Dom Robinson reviews
Special Edition
Five criminals. One line up. No coincidence.
Distributed by
MGM
Cert:
Cat.no: 19899 DVD
Running time: 102 minutes
Year: 1995
Pressing: 2002
Region(s): 2 (UK PAL)
Chapters: 32 plus extras
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages: English, French
Subtitles: English, French, Dutch
Widescreen: 2.35:1
16:9-enhanced: Yes
Macrovision: No
Disc Format: DVD 9
Price: £22.99
Extras:
Four Featurettes, Bryan Singer's Gag Reel, Taking Out The Usual Suspects:
Interviews & Outtakes, Deleted Scenes, Trailers, TV Spots, Two Audio Commentaries
Director:
(Apt Pupil, Public Access, The Usual Suspects, X-Men, X2 )
Producer:
Bryan Singer & Michael McDonnel
Screenplay:
Christopher McQuarrie (Public Access )
Music :
Cast :
McManus: Stephen Baldwin
Keaton: Gabriel Byrne
Fenster: Benicio Del Toro
Hockney: Kevin Pollak
Verbal: Kevin Spacey
Agent David Kujan: Chazz Palminteri
Kobayashi: Pete Postlethwaite
Edie Finneran: Suzy Amis
Jack Baer: Giancarlo Esposito
Jeff Rabin: Dan Hedaya
The Usual Suspects
tells the story of five criminals brought together
in a framed line-up, with 27 bodies turning up in Long Beach Habour and a pot
of money worth $91 million. There's a terrified witness dying in hospital, who
can't say too much but mentions the name "Keyser Soze" . Is he a mysterious
criminal overlord with a reign of terror, or the devil himself? Agent David
Kujan is hell-bent on unraveling the truth.
This film proved itself to be one of the few great films of 1995, winning
Kevin Spacey the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, with both an Oscar and a
BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay going to Christopher McQuarrie.
Kobayashi (Pete Postlethwaite, right) lays down the plan.
If you're after a film with strong acting, then you couldn't do better than
this one. The five men lined-up to be stitched-up Stephen Baldwin, Gabriel
Byrne, Benicio Del Toro, Kevin Pollak and Kevin Spacey each have
their own character to play, but it's Spacey as the crippled Verbal Kint, known
as Verbal because he talks too much...and usually to the wrong people, who
shines through as the best and deserved his Oscar. He also starred in
Clint Eastwood's Midnight In The Garden Of Good And Evil
and should have won another Oscar for his perfect performance in Curtis Hanson's
L.A. Confidential .
Chazz Palminteri is also very good as Agent Kujan, the detective in
charge of getting to the truth of the matter, with good support from fellow
detectives Dan Hedaya and Giancarlo Esposito . Finally, the
ubiquitous Pete Postlethwaite appears as Kobayashi, the man who brings
the chance of a lifetime to the famous five, tempting them with the aforementioned
$91 million offer.
Kevin Spacey goes on trial for crimes against decent films after K-PAX .
The film was originally released on DVD by Polygram in 1998, with a fullscreen
transfer, which was a shame as it looked terrific in its original 2.35:1 ratio,
even thought it was shot in the Super-35 format so in the main, the matte ('those
black bars' to the uninitiated) could be opened up to reveal more picture above
and below the usual widescreen image, without losing much picture information,
if any, at the sides. This still resulted in a couple of scenes where a pan-and-scan
shot reared its ugly head, one being at the start of chapter 11 (on that DVD,
but 19 on this one) with Chazz Palminteri
sitting on one side of his office and Kevin Spacey on the other, but the image
panned from right to left as Dan Hedaya enters the office stage-left behind
Spacey.
Thankfully, this Special Edition rights the wrongs and gives us the
2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer we wanted all along, looking crisp and
clear with only a handful of minor specks on the print.
The sound comes across very clear on this disc, with Dolby Digital 5.1 (English
and French) used mainly to set the tone for such a dark thriller, plus more active use in scenes where
Verbal gives a description what happened when Keyser Soze found intruders at
home and a loud explosion on a boat.
In addition to the much-improved picture and sound quality over the original
release, the extras on this special edition also excel, beginning with a
two-part featurette totalling 50 minutes, Deposing The Usual Suspects ,
containing film clips and plenty of chat from cast and crew members about the
film. An 18-minute featurette, Keyser Soze: Lie or Legend , goes behind
the hidden legend whose name was borne from a man called Keyser Sume (pronounced
Su-may), who was the boss of writer Christopher Quarrie when he worked
at a law firm. Note that you must watch the film before these featurettes
since they contain plenty of plot spoilers.
Introduction to The Usual Suspects is a 6½-minute mini-featurette
that, unlike the above, was made at the time of the film, but doesn't tell
you much about the film and is more like what you'd expect to see on Box
Office America . The final mini-featurette is Heisting Cannes with
The Usual Suspects (4 mins) as the cast and director attend the event,
with comments dropped in from present-day thoughts.
Bryan Singer's Gag Reel is a five-minute blooper reel, there's a 17-minute
interview with film editor and composer John Ottman , a one-minute piece
about an apartment scene as Kevin Spacey pays a visit to Gabriel Byrne in
Bryan Singer introduces Kevin Spacey and Friend ; and Interviews
Outtakes (3 mins) show the latter during the former and descends into a
discussion about why the Jaws two-hour documentary with outtakes only
made it onto the laserdisc and not the DVD release.
Five Deleted Scenes are included, all introduced by John Ottman, most
of which wouldn't make a great deal of difference to the film if put back in.
Then comes an International trailer (2 mins, 16:9 anamorphic),
US Trailer (2 mins, 2.35:1 anamorphic) - with an introduction by Mr Ottman -
and three minutes of eight US TV Spots in 4:3 fullscreen.
All of the above footage contain subtitles and the interviews were shot on
film but have been put through the mincer, like an episode of Hollyoaks
or Brookside , to pretend that they've been shot on film when it makes
them look anything but.
Finally there's two audio commentaries - one from John Ottman and the other
from Christopher Quarrie and director Bryan Singer .
There are 32 chapters to the movie, dialogue comes in Dolby Digital 5.1 for
English and French, with subtitles come in 3 languages: English (with a hard
of hearing option), French and Dutch. The menus are animated and scored.
In 1998, one Usual Suspects fan just couldn't go
on after Polygram's original fullscreen DVD release.
FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS
OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2002.
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