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Fahrenheit 451 [DVD] [1966]

4.2 out of 5 stars 53 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Oskar Werner, Julie Christie, Cyril Cusack, Anton Diffring, Jeremy Spenser
  • Directors: François Truffaut
  • Writers: François Truffaut, David Rudkin, Helen Scott, Jean-Louis Richard, Ray Bradbury
  • Producers: Jane C. Nusbaum, Lewis M. Allen
  • Format: Colour, PAL, Anamorphic, Widescreen, Mono
  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: English, French, German
  • Dubbed: French, German
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Audio Description: None
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Universal Pictures UK
  • DVD Release Date: 10 Nov. 2003
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000DCXS3
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 22,512 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

François Truffaut directs this adaptation of Ray Bradbury's chilling novel. In the not-too-distant future, forbidden volumes of literature are burned regularly by the 'firemen'. Montag (Oskar Werner) is the man in charge of the burnings, but after meeting a revolutionary book-owner, schoolteacher Clarisse (Julie Christie), he begins to have doubts - both about his vocation and his dead marriage to pleasure-seeking Linda (also Christie). Curious about the draw of literature, Montag keeps a forbidden volume of 'David Copperfield' for himself, and soon embarks on a clandestine affair with Linda. The music score comes from the legendary Bernard Herrmann.

From Amazon.co.uk

The classic science fiction novel by Ray Bradbury was a curious choice for one of the leading directors of the French New Wave, François Truffaut. But from the opening credits onward (spoken, not written on screen), Truffaut takes Bradbury's fascinating premise and makes it his own. The futuristic society depicted in Fahrenheit 451 is a culture without books. Firemen still race around in red trucks and wear helmets, but their job is to start fires: they ferret out forbidden stashes of books, douse them with petrol and make public bonfires. Oskar Werner, the star of Truffaut's Jules and Jim, plays a fireman named Montag, whose exposure to David Copperfield wakens an instinct towards reading and individual thought. (That's why books are banned--they give people too many ideas.) In an intriguing casting flourish, Julie Christie plays two roles: Montag's bored, drugged-up wife and the woman who helps kindle the spark of rebellion. The great Bernard Herrmann wrote the hard-driving music; Nicolas Roeg provided the cinematography. Fahrenheit 451 received a cool critical reception and has never quite been accepted by Truffaut fans or sci-fi buffs. Its deliberately listless manner has always been a problem, although that is part of its point; the lack of reading has made people dry and empty. If the movie is a bit stiff (Truffaut did not speak English well and never tried another project in English), it nevertheless is full of intriguing touches, and the ending is lyrical and haunting. --Robert Horton, Amazon.com --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By Kona TOP 1000 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on 14 April 2005
Format: DVD
Oskar Werner stars as Montag, an unhappy man living in a monotonous futuristic society. Books are illegal, spy screens are on every wall, emotions are out, and people take drugs to endure their dull lives. Montag is a fireman whose job it is to find hidden books, burn them, and arrest the owners. One day he becomes curious about these books and sneaks a copy of David Copperfield home. His spaced-out wife (Julie Christie) reports him to the authorities and he must run for his life. He runs to a kindred spirt (also played by Christie) who is a book-lover.
Oskar Werner is wonderful as the sensitive, confused fireman who longs to really connect with people, ideas, and feelings. Christie shines as both the glamorous, bored housewife and the brave teacher who dares to read. The film's view of the future is frightening and sad, but the ending is hopeful and quite touching. Heartily recommended.
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Rarely do film adaptations exceed the quality of the book but this by Francois Truffaut does ! The reasons are many fold. The casting is excellent. Some might consider Oscar Werner a little wooden but he underplays Montag in a slightly 'child like' way, which emphasises his growing awareness and affinity for books. Julie Christie has the uneviable task of playing both the main female characters including Montag's air head/drugged up/reality tv obsessed wife. Montag's burning of the marital bed is deeply symbolic after his wife betrays him to the authorities. He chooses his love of books over everything in this dystopian vision of the future, akin to the world of 1984. Clever use of literary greats including Dickens and spoken opening titles elevate this film above many films of this period. So too does the original score by the great Bernard Hermann, who composed the music while going through divorce. There are some very moving pieces of music throughout and the final snowy, woodland scenes with the 'book people' all wandering around reciting their memorised books is a great ending to a great film ! Unlike 1984 there is the final upbeat message that 'freedom' (in this case to read) survives ! A must see.
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I left school in 1966, the year this film was released. I and a few schoolfriends went to see it one Friday night. We left the cinema moved, and when we met on Monday we discovered we had all spent the entire weekend reading. The film had jolted us out of complacency, because we realised that the truth of books being valuable conveyors of ideas had been forgotten, so we were reading while we had the chance. Forty years later, ideas are still under threat: see the film, then read books while you can.
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By Trevor Willsmer HALL OF FAMETOP 50 REVIEWER on 6 Jan. 2006
Format: DVD
It's curious that a director who spent so much of his early career railing against the tyranny of the literary tradition in French cinema should spend so much of his career either adapting novels or filling his films with techniques from and references to literature at every turn, so his attraction to Ray Bradbury's fable isn't that surprising. What is surprising is that in many ways it's his most purely cinematic film, discarding his usual over-reliance on voice-over to carry underwritten scenes for more purely cinematic forms of interpretation. Even the readings from the forbidden books are kept to a minimum: the obsession is in Montag's behavior, not the words he speaks.

Truffaut's playfulness is all over the material, from casting an actor who forbade his children to watch TV or go to the cinema as the fire chief (Cyril Cusack in the film's standout performance) to dramatically masking off half the screen and heightening the dramatic music for what turns out to be a less than dramatic moment in a search - and that's without the inclusion of Cahiers du Cinema among the burning books or mentioning Anton Diffring's brief moment in drag. But then this is an absurdist world, where firemen slide up poles and start fires and where fascism is accepted in that way it always is when gradually introduced because of people's innate ability to adapt to their circumstances, no matter how absurd or restricting.

It improves on Bradbury's novel by losing some of the more distancing sci-fi devices such as the fortune telling dog, and setting its future in a soulless post-war New Town environment that is close enough to the real look of the time to add to the credibility.
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I very much enjoyed watching this film, I am reading the book now and so far the director's interpretation and vision of the Ray Bradbury's book is remarkable. Truffault obviously shows us what he sees and even the author of the book was quite pleased with the result and mentioned, in a personal interview, that he has watched the movie at least 20 times and he is always touched by it.

Ray Bradbury shares with us his most terrible fear, what it would happen if libraries and books were illegal and burnt. He expresses that as a self-educated, the only idea of burning books was unimaginable and this really touches a very sensitive point in his heart. In the interview Bradbury mentiones that as self-taught he used to study in libraries and never made it to college.

The director's choice of the music background couldnt be better, having Bernard Herrmann as a composer for the film made this film to reach the level of Psycho and The birds, in a different theme (or subject) of course. Bernard Herrmann has accompanied Hitchcock's best films, without mentioning The citizen Kaine by Orson Wells.

During the film I found myself trying the guess the end and thankfully I was nicely surprised. This has no comparison with today's films in which you see what you expect. Due to the time in which the film was made, the director does not rely on special effects to give us a very special gift to be remembered.

Finally, it is a good way to reflect on what we take for granted (books, feeling, freedom of thought) and how the government can use the media to manipulate people's lives.
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