Release Date: Aug 29, 2000 Region: 1 Runtime: 175 mins Studio: 20th Century Fox Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 4.0 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC] FRENCH: Dolby Digital Surround
Video:
Widescreen 2.20:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: English, Spanish Packaging: Keep Case Rating: G Features:
THX Certified DISC ONE: The Feature: Running Commentary by Robert Wise DVD-ROM Link to The Sound Of Music Web Sites and Events DISC TWO: Supplemental: Original 1965 Documentary Salzburg Sight and Sound (36 Minutes) Documentary: The Sound Of Music: From Fact To Phenomenon with Cast Interviews, Rare Music Outtakes, Photos and More (87 Minutes) Audio Supplement by Ernest Lehman (36 Minutes) Interviews with Julie Andrews and Robert Wise DVD-ROM Games and Links to Fan Site Storyboards, Sketches, Production Stills Theatrical Trailers, Radio and TV Spots
Release Date: Nov 15, 2005 Region: 1 Runtime: 174 mins Studio: 20th Century Fox Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.0 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo [CC] SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono FRENCH: Dolby Digital Stereo
Video:
Widescreen 2.20:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Packaging: Keep Case Rating: G Features:
Disc 1: Introduction by Julie Andrews Commentary by Robert Wise Isolated Score Commentary with Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer Disc 2: Introduction by Julie Andrews Retrospective Documentary: A Few Of My Favorite Things From: Liesl to Gretl: A 40th Anniversary Reunion Photo Galleries: Behind the Scenes, Storyboards, Lobby Cards & Posters Mia Farrow Screen Test Restoration Comparison Trailers & TV Spots "The Von Trapp Family: Harmony and Discord" as seen on Biography® (A&E Network) All-New Featurettes Created Exclusively for this DVD Release: - "Julie Andrews & Christopher Plummer: A Reminiscence" - "On Location with The Sound of Music" - "From Liesel to Gretl: A 40th Anniversary Reunion" - "When You Know the Notes to Sing: A Singalong Phenomenon"
Audio Interviews Commentary By Director The Documentary Salzburg Sight And Sound Documentary The Sound Of Music From Fact To Phenomenon Original Theatrical Feature Presentation Previews TV And Radio Spots
The most widely seen movie produced by a Hollywood studio, The Sound of Music grows fresher with each viewing. Though it was planned meticulously in pre-production (save for the scene where Maria and the children take a dipping in an Austrian lake that nearly cost a life), on each viewing one is struck anew by the spontaneous almost improvisatory air of the acting, notably of Julie Andrews under Robert Wise's direction. There are also the little human touches he brings to, for instance, the scene where Maria leads the children to the hills, over bridges and along tow paths where the smallest boy trips up and momentarily gets left behind: it creates a feeling that most of us have encountered. From the opening pre-credit sequence of muted excitement as the camera roves over the Austrian Alps (photographed in magnificent colour), where little phrases from the wind instruments on the soundtrack are flung as if on the breeze, foreshadowing the title song to follow, the production never puts a foot wrong.
On the DVD: On the first disc the film itself has never looked or sounded better since its original presentation in Todd AO (prints of which are said to have disappeared forever). The disc also contains a separate audio guide that takes the viewer through the film sequence by sequence, with director Robert Wise commenting on the weather, the production design by Boris Leven, the sequences filmed on location and in Hollywood (like the interiors of the Von Trapp villa), and the naming of other actors who were eager for the lead roles, notably Doris Day and Yul Brynner.
On the second disc there are the documentaries. "Salzburg Sight and Sound" was Charmian Carr's own record of her time on location in the summer of 1964, playing Liesl, the eldest Von Trapp daughter. "From Fact to Fiction", running two hours, begins with the birth of Maria in 1905 who inspired the film, charts her subsequent marriage to Captain Von Trapp, their escape from Nazi Germany not across the Alps but via a train across the Italian boarder, their home in Vermont and thence to the German film of the family that was brought to the attention of Rodgers and Hammerstein as an ideal vehicle for a stage musical. A second group of documentaries covers previews, television and radio commercials and a 1973 interview with Wise and Andrews. Overall, this is a marathon package but in its way is as compelling as the film itself. --Adrian Edwards