Age cannot wither it, nor custom stale its infinite variety. All human (or at least Russian) life is here in a stupendous, rich DVD transfer - spotless and detailed. You get everything, too - they've put in the overture and entr'acte title cards and music so you can have an intermission just as they used to in the cinema. The film is huge and you can really lose yourself in it. Yes, a lot of the book had to be cut. Yes, Omar Sharif never quite fits the role and yes, "Lara's Theme" can grate after a while - but against that you have Julie Christie at her most luminous, Rod Steiger at his most arrogant (but all broken up inside), some of the greatest landscape photography you'll ever see and a historical sweep that somehow remains human in scale. Disc one has the film on both sides - two-thirds of it is on side A (which is DVD-9) and the last third is on side B (which is DVD-5). The second disc (also DVD-5) has plenty of documentaries, archive clips, interviews and reminiscences and shows the astonishing amount of work it takes to make a film like this. You get a lot for your money.
Update: Sometime in the first half of 2009, the image on this page changed to one of a mostly red cover (the one I have and wrote about was mostly white). I'm not sure if it's the same edition.