Release Date: Aug 19, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 124 mins Studio: Warner Bros. Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo [CC]
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color
Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Packaging: Snap Case Rating: PG Features:
25th Anniversary Documentary Cabaret: A Legend In the Making Original Featurette The Recreation of an Era Kit Kat Klub Memory Gallery: The Film's Stars and Creators Reminisce About Making Movie Musical History Extensive Production Notes Interactive Menus Theatrical Trailer Scene Access
Cabaret is one of those film musicals whose cultural and stylistic influence extend well beyond the cinema. It confirmed Bob Fosse's status as one of the boldest choreographers of the 20th century and gave Liza Minnelli an early peak in a film career which would never scale such heights again. Minnelli is both the film's strength--on its own merits her performance is an Oscar-winning tour de force--and weakness. The real Sally Bowles was a third-rate performer and just one of a rich gallery of characters; here, the constant allowances for Minnelli's star turns and mannerisms ultimately throw the story off balance. But the source material is impeccable: Kander and Ebb's stage show, based on the autobiographical stories of Christopher Isherwood, has long since been acknowledged a classic. The songs, augmented by some new numbers in the film, are ageless.
Joel Grey from the original Broadway production is the Emcee, the master of ceremonies who, with his Kit Kat Klub girls, provides a depraved Greek chorus satirising the rise of the Nazi regime and the lazy complacency of the 1930s Berlin cabaret-goers. The "divine decadence" tag is only part of the story, though. Cabaret still works a sinister, uncomfortable magic which sets it apart as a uniquely powerful film musical.
On the DVD:Cabaret's 30th Anniversary Special Edition is packed with extras which include a scratchy "making of" documentary from 1972 and a retrospective from 1997, the latter featuring reminiscences from the cast. There’s also the original theatrical trailer, though in the absence of the late director Fosse the lack of some kind of commentary is a disappointment. The picture itself, presented in widescreen 16:9 letterbox format with a Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo soundtrack, gleams as sharply, visually and aurally, as it did on its first release. --Piers Ford
Release Date: Sep 9, 2002 Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Video:
16:9 Wide Screen
Features:
1997 Documentary Cabaret A Legend In The Making 1972 Documentary The Recreation Of An Era 1997 Kit Kat Klub Memory Gallery Reminiscences From The Stars And The Creators 1972 Original US Theatrical Trailer Songs Menu Photo Gallery 50 Pages Of Production Notes And Trivia