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1984 (1984)
Released By: Live Home Video   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Live Home Video
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Michael Radford
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Cyril Cusack, Gregor Fisher, James Walker, John Hurt, Richard Burton, Suzanna Hamilton
Published ID: 1820
UPC: 027616884220,
Plot: Directed by British filmmaker Michael Radford, Nineteen Eighty-Four is the second film adaptation of the George Orwell novel. The film is set during April of 1984 in post-atomic war London, the capital city of the repressive totalitarian state of Oceania. Winston Smith (John Hurt) is a government bureaucrat whose job is rewriting history and erasing people from existence. While his co-worker Parsons (Gregor Fisher) seems content to follow the state's laws, Winston starts to write in a secret diary despite the fact the Big Brother is watching everyone at all times by way of monitors. He silently suffers and tries to comprehend his oppression, which forbids individual human behaviors such as free thinking and sex. He meets Julia (Suzanna Hamilton), who works for the Ministry of Truth, and they engage in a stoic love affair. They are soon found out, and Winston is interrogated and tortured by his former friend O'Brien (Richard Burton in his final film appearance). ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Awful movie - Good book
Added 8/20/2009

The movie was basically awful, while the book revealed some real truths that happen when a society is taken in bondage by its evil government, wanting to change all truth into lies, whether that be history or morality, etc, all through THOUGHT CONTROL. Some may see this happening in America now, read the book and see if you see the similarities. But the movie was awful, it took forever to even begin to reveal the slightest hint of what the story was about, and then left you still wondering. Nothing much was made clear, and the movie seemed to focus more on sensual stimulation thru nudity than dealing with what the story was all about, a nation's calling good evil and evil good and forcing its subjects to believe it. To me, the movie is very slow moving and boring as far as the real story is concerned. I see this movie as a serious waste of time. It really disappointed me, and I wonder whether it would disappoint George Orwell as well. I believe the whole point was just missed in the movie, and it was hard to see any point at all. (The book is just the opposite, I would highly recommend that everyone read it.)
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Missing in edit
Added 7/7/2009

I love this movie and I own it on VHS and DVD. However, some of the VHS movie has been edited out of the DVD. For example, the scene where Winston and Julia go to O'Brian and want to join the resistance is ommited. This is an important scene, one minute Winston is reading the Goldstein book and the next scene they are being arrested by the thought police. I wonder if they will issue a DVD with all of the Omitted scenes back in. Otherwise, a great movie.
2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
1984
Added 7/2/2009

We have not watched entire movie yet although this is a DVD we having been wanting for a long time after seeing snipets.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A Horrible Adaptation of a Classic Novel
Added 5/28/2009

In many respects, this adaptation of George Orwell's "1984" should stand out as an example of how you don't adapt a novel for the big screen. No film version can ever match the depth and detail of the original novel upon which it is based, but when a film is done this badly it demands an answer the obvious question, "What was the director thinking?"

To be fair, I like director Michael Radford's treatment of the external world of London as bleak and almost lifeless, although I think that the neighborhoods of the proletariat should have been much darker and more foreboding. Their environment seemed poor, but didn't evoke the same emotions as Orwell's well-written descriptions of dark alleys and the myriad of pubs that are filled with the down-trodden masses of non-party members. And with that same thought in mind we begin to see the first of many departures from the novel - aside from the antique shop and Winston's prostitute encounter there are no portrayals of any of the other scenes that make up more of the surrounding story in the proletariat world.

I realize that a director only has so much time to work with when creating a movie, but this director left out large chunks of the story in order to make it fit the time frame, and I feel sorry for anyone that hasn't read the book because so much of the movie won't mean anything. This movie could almost represent a condensed version of the original, except that it shows scenes out of order, it doesn't explain why so much of the story is actually occurring, and it changes a great deal of the detail in ways that are unforgivable. Here are just a few examples: In the novel Winston worked for Minitrue (Ministry of Truth), although in the film it mentions Winston working for Minirec (Ministry of Records). In the novel Winston does not exclaim that he hates Julia before discovering that she secretly loves him. In the film, Winston's vision of Julia undressing in a field occurs just before their first romantic encounter, not some weeks earlier in a dream as in the novel. I could go on and on, but there are a great number of these scenes that are not simply errors or a failure of attention to detail, they are the director's deliberate attempts to place his stamp on someone else's work. I believe in artistic expression, but if you want to make your own mark - create your own story; don't create a hatchet-job of someone else's work.

One of my largest complaints is the deliberate omission of a great detail of information surrounding the Socialism and Communism themes that are so prevalent in the novel; Ingsoc is never explained as a newspeak amalgamation of English Socialism, everyone is called brother or sister instead of comrade, and the recurring treatment of society's failed attempts to obtain even the most basic of necessities of life due to the government's ineptitude at production are missing. What's more infuriating is the portrayal of Winston's day-to-day activities at Minitrue/Minirec - you're vaguely aware that he is doing SOMETHING, but the film version manages to omit what that actually is. Having read the book we know that he was altering the past, but the film doesn't convey that. In fact, the film conveys very little - if you have read the book then the film simply gives you fleeting images to go along with the story line that you already know, but in most respects the film's failure to align with the novel begins to interfere with what you remember about the story.

Much like "Animal Farm", which is George Orwell's other treatment of communism, "1984" is supposed to be a sharp arrow piercing through the utopian vision of a communism by portraying a world where a corrupt government cannot live up to its promises, but this adaptation completely misses the target. At the time this movie was created the Cold War was still raging, and I can only surmise that the director toned down the communist-themed overtones in order to appease the Soviet Union; if that's the case - that's a really weak argument.

I truly feel sorry for someone that sees this film and has never read the book. After watching this movie I got the feeling that the director, Michael Radford, was trying to create a visual masterpiece like Stanley Kubrick did with "2001: A Space Odyssey", but unfortunately Michael Radford is NOT Stanley Kubrick, and as a result he created a film that is little more than an insult to the original novel, and my only take-away from this film is the feeling that I have lost two hours of my life.

1 out of 5 people found this helpful.
1984 "1984"
Added 5/15/2009

Fairly good movie (1984 made in "1984"), better then the 1956 version of 1984 but still not worth the $40 + price tag!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Awful movie - Good book
Added 8/20/2009

The movie was basically awful, while the book revealed some real truths that happen when a society is taken in bondage by its evil government, wanting to change all truth into lies, whether that be history or morality, etc, all through THOUGHT CONTROL. Some may see this happening in America now, read the book and see if you see the similarities. But the movie was awful, it took forever to even begin to reveal the slightest hint of what the story was about, and then left you still wondering. Nothing much was made clear, and the movie seemed to focus more on sensual stimulation thru nudity than dealing with what the story was all about, a nation's calling good evil and evil good and forcing its subjects to believe it. To me, the movie is very slow moving and boring as far as the real story is concerned. I see this movie as a serious waste of time. It really disappointed me, and I wonder whether it would disappoint George Orwell as well. I believe the whole point was just missed in the movie, and it was hard to see any point at all. (The book is just the opposite, I would highly recommend that everyone read it.)
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Missing in edit
Added 7/7/2009

I love this movie and I own it on VHS and DVD. However, some of the VHS movie has been edited out of the DVD. For example, the scene where Winston and Julia go to O'Brian and want to join the resistance is ommited. This is an important scene, one minute Winston is reading the Goldstein book and the next scene they are being arrested by the thought police. I wonder if they will issue a DVD with all of the Omitted scenes back in. Otherwise, a great movie.
2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
1984
Added 7/2/2009

We have not watched entire movie yet although this is a DVD we having been wanting for a long time after seeing snipets.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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Shopping
IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
VHS
$64.98 @ Amazon
DVD
$30.51 @ Amazon