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Chinatown [Region 2] (English audio) by Jack Nicholson
Formato: DVD
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Detalles del producto
- ASIN : B01I083C3A
- Opiniones de los clientes:
Opiniones de clientes
4,7 de 5 estrellas
4,7 de 5
2.241 valoraciones globales
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Para calcular el desglose general de valoraciones y porcentajes, no utilizamos un simple promedio. Nuestro sistema también considera factores como cuán reciente es una reseña y si el autor de la opinión compró el producto en Amazon. También analiza las reseñas para verificar su fiabilidad.
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4,0 de 5 estrellas
Gran calidad y extras
Revisado en España el 30 de octubre de 2020
La edición americana de un solo Blu-ray (código de barras 032429256553, asin B06XNQS16Z) incluye además de la película en VO en inglés con subtítulos en varios idiomas (incluido el español), pista de audio en español latino (mono). También incluye el audio comentario del guionista Robert Towne junto a David Fincher (en inglés sin subtítulos) y varios extras y audio comentarios (con subtítulos en varios idiomas, entre ellos español)
Revisado en España el 30 de octubre de 2020
Imágenes de esta reseña
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Reseñas más importantes
Principales reseñas de España
Ha surgido un problema al filtrar las opiniones justo en este momento. Vuelva a intentarlo en otro momento.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 1 de mayo de 2023
Una gran película con un guión de Robert Town muy digno de encomio. Una de las mejores películas de cine negro y de Roman Polanski.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 29 de diciembre de 2022
Perfecto
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 30 de octubre de 2020
La edición americana de un solo Blu-ray (código de barras 032429256553, asin B06XNQS16Z) incluye además de la película en VO en inglés con subtítulos en varios idiomas (incluido el español), pista de audio en español latino (mono). También incluye el audio comentario del guionista Robert Towne junto a David Fincher (en inglés sin subtítulos) y varios extras y audio comentarios (con subtítulos en varios idiomas, entre ellos español)

La edición americana de un solo Blu-ray (código de barras 032429256553, asin B06XNQS16Z) incluye además de la película en VO en inglés con subtítulos en varios idiomas (incluido el español), pista de audio en español latino (mono). También incluye el audio comentario del guionista Robert Towne junto a David Fincher (en inglés sin subtítulos) y varios extras y audio comentarios (con subtítulos en varios idiomas, entre ellos español)
Imágenes de esta reseña



Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 10 de junio de 2021
Me ha gustado su final.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 15 de agosto de 2021
La película me parece bien. Lo que no me parece bien es el poco tiempo disponible para verla.
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 13 de febrero de 2020
Ahora hacía muchos años que no la había visto, y era una pena, porque continua siendo la gran película de cuando la vi por primera vez
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 18 de marzo de 2018
Gran película y tanto la imagen como el sonido están en perfecto estado por lo que el visionado de la película es un goce para los amantes del cine
Revisado en España 🇪🇸 el 3 de febrero de 2020
Todo ha estado perfecto
J. Prunera
J. Prunera
Reseñas más importantes de otros países

Bluesboy
5,0 de 5 estrellas
No extras !!!
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 23 de noviembre de 2018
This UK blu-ray disc is reviewed as having extras including commentary along with extras featured on previously issued DVD version. IT HAS NONE WHATSOEVER !
The film is without doubt a 5 star, but thisUK blu-ray edition is only worth 3 star. A rip-off!
I have subsequently purchased a US import and it has several extras and therefor 5 stars all round.
The film is without doubt a 5 star, but thisUK blu-ray edition is only worth 3 star. A rip-off!
I have subsequently purchased a US import and it has several extras and therefor 5 stars all round.

Seatinthestalls
5,0 de 5 estrellas
History Repeats Itself
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 16 de octubre de 2011
Roman Polanski created an unforgetable film-noir. Although shot in colour, it still retains an authentic feel of place and time.
Jack Nicholson plays the inevitable gumshoe wandering into a convoluted plot until it's way above his head. Faye Dunaway has the role of Femme-fatale to perfection. These two are the main players, but there's a decent supporting cast that includes an alarming `Goodfellas'-style cameo from the director himself. The plot twists so much it must be watched rather than described. Pacing, lighting & editing are absolutely spot-on, enabling the whole movie to flow in both plot and character development. And the icing on the cake is its theme music, which surfaces as incidental elements throughout the movie. It's a slow-burning jazz number with languid trumpet lead that hits the spot in every theme and is as much a part of plot cohesion as the script itself.
Some don't appear to enjoy this movie half so much as they should. I don't know why, and clearly my praise of it must be as confusing to them. All I can say is that I was bowled over at first watching and have loved it ever since. It's nearly 40 years old now, but might have been made yesterday. No element has aged in the least.
The Collector's Edition supplied by Amazon is crisp & clear. It is listed as 125mins run-time, `15' viewer-rating, and 2.35:1 aspect ratio. There's a number of interesting extras.
Highly recommended and collectible.
Jack Nicholson plays the inevitable gumshoe wandering into a convoluted plot until it's way above his head. Faye Dunaway has the role of Femme-fatale to perfection. These two are the main players, but there's a decent supporting cast that includes an alarming `Goodfellas'-style cameo from the director himself. The plot twists so much it must be watched rather than described. Pacing, lighting & editing are absolutely spot-on, enabling the whole movie to flow in both plot and character development. And the icing on the cake is its theme music, which surfaces as incidental elements throughout the movie. It's a slow-burning jazz number with languid trumpet lead that hits the spot in every theme and is as much a part of plot cohesion as the script itself.
Some don't appear to enjoy this movie half so much as they should. I don't know why, and clearly my praise of it must be as confusing to them. All I can say is that I was bowled over at first watching and have loved it ever since. It's nearly 40 years old now, but might have been made yesterday. No element has aged in the least.
The Collector's Edition supplied by Amazon is crisp & clear. It is listed as 125mins run-time, `15' viewer-rating, and 2.35:1 aspect ratio. There's a number of interesting extras.
Highly recommended and collectible.

Jason Parkes
5,0 de 5 estrellas
A masterpiece of 20th Century Cinema.
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 2 de febrero de 2003
Chinatown remains one of the great 70s films of all time, alongside such perfect works as The Conformist, The Godfather I&II, Badlands, Shampoo, Mean Streets, Network, The Last Picture Show, The French Connection, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest & The Deer Hunter. Penned by key New-Hollywood screenwriter Robert Towne (The Last Detail) & directed by Roman Polanksi, it recreates a knowing take on film noir. This is done by updating the colour scheme, moving from the chiaroscuro experimentation of film noir such as The Big Heat, Out of the Past & In a Lonely Place to a lush colour scheme utilising orange-filters in an intrigueing manner. The film recreates an era with John A Alonso's cinematography- which sits next to the perfect recreations of era in colour such as Reds, Days of Heaven, Barry Lyndon & Heaven's Gate.
Towne's screenplay is complex & knowing, so many twists & parallels it is as good as the genre to which it refers- most notably the roman-noir writings of Raymond Chandler (The Long Goodbye) & Dashiel Hammett (Red Harvest). It makes the film adaptation of LA Confidential look a joke compared. Great to see a lack of voiceover, Towne can easily do the droll-Bogart quips- as is seen when Jake talks to the cops- but the images are left to do the talking. And when the twists come, they come- & are as powerful as those in films such as Vertigo.
The cast are brilliant- one of Nicholson's key performances (so why did he win an Oscar for As Good as it Gets?), alongside brilliant turns from Faye Dunaway, Diane Ladd & a creepy John Huston (there's also a top cameo from Polanski & an appearance from John Hillerman, familiar to those who watched Magnum PI!).
The film starts off as a simple detective story, a local politician is accused by his wife of having an affair, Jake Gittes- who used to work for the D.A. until an undefined event in Chinatown- takes on the case & starts to tail the man in question. The backdrop of politics appears to be related- 1937 LA has not yet expanded to the valleys & is experiencing a water shortage; add to this politicians who wish to build a new dam. Enter Faye Dunaway, an extension of the femme fatale who is more of a victim than a spiderwoman, who informs Gittes that she is the real wife of the man he's tailing (so who was the woman who originally hired him?). Complexities abound when said man turns up dead in the LA water system & it turns out saltwater was in his lungs. Enter a web of modern corruption, leading to Noah Cross (John Huston), who was involved with the dead man & wants to track a girl seen by Gittes during surveillance. Enter more complexities & revelations...
Chinatown is a simply brilliant film, one that can definitely be called perfect- it slowly reveals a portrait of a changing LA- where modern life is taking over (the Okies recalling those in Grapes of Wrath are being destroyed by the politicians & the police are in cahoots with Cross)- preceding the world James Ellroy takes up with books like The Black Dahlia & LA Confidential. It also has a brilliant score from Jerry Goldsmith, which William Goldman believes saves the film (see Which Lie Did I Tell?). A masterpiece of 20th century cinema that is great value at this budget price...
Towne's screenplay is complex & knowing, so many twists & parallels it is as good as the genre to which it refers- most notably the roman-noir writings of Raymond Chandler (The Long Goodbye) & Dashiel Hammett (Red Harvest). It makes the film adaptation of LA Confidential look a joke compared. Great to see a lack of voiceover, Towne can easily do the droll-Bogart quips- as is seen when Jake talks to the cops- but the images are left to do the talking. And when the twists come, they come- & are as powerful as those in films such as Vertigo.
The cast are brilliant- one of Nicholson's key performances (so why did he win an Oscar for As Good as it Gets?), alongside brilliant turns from Faye Dunaway, Diane Ladd & a creepy John Huston (there's also a top cameo from Polanski & an appearance from John Hillerman, familiar to those who watched Magnum PI!).
The film starts off as a simple detective story, a local politician is accused by his wife of having an affair, Jake Gittes- who used to work for the D.A. until an undefined event in Chinatown- takes on the case & starts to tail the man in question. The backdrop of politics appears to be related- 1937 LA has not yet expanded to the valleys & is experiencing a water shortage; add to this politicians who wish to build a new dam. Enter Faye Dunaway, an extension of the femme fatale who is more of a victim than a spiderwoman, who informs Gittes that she is the real wife of the man he's tailing (so who was the woman who originally hired him?). Complexities abound when said man turns up dead in the LA water system & it turns out saltwater was in his lungs. Enter a web of modern corruption, leading to Noah Cross (John Huston), who was involved with the dead man & wants to track a girl seen by Gittes during surveillance. Enter more complexities & revelations...
Chinatown is a simply brilliant film, one that can definitely be called perfect- it slowly reveals a portrait of a changing LA- where modern life is taking over (the Okies recalling those in Grapes of Wrath are being destroyed by the politicians & the police are in cahoots with Cross)- preceding the world James Ellroy takes up with books like The Black Dahlia & LA Confidential. It also has a brilliant score from Jerry Goldsmith, which William Goldman believes saves the film (see Which Lie Did I Tell?). A masterpiece of 20th century cinema that is great value at this budget price...

Speedigee
4,0 de 5 estrellas
Polanski's classic
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 19 de junio de 2015
Polanski's classic noir thriller based on the Los Angeles water wars, ie the political difficulties over the Owens Valley aqueduct. It presented a vague backdrop for a murder mystery story set in the 1930s. It was a generally entertaining film with some good acting and a very good musical soundtrack by Jerry Goldsmith. The Blu-ray video was good but the sound was better when set to the restored mono rather than the simulated 5.1 Dolby stereo - the latter seemed to be at a lower level compared to the musical soundtrack which made it difficult to set a suitable sound level. For the record this US import will play in the UK and includes all the extras which are apparently missing from the UK version.

Lou Knee
5,0 de 5 estrellas
Great edition of a great movie
Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 3 de enero de 2009
If there are any niggly little flaws in this movie then they are SO minor as to be completely inconsequential. The marriage of major movie stylists Polanski and Nicholson on one film proves to be almost too good to believe. Have they made another movie together? And if not, why not? It simply throbs with style and charisma, this movie, and the work of both men here is just exceptional. You really can't hype this movie enough, it sets out knowing exactly what it wants to be and delivers it by the bucketful. Nothing in it is forced or rushed or looks out of place. This is because there are cinematic masters at work here. Everything is relaxed (as real Noir should be) and very, very confidently executed. A masterpiece.