Valkyrie

DVDfever.co.uk – Valkyrie Blu-ray reviewDom Robinson reviews

Valkyrie
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Blu-ray:

DVD:

  • Cert:
  • Running time: 121 minutes
  • Year: 2008
  • Released: June 2009
  • Region(s): 2, PAL
  • Chapters: 32 plus extras
  • Picture: 1080p High Definition
  • Sound: DTS 5.1 HD Master Audio Lossless, Audio Descriptive Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 5.1, Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Languages: English, Danish, Finnish, Hungarian, Swedish, Norwegian, Russian, Latvian
  • Subtitles: English for hearing impaired
  • Widescreen: 1.85:1
  • 16:9-Enhanced: Yes
  • Macrovision: Yes
  • Disc Format: BD25
  • Price: £19.99 (DVD), £24.99 (Blu-ray)
  • Extras: The Journey To Valkyrie, The Road to Resistance: A Visual Guide, The African Front Sequence,Taking to the air, Recreating Berlin, The Valkyrie Legacy, 92nd Street Y: Reel pieces with Tom Cruise and Bryan Singer, Audio Commentaries
  • Vote and comment on this film:View Comments

    Director:

      Bryan Singer

    (Apt Pupil, Prisoners, Public Access, Superman Returns, Usual Suspects, X-Men 1 & 2, You Want Me To Kill Him?)

Producers:

    Gilbert Adler, Christopher McQuarrie and Bryan Singer

Screenplay:

    Christopher McQuarrie and Nathan Alexander

Original Score :

    John Ottman

Cast :

    Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg: Tom Cruise
    Major-General Henning von Tresckow: Kenneth Branagh
    General Friedrich Olbricht: Bill Nighy
    General Friedrich Fromm: Tom Wilkinson
    Nina von Stauffenberg: Carice van Houten
    Major Otto Ernst Remer: Thomas Kretschmann
    Ludwig Beck: Terence Stamp
    General Erich Fellgiebel: Eddie Izzard
    Dr. Carl Goerdeler: Kevin McNally
    Colonel Mertz von Quirnheim: Christian Berkel
    Lieutenant Werner von Haeften: Jamie Parker
    Adolf Hitler: David Bamber
    Colonel Heinz Brandt: Tom Hollander
    Erwin von Witzleben: David Schofield
    Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel: Kenneth Cranham
    Confident General (Desert): Bernard Hill

At the start of Valkyrie, we’re deep into the Second World Warand the German 10th Panzer Division are in Tunisia, North Africa, along with their most eager recruit, Colonel Clausvon Stauffenberg (Tom Cruise).

Like many German soldiers, Claus is pissed off with Hitler and wants to be part of the plot to kill the evil manbecause of all the things he’s done such as killing Jews and torturing prisoners. Claus then makes a deal withthe Confident General (Bernard Hill) to take their troops off the planned path so they can join up with anotherdivision and so they can basically still keep enough men alive for when they’ll be needed on a later mission, rather thanlead them into certain death. However, this is cut short by an aircraft attack which kills everyone… except Cruise,of course.


As we get to the 13th March 1943, Major-General Henning von Tresckow (Kenneth Branagh) and co try to killHitler but their bomb fails to go off, so they recruit Claus once he’s back on his feet. The aim is to initiateOperation Valkyrie – in which men all over Berlin are ready if Hitler were to be cut off or killed. They would kickin if a military coup were to take place. So: get Hitler killed, dupe the Reserve Army into arresting the SS troopsand then form a new government with decent people instead of corrupt ones. Hmm… sounds like a plan for our owncheating bastards who do everything “within the rules”!

Things take a great amount of time, though, and it’s not until June 1944 when they try to put it into place

Amongst the rest of the film, there’s some effective use of CGI when we see a few scenes of Cruise missing variousparts of his anatomy, there’s a great cast also featuring Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Terence Stamp andEddie Izzard who is the inside man who will cut all communications once they kill Hitler. It also moves alongat a great pace, and it seems a bit odd at first that everyone speaks in their native tongue, rather likeThe Hunt for Red October, but it’s better thanputting on a dodgy German accent. However, wouldn’t it also have been an idea to aim for authenticity along the linesofDownfall?


Valkyrie is presented in its original 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen ratio and looks as highly detailed as you’d expect ahigh-definition picture to look which, evokes the period of the time.

The sound comes in DTS HD 5.1, DTS 5.1 and Dolby Digital 5.1 formats.I haven’t got a DTS HD setup, which allows for a 7.1 surround speaker setup, but then I haven’t got the room for thateither, so DTS 5.1 will do for me. The highlights for me were the opening air attack and also the time when they cometo make their assassination attempt on Hitler. Dialogue is crisp and clear throughout and there’s no disappointment tobe found here.

The extras are as follows:

  • The Journey To Valkyrie (15:56): Christopher McQuarrie tells us why he wanted to make the film before other cast members chip in including co-writerNathan Alexander and then all the key cast members.
  • The Road to Resistance: A Visual Guide (9:08): A look at Berlin in 1944 as told to us by the real-life Claus’ grandson.
  • The African Front Sequence (7:01): How the opening air-raid was put together.
  • Taking to the air (7:32): How you can only get realistic planes in flight by actually flying planes in the air, rather than using CGI.
  • Recreating Berlin (6:51): Most of Berlin at the time was bombed to smithereens, and nowadays the occasional building left is surrounded by loads ofmodern ones, hence the difficulty.
  • The Valkyrie Legacy (1:54:15): Split up into 9 chapters, this is the 2008 documentary about the real-life story that inspired this film, which was alsocalled “Valkyrie: The Plot to Kill Hitler”. Excellent stuff for the viewer who can’t get enough of all this.
  • 92nd Street Y: Reel pieces with Tom Cruise and Bryan Singer (38:57): A discussion at the New York City cultural and community centre with Cruise and Singer.
  • Audio Commentaries: One from Tom Cruise, Bryan Singer and Christopher McQuarrie, the other from McQuarrie and Nathan Alexander.

The main menu features thumping music from the film with images of the cast mixed with shots from the film, all done ina very clever fashion. There are subtitles in several different languages (I might’ve missed out a couple above as Icouldn’t figure out all of those in the list on the disc) and there are 32 chapters to the film which is perfectly fine.If you’re a fan of this film, then the fantastic set of extras which round the disc out will make this a package not tobe missed.


FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS


OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2009.View the discussion thread.blog comments powered by Disqus= 0) {query += ‘url’ + i + ‘=’ + encodeURIComponent(links[i].href) + ‘&’;}}document.write(”);})();//]]]]>]]>

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