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Gangs of New York (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) |  | Director: Martin Scorsese Actors: Roger Ashton-Griffiths, Jim Broadbent, Peter-Hugo Daly, Daniel Day-Lewis, Leonardo DiCaprio Studio: Miramax Home Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $14.99 Buy Used: $2.33 as of 3/12/2010 06:34 EST details You Save: $12.66 (84%)
New (50) Used (132) Collectible (6) from $2.33
Seller: joiedevivre17 Rating: 580 reviews
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Number Of Discs: 2 Running Time: 167 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.7
MPN: D24017D UPC: 786936165371 EAN: 0786936165371
Theatrical Release Date: 2002 Release Date: July 1, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A man seeks to avenge the murder of his father. Set in nyc just before the civil war hes caught in the middle of the equally powerful & corrupt politician machines of manhattan. Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 06/06/2006 Starring: Cameron Diaz Leonardo Dicaprio Run time: 167 minutes Rating: R Director: Martin Scorsese
Gangs of New York may achieve greatness with the passage of time. Mixed reviews were inevitable for a production this grand (and this troubled behind the scenes), but it's as distinguished as any of director Martin Scorsese's more celebrated New York stories. From its astonishing 1846 prologue to the city's infernal draft riots of 1863, the film aspires to erase the decorum of textbooks and chronicle 19th-century New York as a cauldron of street warfare. The hostility is embodied in a tale of primal vengeance between Irish American son Amsterdam Vallon (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his father's ruthless killer and "Nativist" gang leader Bill "the Butcher" Cutting (Daniel Day-Lewis, brutally inspired), so named for his lethal talent with knives. Vallon's vengeance is only marginally compelling; DiCaprio is arguably miscast, and Cameron Diaz (as Vallon's pickpocket lover) is adrift in a film with little use for women. Despite these weaknesses, Scorsese's mastery blossoms in his expert melding of personal and political trajectories; this is American history written in blood, unflinching, authentic, and utterly spectacular. --Jeff Shannon
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 100
Daniel Day-Iewis March 2, 2010 Richard Schulman (Bristol) I have been waiting to catch this movie on cable. I knew it had mixed reviews but just
by the headlines in Amazon reviews it is more of a mess
than I thought. It is a pretty interesting movie; captures the old New York City set, the architecture. If only the version I saw had more character development, I would have swooned. What saved the movie for me was Daniel Day -Lewis's acting.
He is a marvel of believability. His voice is perfect. Coming from New York he brought back nostalgic memories. Too bad the movie is embarrassing in the assumptions that if like Shakespeare if one acts with dignity than excuses for no motivation will be allowed. Nope got to have believability on all levels. The faults are not in the acting but in the script.
Gangs of New York (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) February 10, 2010 Arnita D. Brown (USA) Having seen his father killed in a major gang fight in New York, young Amsterdam Vallon is spirited away for his own safety. Some years later, he returns to the scene of his father's death, the notorious Five Points district in New York. It's 1863 and lower Manhattan is run by gangs, the most powerful of which is the Natives, headed by Bill "The Butcher" Cutting. He believes that America should belong to native-born Americans and opposes the waves of immigrants, mostly Irish, entering the city. It's also the time of the Civil War and forced conscription leads to the worst riots in US history. Amid the violence and corruption, young Vallon tries to establish himself in the area and also seek revenge over his father's death. "Gangs of New York" is just perfect entertainment. It is an enthralling, bloody, melodramatic epic. A movie that spins another tale of the New York underworld but, with a twist. Instead of the mid-twentieth century organized crime, This movie ventures back to the 19th century to show the origin of the modern street gang. This movie is fantastic, and should not to be missed.
Great Movie! Crummy DVD! January 10, 2010 Lyndall S. Smith (Carlsbad, NM USA) First of all let me say the movie Gangs of New York is an excellent film. I saw it in the theater and then purchased it on DVD and again on VHS (after I got the DVD).
The DVD for this movie sucks. Many of the other reviewers have mentioned the lack of Mr. Scorcese extra footage he had to cut. I was unaware of that, but my beef with this release is the fact that the movie is only 167 minutes long and they spread it onto 2-disks. I'm all for two disc editions of DVDs I love the extras that get included because of them, but this 2-disc edition should have only been one disc. If Francis Ford Coppola can fit the Godfather Pt. 2 on a single disc then Mr. Scorcese could have to. I hate having to get up in the middle of the movie to change the blasted disc it is uncalled for. When I found this out I immediately went and purchased the VHS, ha ha problem solved all on one tape. If you have a working vcr or blu ray go with it instead of this crummy release an absolute waste of resources.
P.S. Buena Vista -- Hurry Up and Release Mr. Scorceses true vision aka Director's Cut and keep the movie itself on one disc. Fill the second disc with special features.
History and butchery December 13, 2009 Jay Dickson (Portland, OR) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Any film that tries to recreate mid-nineteenth-century New York has to have something going for it, and director Martin Scorsese's gorgeous recreation of the Five Points and Paradise Square in the 1840s and 1860s certainly is the sort of the thing you won't get to see very often. The plot of this expensive over-the-top mess has something to do with how "America" (by which Scorsese means... New York? Manhattan? the immigrant population?) was supposed to have been established by mob violence waged between the Irish, represented by (wait for it) Amsterdam Vallon (Leonardo di Caprio), and the self-named "Natives," led by "Wild" Bill Cutting (Daniel Day-Lewis). (There's even a U2 rock anthem at the end, "The Hands that Built America," to hammer home this dubious point.) The whole thing is ridiculously overscaled and all kinds of historical figures from the day keep wandering in to make cameos, from Horace Greeley to P.T. Barnum to Boss Tweed, as di Caprio and Day-Lewis go at each other with every kind of deadly bladed implement you can imagine. The film's bizarre messing of history finds it nadir during the Draft Riots (which forms a chaotic set-piece conclusion), when Scorsese shows the mobs storming and burning the mansion of the Schermerhorns (suggesting they're going to kill them) and the Union fleet warships firing their big guns into lower Manhattan.
What was Scorsese trying to do with this movie? It seems to be on the same silly scale as Brian Di Palma's SCARFACE, but somehow mixed with BIRTH OF A NATION; the whole thing seems staggeringly misconceived. Neither Di Caprio now Cameron Diaz as his pickpocket love interest seem to have the slightest idea what they're doing in the film. As the Grand Guignol villain, the fictitious Bill Cutting (who is even given a glass eye he likes to tap with a knife point), Daniel Day-Lewis gives a wildly sweaty and over-the-top performance that many people for some reason took very seriously at the time the film was released.
Fantastic December 9, 2009 K. Blankenship The battle for control of the Five Points slum in New York in the mid-1800's kicks this movie into a grudge that spans over fifteen years. Leonardo DiCaprio plays young Amsterdam Vallon who, as a boy, witnessed his father's murder during the battle between two rival gangs, the Natives (those born in the America) and the Dead Rabbits (the immigrants), for control of the Five Points. William Cutting, also called "Bill the Butcher," is the man who cuts down Amsterdam's father. Daniel Day-Lewis plays Cutting, the leader of the Natives and a very anti-immigrant man who is feared by everyone in the slum of Five Points. Fifteen years after the great battle, the Dead Rabbits are banned, Amsterdam's father is dead, and Amsterdam himself is coming back from having disappeared since the battle. No one recognizes him and he uses this to his advantage. He is able to get close to Cutting and prepares for when the moment is right to exact his revenge.
Overall, this movie was just amazing. I am not normally a fan of movies that have the main plot line of killing. Very few movies have been able to keep my attention for over two hours. Many have tried, but most have failed. This movie, however, clocking in at 2 hours and 40 minutes, kept my attention the entire time. My heart sank when I opened the DVD case and saw that there were two disks sitting there, each labeled "Feature Film". This movie was so long that it needed two disks? The only movie I had ever seen that required two disks to house the entire feature film was Stephen King's Rose Red, and that was only because it clocks in closer to four hours. This was going to be a long night.
When it reached the end of the first disk, however, I was surprised. I did not feel like an hour and a half of my life had been slowly taken from me, as I sat in front of my television. Overall, I believe that this movie truly did deserve the ten Oscar nominations that it got. Daniel Day-Lewis was phenomenal playing "Bill the Butcher", the story line was easy to follow and yet it still kept you wanting to know how it would end, and the movie itself deserved the Best Picture nomination that it got.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 100
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