Available On Wireless Devices
Home
Content
Bookmarks
SEARCH
Previous Visit:
Home, Garden & Pets
Kitchen & Dining Material (material_browse)
Wood
Babel
DVD:
List Price:
$29.99
Price:
$0.03
You Save:
$29.96 (100%)
328 Merchants
Used & new
Merchant:
abundatrade
Condition:
Used
Availability:
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Customers who bought this item often buy:
Traffic
21 Grams (Collector's Edition)
A Mighty Heart
Things We Lost in the Fire
The Interpreter (Widescreen Edition)
Editorial Reviews
1.
Product Description
TRAGEDY STRIKES A MARRIED COUPLE ON VACATION IN THE MOROCCAN DESERT, TOUCHING OFF AN INTERLOCKING STORY INVOLVING SIX DIFFERENT FAMILIES.
2.
Amazon.com
Brilliantly conceived, superbly directed, and beautifully acted,
Babel
is inarguably one of the best films of 2006. Director Alejandro González Iñárritu and his co-writer, Guillermo Arriaga (the two also collaborated on
Amores Perros
and
21 Grams
) weave together the disparate strands of their story into a finely hewn fabric by focusing on what appear to be several equally incongruent characters: an American (Brad Pitt) touring Morocco with his wife (Cate Blanchett) become the focus of an international incident also involving a hardscrabble Moroccan farmer (Mustapha Rachidi) struggling to keep his two young sons in line and his family together. A San Diego nanny (Adriana Barraza), her employers absent, makes the disastrous decision to take their kids with her to a wedding in Mexico. And a deaf-mute Japanese teen (the extraordinary Rinko Kikuchi) deals with a relationship with her father (Koji Yakusho) and the world in general that's been upended by the death of her mother. It is perhaps not surprising, or particularly original, that a gun is the device that ties these people together. Yet
Babel
isn't merely about violence and its tragic consequences. It's about communication, and especially the lack of it-.-both intercultural, raising issues like terrorism and immigration, and intracultural, as basic as husbands talking to their wives and parents understanding their children. Iñárritu's command of his medium, sound and visual alike, is extraordinary; the camera work is by turns kinetic and restrained, the music always well matched to the scenes, the editing deft but not confusing, and the film (which clocks in at a lengthy 143 minutes) is filled with indelible moments. Many of those moments are also pretty stark and grim, and no will claim that all of this leads to a "happy" ending, but there is a sense of reconciliation, perhaps even resolution. "If You Want to be Understood... Listen," goes the tagline. And if you want a movie that will leave you thinking,
Babel
is it.
-.-Sam Graham
Beyond
Babel
Other Interweaving Storylines on DVD
Other DVDs by Director Alejandro González Iñárritu
Why We Love Cate Blanchett
Stills from
Babel
(click for larger image)
Recently Found
-
Mobile
-
My Cart
-
About Us
-
Contact Us
-
Email This Page
-
Privacy Policy
©2010 Microuse. All Rights Reserved.