The Hurricane [HD DVD]
Front Cover
Rating:
17.517.517.517.517.5
Medium:
HD DVD
Release Date:
8/28/2007
Theatrical Date:
1/14/2000
Date Imported:
5/24/2008
List Price:
$19.98
Genre:
Drama
Studio:
Universal Studios
Cast:
Denzel Washington / Vicellous Reon Shannon / Deborah Kara Unger / Liev Schreiber / John Hannah
Director:
Norman Jewison
Audience Rating:
R (Restricted)
Aspect Ratio:
1.85:1
DVD Region:
0
Running Time:
146
Format:
AC-3 / Closed-captioned / Color / Dolby / Dubbed / Subtitled / Widescreen
Language:
English (Original Language) / English (Subtitled) / French (Subtitled) / French (Dubbed)
EAN:
0025193282927
UPC:
025193282927
Description:

Product Description The inspirational true story of boxer Rubin "The Hurricane" Carter who was wrongfully convicted of murder in 1966. Told in a series of flashbacks Washington immerses himself in the role of Carter with a charged intense passion. The story jumps around in time from Carter's troubled childhood to his arrest in 1966 to his fruitless appeals settling in 1983 when a group of three white adults and a black teenager dedicate their lives to freeing him. Jewison's assured direction keeps these stories from getting jumbled and blurring together. Even in flashbacks the plot moves forward dramatically to its eventual rousing conclusion. Based on the novels THE 16TH ROUND by Carter and LAZARUS AND THE HURRICANE by Chaiton and Swinton.Runtime: 146 minutesFormat: DVD HD Genre: DRAMA Rating: R UPC: 025193282927 Manufacturer No: 61032829

Amazon.com essential video In his direction of The Hurricane, veteran filmmaker Norman Jewison understands that slavish loyalty to factual detail is no guarantee of compelling screen biography. In telling the story of boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter--who was wrongly convicted of murder in 1967 and spent nearly two decades in jail--Jewison and his screenwriters compress time, combine characters, and rearrange events with a nonchalance that would be galling if they didn't remain honest to the core truth of Carter's ordeal. Because of that emotional integrity--and because Denzel Washington brings total conviction to his title role--The Hurricane rises above the confines of biographical fidelity to embrace higher values of courage, compassion, and ultimate justice.

Jewison is woefully heavy-handed in his treatment of the fictionalized, absurdly villainous detective (Dan Hedaya) who zealously plots to keep Carter in jail, and anyone familiar with Carter's story may object to the film's simplified account. But what matters here is the shining star of hope that is Lesra (Vicellous Reon Shannon), the Brooklyn teenager who rejuvenates Carter's legal battle in the early 1980s. This surrogate father-son relationship is what revives Carter's hope for family and future, and makes The Hurricane so engrossing and emotionally effective. Lesra's real-life Canadian mentors are compressed from nine characters to three, but their efforts are superbly dramatized, and Jewison hits the small but important grace notes that make a good film even better. By its final scenes, The Hurricane conveys the rich, rewarding satisfaction of surviving a difficult but valuable journey of mind, body, and soul. --Jeff Shannon

Amazon.com In his direction of The Hurricane, veteran filmmaker Norman Jewison understands that slavish loyalty to factual detail is no guarantee of compelling screen biography. In telling the story of boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter--who was wrongly convicted of murder in 1967 and spent nearly two decades in jail--Jewison and his screenwriters compress time, combine characters, and rearrange events with a nonchalance that would be galling if they didn't remain honest to the core truth of Carter's ordeal. Because of that emotional integrity--and because Denzel Washington brings total conviction to his title role--The Hurricane rises above the confines of biographical fidelity to embrace higher values of courage, compassion, and ultimate justice.

Jewison is woefully heavy-handed in his treatment of the fictionalized, absurdly villainous detective (Dan Hedaya) who zealously plots to keep Carter in jail, and anyone familiar with Carter's story may object to the film's simplified account. But what matters here is the shining star of hope that is Lesra (Vicellous Reon Shannon), the Brooklyn teenager who rejuvenates Carter's legal battle in the early 1980s. This surrogate father-son relationship is what revives Carter's hope for family and future, and makes The Hurricane so engrossing and emotionally effective. Lesra's real-life Canadian mentors are compressed from nine characters to three, but their efforts are superbly dramatized, and Jewison hits the small but important grace notes that make a good film even better. By its final scenes, The Hurricane conveys the rich, rewarding satisfaction of surviving a difficult but valuable journey of mind, body, and soul. --Jeff Shannon

Average Customer Rating:
4.0