Yo la tengo encargada pero a dvdsoon, así pues es impredecible cuando llegará, aunque con el resto del pedido han cumplido y ya solo queda este título pendiente y "Three Extremes: Special Edition".Iniciado por Mounix
Te adjunto una crítica que abre el apetito. Yo intuyo que al tratarse de Paramount todos los extras llevarán subtítulos en español.
The DVD
Video: It's an anamorphic widescreen (2.35:1) transfer, and it looks pretty damn excellent. I don't own the original (bare bones) DVD release, so I cannot compare the picture quality between the two ... but this as good as I've ever seen Event Horizon look.
Audio: Dolby Digital DTS*, 5.1, or 2.0 English; French 5.1 Surround. Optional subtitles are available in English and Spanish. (* Yes, there's a DTS track included, although the DVD case makes no mention of it.) Audio quality is quite strong throughout, with the creepy sound effects and moody score coming through in fine form.
Extras
The only extra feature on disc 1 is a feature-length audio commentary with director Paul Anderson and producer Jeremy Bolt. The two filmmakers deliver a healthy dose of on-set anecdotes and modest criticisms. It's not the most dazzling chat-track you'll ever hear, but fans of the film will certainly enjoy it.
We start disc 2 under the heading of The Making of Event Horizon, which contains five different chapters:
Into the Jaws of Darkness (14:53) covers the pre-production angle, focusing mainly on the very specific "look" of the film. Interview subjects include director Paul W.S. Anderson, producer Jeremy Bolt, and production designer Joseph Bennett.
The Body of the Beast (22:44) runs through the entire cast, careful to dole out some love for everyone from Fishburne to Quinlan to Pertwee. Bolt and Anderson return for some interview segments, and are joined by FX supervisor Pauline Fowler and actor Jason Isaacs.
Liberate Tutume Ex Infernis (19:49) looks at the Event Horizon practical FX work, from the extremely disturbing visions of hellacious carnage to the interstellar sequences to the massive stage constructed to create the Horizon's bizarre engine. Gore guru Bob Keen joins the interview panel as he goes through some of his more unpleasantly creative creations.
The Scale to Hell (18:36) features FX producers Stuart McAra and Richard Yuricich as they go through the post-production workload, concentrating mainly on the magic used to bring a mile-long spaceship to life. Also covered here is the "space station fall-back" shot, which is my favorite visual trick in Event Horizon.
The Womb of Fear (26:30) covers the post-production, with an impressive amount of attention paid to the editing and test-screening problems. Anderson and Bolt are forthright about the behind-the-scenes issues, usually blaming "the studio" for the problems in the final cut. Also included is a section on the musical score and a fan-friendly little wrap-up in which the flick's staying power is acknowledged.
Taken in "Play All" fashion, The Making of Event Horizon is exactly the sort of doco the fans will devour. And speaking as only one specific fan, I call it darn good stuff.
Switching over to the Secrets menu, we find a few enticing little treats:
--Deleted Briefing Scene (2:48) with optional commentary by Anderson
--Extended Medical Bay Scene (0:53) with mandatory Anderson commentary
--Extended Burning Man Confrontation (6:16) with mandatory Anderson commentary
Again, the hardcore Horizon fans will really dig the deleted footage. On clip #3, Anderson offers a very clear explanation between the various "cuts" of the film, which I found pretty interesting.
Under the heading of The Unseen Event Horizon we find The Un-Filmed Rescue Scene (2:46), which is a storyboard sequence of an early prologue, and a nifty little slide show (3:44) of Conceptual Art. Both of these featurettes come with Anderson commentary.
And just when I thought the DVD was winding down, I clicked on the heading called The Point of No Return. The Revolving Corridor (1:51), The Crew Gathers (1:13), Shooting Wire Work (1:35), and The Dark Inside (3:26) are a bunch of on-set video snippets, complete with (you guessed it) Paul Anderson commentary.
Rounding out the rather packed 2-disc set are the original theatrical trailer (2:17) and a video trailer (1:46) for Event Horizon.
Final Thoughts
Horizon fans have been eagerly awaiting a double-dip DVD release for quite a few years now. While this 2-disc Special Edition might not be the Director's Cut we were all hoping for, there's little denying that Paramount's put together an excellent little release here.