Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Atomic!, 27 Jul 2003
Having bought the original DVD away back in 1999 (in the old-style transparent plastic case and everything), I have to say I was aprehensive about paying the extra money for the extra scenes and interviews. However, it was well worth it.To recap, Trainspotting follows the lives of three junkies (Renton, Sick Boy and Spud) and a psychopath (Begbie) in Edinburgh (although quite a lot of the film is actually shot in my home town of Glasgow). Having recieved a mixture of acclaim and controversy when it was released, those who make the effort to watch it will realise it is not about glamorising drugs. It is essentially about the break up of friendships between men who have been pals since school and whose lives decay in a furore of drink, violence, sex, and drugs. It also makes an important statement of how mundane junkies' lives are. The most disturbing aspect of this film is actually the amount of humour: from the bookmaker's toilet to the psychopath Begbie, quite simply a nutter, to use a nice vernacular phrase. Also look out for Sick Boy's great impressions of Sean Connery. The extras on the DVD are great and a perfect length. Various missing scenes are included on the first disc. On the second disc, there is a mixture of interviews (including one with the author of the book, Irvine Welsh), and good behind-the-scenes material, including some nice multi-angle material. Admirers of Trainspotting will have already appreciated its pulsating and eclectic soundtrack: from Lou Reed's 'Perfect Day' to Sleeper's cover of 'Atomic'; from Iggy Pop's 'Lust For Life' to 'Habanera' from Carmen. This DVD explains the choice of sound, as well as other aspects such as visuals and colour, and was interested to find out the music is designed to move the audience from the 1980s where the story begins to the 1990s. Indeed, Renton, the hero (?) of the film begins as a person with his mind stuck in the era of Iggy Pop, before eventually waking up to the 1990s with Pulp and Damon Albarn. Incidentally, also look out for the vox-pops of Albarn at the Cannes film festival on the second disc, as well as the likes of Oasis and Ewan McGregor himself. This a film which deals with a controversial subject in a perfect manner with an excellent cast, great visuals, and a racing sountrack. ***** Five Stars! *****
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Choose This!, 22 Dec 2002
Still boasting one of the most spectacular opening sequences of contemporary movie history, Trainspotting remains as one of the more finer pieces of British cinema to grace our screens in recent years. Filmed in an disused Cigarette factory in Glasgow on a 1.5 million budget, Trainspotting is based on the best-selling book by Irvine Welsh, author of other drug-fueled novels such as 'Ecstasy' and 'The Acid House', John Hodge's near faithful, toned down script is one to savor and relish within, as we are taken through the back streets of the human breed. Starring Ewan McGregor as the young, unemployed junkie Mark Renton, Director Danny Boyles' disturbing vision of a crime-controlled Edinburgh, is ruthlessly displayed with incredible confidence and effortless brutality as we are shown the way before the eyes of Renton. Following the lives of Mark and his disturbing friends Sick Boy, Spud, Begbie and Tommy and their crusades into violence and addictions, and the price their fun will cost. With nothing left to imagination, the film skips from Drug-use to cot death, from sexual frustration to underage sex, but stays alive long enough to tell a very poignant tale of how life can change where return to the norm is no longer an option. Even though the disturbing use of harrowing imagery remains the key player of the films make-up, an agonizing soundtrack which underplays the powerful leads, rests as an odd mixture of golden oldies and modern pop. A Classic in a new era of film-making
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
'Moving on, the day you die'., 15 Oct 2006
Trainspotting is largely responsible for the revival of the British Film Industry and one the finest films of the 1990s. It is also one of my personal favourites.
Set in the underworld of Edinburgh, Renton and his 'so called friends'. Among them are Begbie (a psychopath), Tommy (too honest for his own good), Sickboy (Sean Connery enthusiast and utterly unreliable) and Spud (slimy loser). Renton is desperate to kick his addiction to heroin. But why would he want to choose life? His attempt to go straight goes through many twists and turns, with underage girls, scrapes with the law, re-addiction and even all the way to London, back to Edinburgh and then back again. Despite the horror of the life of the protagonists, the films ends or an uplifting high.
Among the best scenes in the film are (The Worst) toilet (in Scotland), Spud's moring-after-the-night-before disaster, the junkie limbo and Renton abandoning his 'so-called mates'. The final shot of Renton walking away over the Bridge with Born Slippy by Underworld playing is one of my favourites of all time.
Sick, twisted and funny, black comedy, with great acting by all, impressive directing by Danny Boyle and a wonderful soundtrack, Trainspotting is a great buy.
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