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Straw Dogs [1971] [DVD]

3.6 out of 5 stars 182 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Dustin Hoffman, Susan George, Peter Vaughan, T.P. McKenna, Del Henney
  • Directors: Sam Peckinpah
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: English
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Fremantle
  • DVD Release Date: 7 Oct. 2002
  • Run Time: 113 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (182 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00006JI4P
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 22,457 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

DVD Special Features:

Expert commentary with Peckinpah biographers Paul Seydor, Garner Simmons & David Weddle
Commentary with Katy Haber, dialogue director and Peckinpah's assistant
Isolated Oscar-nominated Jerry Fielding score in stereo featuring additonal scores
Interview with Peckinpah's biographer Garner Simmons
Interview with Susan George
Info on deleted scenes (via shooting script & stills)
History of Straw Dogs and the Censor
Behind the B&W scenes/on location stills
Original B&W publicity stills
Original colour publicity stills
Original colour lobby cards
Original 1971 film posters from around the world
Reviews, views & correspondence (including Peckinpah letters and BBFC rejection letters)
1971 Television South West on location documentary
1971 Original US Theatrical Trailer
1971 Original US TV and Radio ad spots

From Amazon.co.uk

According to critic Pauline Kael Straw Dogs was "the first American film that is a fascist work of art". Sam Peckinpah's only film shot in Britain is adapted from a novel by Gordon M Williams called The Siege of Trencher's Farm which Peckinpah described as a "lousy book with one good action-adventure sequence". The setting is Cornwall, where mild-mannered US academic David Sumner (Dustin Hoffman) has bought a house with his young English wife Amy (Susan George) in the village where she grew up. David is mocked by the locals (one of whom is Amy's ex-boyfriend) and treated with growing contempt by his frustrated wife, but when his house comes under violent siege he finds unexpected reserves of resourcefulness and aggression.

The movie, Peckinpah noted, was much influenced by Robert Ardrey's macho-anthropological tract, The Territorial Imperative. Its take on Cornish village life is fairly bizarre--this is a Western in all but name--and many critics balked at the transposition of Peckinpah's trademark blood-and-guts to the supposed peace of the British countryside. A scene where Amy is raped caused particular outrage, not least since it's hinted she consents to it. Not for the first time in Peckinpah's movies there are disquieting elements of misogyny, and it doesn't help that the chemistry between Hoffman and George is non-existent. (Impossible to believe these two would ever have clicked, let alone married.) But taken as a vision of irrational violence irrupting into a civilised way of life Straw Dogs is powerful and unsettling, and the action sequences are executed with all Peckinpah's unfailing flair and venom. Oh, and that title? A quote from Chinese sage Lao-Tze, it seems, "The wise man is ruthless and treats the people as straw dogs." The film was long withheld from home viewing in Britain by nervous censors, but this release presents it complete and uncut. --Philip Kemp

On the DVD: Straw Dogs is as jam-packed a disc as is possible for a film made before the days of obligatory "making of" features. Both the sound and visuals have transferred well, and, like the script, have aged well. There's a bumbling original interview in the style of Harry Enfield's Mr. Cholmondley-Warner, along with stills and original trailers. The new material includes a feature on the history of the film's censorship and commentaries by Peckinpah's biographers musing over interesting fan-facts (though none of the speakers have any first-hand experience of the making of the film). However, Katy Haber's commentary, and interviews with Susan George and Dan Melnick, offer a much more in-depth and intimate portrayal of the man and the making of the film. --Nikki Disney

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Blu-ray Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
This is a great film. It isn't going to be everybody's cup of tea due to its graphic scenes, but it is intelligent and has stood the test of time well. Unfortunately the same cannot be said for this new blu-ray 'remaster'. The picture quality is appalling, with contrast pushed up so high that whites are bleached out and blacks lose all detail. And colours have been changed too, with unnatural greens and the sky almost white rather than blue. Watch the 'Before & After' feature and you can see how natural the colours were BEFORE the restoration. They have completely ruined it. There are quite a lot of good bonus features, particularly the extended interviews, but very little that hasn't been available before. The poor picture quality means that i cannot recommend this disc.
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Format: DVD
Note: This review is for this DVD edition of 'Straw Dogs': Straw Dogs [1971] [DVD], which has the full movie uncut, it has been digitally remastered and can be watched in widescreen. The DVD is quite basic, there are no extras at all, no subtitles, and the only option on the menu is to 'Play Film'. I would say that the DVD release would probably rate three stars (particularly in comparison to Straw Dogs - Ultimate 40th Anniversary Edition [DVD]), but the movie is certainly worthy of a five.

This groundbreaking 1971 chestnut from director Sam Peckinpah caused much controversy at the time.

(NOTE: The next two paragraphs contain spoilers)
--------------------------
This was due to the considerably lengthy rape scene which is the centrepiece of the movie. The scene is undeniably graphic and hard hitting for the time, but if you can look beyond that scene, I think you'll agree that 'Straw Dogs' is one of the greats in British cinema.

It's an intense thriller about what can happen if you push even the most mild mannered of men too far. Mathematician David Summer is such a man, portrayed by Dustin Hoffman, he temporarily moves to a house in a rural village in England with his wife Amy, played by the lovely Susan George, who is a former town resident. Summer revels in his intelligence, and is too wrapped up in his own head to realise that his naïve wife's needs are being ignored and compromised.
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Format: Blu-ray
Don't be fooled by the "Fully Restored" claim on the cover of this monstrosity. The transfer is poor with very bright whites and overbearing contrast. I may have to keep the disc for the extras as I don't think I could handle the guilt of selling this disc to some poor unsuspecting soul. The most fascinating extra is the before and after "restoration" comparison where Freemantle tries to convince us that they actually improved the image of this film. Whether the source print or Freemantle's tinkering is to blame for the poor transfer, I could not say. I'm just sorry that I rewarded them with my purchase, but I hope I can prevent others from making the same mistake. I agree with the other reviewers that suggest the region free US Blu ray or get the region 1 Criterion DVD. I will never preorder another Freemantle release. The movie itself is excellent and deserves better representation than this on Blu ray. My most dissapointing Blu ray purchase yet.
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Format: Blu-ray
A great film, so I was really looking forward to the ''Fully Restored'' 40th Anniversary Edition Blu ray from Fremantle.
I wish I'd checked the reviews out on here first, though.
Quite simply a dreadful picture, the worst I've ever seen on Blu ray. My old DVD was far better!
One star for the extras.
Avoid this release!
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Format: Blu-ray Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Whatever the merits of Sam Peckinpah's still polarising film - and it remains a mixture of the troubling and the masterful, sometimes at the same time - it certainly deserved much better than Fremantle's surprisingly dreadful UK Blu-ray release. The extras are the same as their previous DVD release, and they're an impressive collection: audio commentary by Peckinpah experts Garner Simmons, David Weddle and Paul Seydor, second commentary by Peckinpah's assistant and longtime companion Katy Haber, interviews with Susan George, producer Daniel Melnick and Garner Simmons, 1971 TV location report, an isolated track for Jerry Fielding's score with deleted cues, stills and poster galleries, text feature on censorship problems, reviews, filmographies and correspondence, 2 US radio spots, 3 US TV spots, and original US theatrical trailer. The sole new feature is featurette Before and After: Restoring a Classic - and it's the 'restoration' that's this release's downfall, the short revealing that the film looked better BEFORE than after!

Far from improving the picture quality over the earlier DVD release, they actually seem to have made it worse: not just a little worse, but a lot worse - washed out, often lacking in definition and looking like it had been mastered from an old 16mm TV copy rather than the original 35mm negative. Contrast has been increased with loss of detail, colours are unconvincing (flesh tones are particularly variable) and blacks are often green. Depth is often absent from the image, giving it the flat look of an old 60s magazine photograph at times. After a while you just lose the will to persevere with the disc it's so poor.
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