a sense of Howard Hughes being Icarus with the wax wings. Those wings were great for a while, but he flies too close to the sun." --Martin Scorsese

Other Movies by The Aviator's Oscar® Winners

Production Designer Dante Ferretti
Film Editor Thelma Schoonmaker
Costume Designer Sandy Powell
Cinematographer Robert Richardson
See all the Oscar® winners at Oscar Central

The Aviator at Amazon.com


The Aviator soundtrack

The Screenplay

Howard Hughes: The Real Aviator


Howard Hughes movies

Great movies of the 1930s

The films of Martin Scorsese

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