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Last of Mohicans [Blu-ray] [1992] [US Import]

4.6 out of 5 stars 408 customer reviews

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Dispatched from and sold by Moref Designs.
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£9.96 Only 1 left in stock. Dispatched from and sold by Moref Designs.

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  • Last of Mohicans [Blu-ray] [1992] [US Import]
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Product details

  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 2.40:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: R (Restricted) (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (408 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000Y5CHIE
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 113,804 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Blu-ray Verified Purchase
I have watched every version of this master piece, the Blu Ray version even beats the Laser Disc version.

The picture is so crystal clear you see new details of the film that you couldn't see before.

The audio is stunning.

None of the content is new, which is odd considering the original pre-edited version was apparently 3 hours long. This version is similar to the directors edition, but bizarrely Michael Mann removes the "Once we were here epic ending".

Here's hoping Mann releases an uncut 20th anniversary special edition!

Overall 10 out of 10, i loved every second.

Thanks for reading.
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By A Customer on 12 Jun. 2004
Format: DVD
As an adaptation it's far from faithful to the book but manages to capture the spirit nevertheless.
In the midst of war, Cora (Madeleine Stowe), the daughter of a British General, falls in love with Hawkeye (Daniel Day Lewis), a white man raised by Indians. Their struggle to stay together inspite of the madness surrounding them forms the core of the story.
It is beautifully filmed - the landscapes are breathtaking and the fight/action scenes switch from being brutal to almost balletic at times. The acting is of a high quality throughout - Daniel Day Lewis makes a surprisingly convincing romantic lead in a departure from his previous roles and Madeleine Stowe is strong as the determined Cora. I'm no expert on the details of the time but there's plently of dirt, blood and sweat in evidence and it doesn't feel overly glamorised. The score is sublime.
If you love heroics and romance (not the soppy but the epic kind) then you will love this.
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By K. C. Simm VINE VOICE on 19 April 2007
Format: DVD
This is the first real epic of new cinema if you wish to pay any credence to such classifications. It is also a very finely crafted film. Micheal Mann has not been hidebound by the Fennimore Cooper novel and some have seen that as a mistake. I do not. Performances are remarkable in particular Day Lewis as Hawkeye. Villans are villans but with reason. Magua knows what he is doing and why. Minor characters are given room to breath and the set piece battles are extremly well done. The main story line, the love story between Cora and Hawkeye is romantic without being mawkish and the secondary story of the battles between the British, French and Indians is told with feeling and understanding. There is passion and Drama here, the direction is strong, the cinematography and the soundtrack are stunning. If you have not seen it buy and enjoy.
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Format: DVD
This film is masterful because the key decisions were 'got right' in 1992. Daniel Day Lewis as Nathaniel, famously ran around in the woods for weeks, intensely preparing for the role and almost a decade on, it shows. He is, like his surrogate Mohican companions completely believable. Thus is doesn't matter that the style of the film is slightly dated in places; that some of the acting seems a little 'hammy' (some of the accents dodgy) 9 years on. Wes Studi as the embittered Magua brings a creation to the screen the like of which, almost had never been seen before, or has been seen since. The key actors in the movie having successfully been transmuted into the the 18th century protagonists (because, this is the calibre of acting were talking about), Michael Mann did what he does best and concentrated on capturing what the actors were doing, as well as the context that they were responding to, and what you get is a sweeping visual feast bringing 18th century frontier America to life. This, letting of masterful performers 'do their thing' while he concentrates on capturing them and their background is what takes Michael Mann's films often to great heights, but when the actors aren't up to the job, this method can leave his movies lacking substance. This film is an instance where the Michael Mann method works really well and even after 9 years, watching it is a heady authentic experience as the combination of immersive acting and direction ( one almost imagines Mann running around, camera in hand with a long Mohican hairstyle, running after Day-Lewis and his companions - the men of action one shot muskets in hand, whose actions are approved of by the wild woods of the American Frontier ) sweeps you up in a visual narrative of rare power. The score is an portent ingredient and is spot on.
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Format: Blu-ray Verified Purchase
My first few viewings of this terrific Michael Mann period-adventure/drama (made in 1992) left me just as impressed as all his other efforts, with it's intense character-development, realism, attention to detail, strong musical soundtrack along with, this time and unusually for Mann, a big helping of smouldering romance.

So, as I own the initial-release R1 DVD any Blu-ray release which promised improvement was likely to tempt me - now I've got and watched it I can safely say that it DOES offer an improvement in all respects.

If you need to learn a bit about the plot, the Amazon synopsis does a good job without any real spoilers.

Luckily I was not deterred by the simply awful disc case cover art, which is a poor piece of artwork (as opposed to an image from the film) depicting the lead character, played by the magnificent Daniel Day-Lewis, so 'artificially' I have some concern that it will have ensured lower sales of this relatively new release !

Watching in HD for the first time it is entirely possible that even more people will be turned-off by the regular periods of 'darkness' and 'muffled' sound, but that would be unfair as (like the equally brilliant 'Master & Commander') many scenes are in dark areas or at night and. as far as I'm concerned, Mann usually tries as much as possible to keep both the original 'live' dialogue and lighting conditions in his films....

So (and despite that box artwork I mentioned !), this release maintains the Mann traits of realistic settings and sound, so those used to ADR-rich films and 'over-illuminated' sets will be disappointed !
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