Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Rafran Cinematografica (as A Rafran-San Marco Production), San Marco Production (as A Rafran-San Marco Production)
Studio Paramount, Rafran Cinematografica, San Marco Finanziera
Release Date: Nov 18, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 165 mins Studio: Paramount Pictures Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC] FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: English Packaging: Keep Case Rating: PG-13 Features:
Commentary track with contributions from directors John Carpenter, John Milius, and Alex Cox, plus film historians, Sir Christopher Fryling (writer of Leone's biography) and Dr.Sheldon Hall, plus additional comments from cast and crew. 3 Documentaries that include exclusive interviews with Claudia Cardinale, Gabriele Ferzetti, Bernardo Bertolucci and cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli, with contributions by John Carpenter, John Milius, Alex Cox, Sir Christopher Fryling and Dr.Sheldon Hall. An opera of Violence The Wages of Sin Something to do with Death Railroad: Revolutionizing the West Featurette Production Gallery Cast Profiles Theatrical Trailer
Sergio Leone had to be persuaded to return to the Western for Once Upon a Time in the West after the success of his "Dollars" trilogy. The result is a masterpiece that expands the vision of the earlier movies in every way. It could as easily have been called The Good, the Bad, the Ugly and the Blonde as Charles Bronson steps into the No-Name role as the harmonica-playing vengeance seeker, Henry Fonda trashes his Wyatt Earp image as a dead-faced, blue-eyed killer who has sold out to the rapacious railroad; Jason Robards provides humanitarian footnotes as a life-loving but doomed bandit and the astonishingly beautiful Claudia Cardinale shows that all these grown-up little boys are less fit to make a country than one determined widow-mother-whore-angel-everywoman. The opening sequence--Woody Strode, Al Mulock and Jack Elam waiting for a train and bothered by a fly and dripping water--is masterful bravura, homing in on tiny details for a fascinating but eventless length of time before Bronson arrives for the lightning-fast shoot-out. With striking widescreen compositions and epic running time, this picture truly wins points for length and width.
On the DVD:Once Upon a Time in the West on disc is the transfer fans have been waiting for: the longest available version of the film in shimmering widescreen (enhanced for 16:9 TVs) which lends full impact to Leone's long shots of Monument Valley scenery or bustling crowds of activity, but also highlights his ultra-close images as Bronson's beady eyes or Cardinale's luscious pout fill the entire screen. A commentary track is mostly by expert Sir Christopher Frayling, with input from other academics, participants and enthusiasts--it's good on the detail, and Alex Cox winningly points out that one scene bizarrely can't be reconciled with what happens before or after it.
Disc 2 has four featurettes which, taken together, add up to a feature-length documentary on the film, and though overlapping the commentary slightly offer a wealth of further good stuff, plus the elegant Cardinale's undiminished smile. Also included is the trailer, notes on the cast, menu screens with generous selections from Ennio Morricone's score, stills gallery, comparison shots from the film and contemporary snapshots of the locations. --Kim Newman
Release Date: Oct 6, 2003 Audio:
Dolby Digital
Features:
Commentary Track Documentaries Cast And Crew Interviews Featurettes Stills Galleries Cast Profiles Original Trailer