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The Golden Compass [Blu-ray]

The Golden Compass [Blu-ray]

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Actors: Nicole Kidman, Dakota Blue Richards, Daniel Craig
Studio: New Line Home Video
Category: DVD

List Price: $39.98
Buy New: $17.39
You Save: $22.59 (57%)



New (40) Used (23) Collectible (1) from $15.24

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 199 reviews
Sales Rank: 870

Format: Dolby, Dts Surround Sound, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: Blu-ray
Number Of Items: 2
Running Time: 113
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 1000038168
UPC: 794043120442
EAN: 0794043120442
ASIN: B00139XZF4

Theatrical Release Date: December 7, 2007
Release Date: April 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: First Class Shipping! Ships Fast! Fast! Fast! Brand new! Sealed Blu-Ray Disc! No bootlegs, imports or counterfiets sold here! All items shipped with delivery cofirmation

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In a parallel universe where witches rule the skies and armoured bears are the bravest warriors young Lyra Belacqua journeys from her home among the scholars at Oxford to the far North to save her best friend. Based on the first book in the Carnegie Medal-winning series His Dark Materials.Format: BLU-RAY DISC Genre: SCI-FI/FANTASY/FANTASY UPC: 794043120442 Manufacturer No: 1000038168

Amazon.com
A fantasy epic with more than a passing resemblance to the Lord of the Rings and Chronicles of Narnia film franchises, The Golden Compass takes place in an alternate universe where each human's soul is embodied in a companion animal called a daemon. Lyra (Dakota Blue Richards), an orphan who's lived most of her life among the scholars at Oxford, is intrigued when her uncle, Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig), announces his plans to travel north to investigate the source of some mysterious particles called Dust. Lyra has little hope of following her uncle until a mysterious woman named Mrs. Coulter (Nicole Kidman, at her most icily beautiful) asks Lyra to travel north as her personal assistant. All is not as it seems, however, and the disappearance of Lyra's friend Roger (Ben Walker) sets her on a dizzying adventure. She does have an alethiometer, or golden compass, that can help her see the truth, and a number of companions, including her shape-shifting daemon, Pantalaimion (voiced by Freddie Highmore of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), polar-bear warrior Iorek Byrnison (voiced by Ian McKellen), Texas aeronaut Lee Scoresby (Sam Elliott), and witch queen Serafina Pekkala (Craig's Casino Royale co-star, Eva Green). Even before its release, The Golden Compass was the subject of controversy over its perceived anti-religious themes. While it does involve an oppressive institution called the Magisterium, it's not overtly religious, particularly to a young viewer. The movie's PG-13 rating should be taken seriously, however. Suitable for an older audience than Narnia (though younger than The Lord of the Rings), it deals with complex concepts, violence (though largely bloodless) and implied death, children and animals in peril, and an unrelentingly ominous and unsettling mood.

Despite a few changes and rearrangements, the overall plot of the movie is remarkably faithful to its source material, the first installment of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy. It doesn't finish the book, however, and--much like The Fellowship of the Ring did--leaves the viewer hanging in anticipation of the next film, The Subtle Knife, due in 2009. So even though The Golden Compass is impressive--especially with its spot-on cast and terrific visual effects--we probably won't know its full emotional impact until the story is complete. --David Horiuchi


Customer Reviews:   Read 194 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars An excellent adaptation of a very complex book   July 8, 2008
The Golden Compass is a very ambitious film based on a very ambitious book. If you haven't read the book, and you liked this movie, you must go read the book. That said, this film really did seem rushed and a lot of the appealing aspects of the book are left out. However, most of what they changed made sense to me (like switching the order of events at Svalbard and Bolvangar) and made the flow of the movie work better.

My main problem with this movie is the same one I had with David Lynch's Dune: You really wouldn't know what's going on unless you've read the book. I saw the movie before I read the book, but my wife who was watching it with me had and she was able to explain a lot of what I was seeing - much like when I watch Dune with someone who hasn't read the book.

So in the end, The Golden Compass suffers from being too complex and fast-paced in order to do justice to the book it's based on. Yes, I liked the movie a lot (enough to buy it for my library), and it inspired me to read the fantastic novels, but those who haven't read the book may be confused by what they're seeing.

I wholeheartedly recommend this movie, but I really recommend reading the book first to get everything out of it.



1 out of 5 stars Twenty Minutes...   July 7, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Twenty Minutes...that's as long as I lasted. It was dull and boring and just plain weird. It's hard to imagine a kid or an adult wanting to sit through this. Just bad.


5 out of 5 stars Deez Movie Review   July 2, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This movie is fantastic! The screen writers followed the book as closely as possible. There are a few minor changes but nothing that altered the storyline. If you haven't read the books, read them because they will explain some of what you see in the movie and prepare you for future movies in the series.


1 out of 5 stars A complete waste of time   July 2, 2008
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

This movie is real dull, without much of a plot or story. The worst thing of all is that THERE IS NO CONCLUSION. A real ripoff. I guess they expect us to wait with baited breath for a sequel to finish the story? There were also some good actors totally wasted in this drivel, like Christopher Lee and Derek Jacoby. I also wasn't expecting this to be children's movie, but that is what it is. Oh, by the way, they ripoff Chronicles of Narnia. They wish they were 1/100th as good as Narnia. Even the voice of the ice bear was a ripoff of the talking lion of Narnia.


3 out of 5 stars The big story about nothing   June 29, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

In some (nearly) parallel universe, things are quite different. Human beings walk alongside their "demons", almost tangible avatars of their souls. The war between church and academia (irrational faith and enlightened reason) has virtually been lost to the "Magisterium", a workable stand-in for organized religion. The only hope for freedom is an understanding of "dust", some quasi-cosmic substance that flows into humans through their demons. The Magisterium sees Dust as a threat to their rule (if only because it's not found in their scriptures, and nothing that powerful can remain outside their control) and plans both covertly and in the open to cut man off from it.

Lyra Belacqua, a precocious 12 year older living in some otherworldly version of Oxford, finds herself at the crossroads of this conflict. Her uncle, Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig) mounts an expedition to the North where the Aurora Borealis reveals a cascade of Dust flowing to a man through his demon. Marissa Coulter (Nicole Kidman in seduction-overdrive), an agent of The Magisterium, takes an extreme interest in Lyra and offers to take her on an expedition North. Before leaving (and once Coulter's odiousness has clearly emerged from her charming demeanor) the master of her school gives her the last remaining Alethiometer - the Golden Compass - an instrument which she doesn't understand. The master's commands are simple - keep it secret, keep it safe. It is only after Coulter virtually imprisons Lyra in her London home (looking like Kensington, with carriages drawn by lightning instead of horses) that Lyra realizes that something is very wrong. Snooping around, Lyra finds evidence linking Coulter with the systematic kidnapping of children (including at least one of her friends) and escapes with her Alethiometer. Hooking up with Gyptians (tough but honorable sea-going nomads) in search of their own lost children, Lyra heads North.

In her search for her missing friend, Lyra will encounter Iorek Byrnison (I know I couldn't have spelled that right - just think of a polar bear with battle armor and the voice of Ian Mckellen) a witch named Serrafina Pekkala (let's just put spell-check aside, this is a parallel universe) played by Eva Green, an "aeronaut" from Texas (and therefore played by Sam Elliot) and various other characters. Her search will bring her to a remote polar research station run by the Magisterium where cruel experiments are conducted on children to separate them from their demons, their personal conduits for Dust.

NOW THAT I'VE WAXED ON THE STORY...
There's a lot of material underlying the "Dark Materials" trilogy, of which GC is the 1st part. Unfortunately, none of it actually works its way into the narrative of this movie. The script excised much of the story's barb against organized religion, reducing the Magisterium to a bunch of generic odious characters in funny clothes plotting something, and ever extending their authority. It's hard to imagine how well the flick would have done were its script larded down with polemic of any kind (let alone anti-religious), but the movie fails because it fails to become a story about anything. It would be easy for the fans to blame Hollywood for taking god out of the picture (as ironic a charge that is for the left) but fantasy stories have always been based on characters who were analogs for those of real life (or acknowledged as such in real life), and The Magisterium of the books could have been replaced with one just as potent without condescending to religious viewers. I mean, this is a parallel universe - it's all about finding different versions of what we already recognize.

Unfortunately, rather than playing shell-games with its symbols, GC decides not to play anything at all. The Magisterium never becomes more than generic baddies (and because they don't do much at all, its hard to envision them as villains at all); there's a war between polar bears that will see Iorek returned to the throne - even though the bears as a whole never become a factor in the story once that happens; there are witches and an evil army of cossak-looking guys, scientists and ofcourse Mrs. Coulter. There's plenty of CGI designed to make us think that things are happening, and the story includes a northbound journey to make it seem like the story is going somewhere when it doesn't. The movie climaxes on a pitched battle between the cossak-looking guys on one side and witches, gyptians and Iorek on the other - it's old stuff to anybody who sat through Narnia and at least 2 of the Rings movies, and since it's shot at night, it's harder to see what's going on. Though the movie preserves at least some of the book's rich material, the narrative sloppily integrates it into the story - using embarrassingly obvious expository dialog and bombarding Lyra with a number of characters who exist if only to show/tell Lyra what to do next. Virtually every plot element in the story is told to us rather than discovered by Lyra. (The Alethiometer is supposed to tell truth, but it to becomes a convenient plot device, a GPS for Lyra to navigate the story's otherwise unnavigable byways.)

There's actually a moment in GC that promises what the rest of the movie fails to deliver. Lyra, having been chased to the doors of her College-home by a band of Gyptian children, warns them back. She threatens them with unspeakable horrors should they cross the gates of the school. The gyptian boy isn't one to suffer threats easily, so he and Lyra engage in duel of wits that ends with the combatants cheerily scheduling a later time to resume their war. The scene embodies everything that the rest of the movie doesn't: a horrible fate, an unceasing belief (or unceasing refusal to believe) in it, and the unique capacity of children to create a great story, live it and know its limits.




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