Product Details
Full Metal Jacket (Deluxe Edition) [1987]

Full Metal Jacket (Deluxe Edition) [1987]
Directed by Stanley Kubrick

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3879 in DVD
  • Released on: 2008-03-03
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Format: PAL
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 112 minutes

Editorial Reviews

DVD Description
Full Metal Jacket begins by following the trials and tribulations of a platoon of fresh Marine Corps recruits focusing on the relationship between Gunnery Sergeant Hartman and Privates Pyle and Joker. We see Pyle grow into an instrument of death as Hartman has foreseen of all of his recruits. Through Pyle's torment and Joker's unwillingness to stand up against it, the climax of part one is achieved with all three main characters deciding their fates by their action or lack there of. The second chapter of Full Metal Jacket delves into Joker's psyche and the repeated referral to the fact that he joined the Corps to become a killer. When his mostly behind the scenes job as a combat correspondent is interfered with by the Tet offensive he is thrusted into real combat and ultimately must choose if he really is a killer.

Special Features
Commentary by Vincent D’Onoforio, Adam Baldwin, Lee Ermey, Jay Cocks, Full Metal Jacket: Between Good and Evil, and the Theatrical trailer.

Synopsis
In this riveting look at military life during the Vietnam conflict, Stanley Kubrick, who made the powerful antiwar classics Paths of Glory(WWI) and Dr. Strangelove (the cold war), once again explores the behavior of men in battle. Full Metal Jacket, adapted from Gustav Hasford's novel The Short Timers, is broken down into two very different parts. The first half of the film focuses on the training of a squad of Marine grunts on Parris Island, and more specifically on the troubled relationship between the brutal drill sergeant (a frightening Lee Ermey) and an oafish misfit (a brilliant Vincent D'Onofrio) who just happens to be a sharpshooter. The first half ends with a devastating, unforgettable scene, leading into the second half, which takes the grunts to Hue City, the climactic battle of the 1968 Tet Offensive and the turning point of the Vietnam War. The story is told through the eyes of Private Joker (Matthew Modine), a cynical aspiring photojournalist who is soon forced to fight for his life and the lives of his fellow recruits. The sniper scene, which takes place amid bombed-out buildings (rather than in the familiar jungles), serves as a microcosm for the Vietnam War--as well as war in general.


Customer Reviews

Widescreen not4
I bought this copy thinking I was getting a widescreen version.But unfortunatly, although this the aspect ratio is indeed 1.78:1 , it is in fact just a cut down from the 1.33:1, so a waste of money.I dont think Kubrick shot in 'widescreen' looking at his other films,but I thought I would take a chance.So keep your old version and expand it to fit your widescreen telly.The film it's self is superb.But you already know that.

At last... a widescreen version!5
I won't go into any detail about the film as most people already know what it's about. This review is about the DVD itself.

Just to let you know that the film is finally available in 1.85:1 on this DVD. I waited years for this release as I have a widescreen TV and I always get my films in widescreen if possible. I had the original 1.33:1 R1 version, but sold that and bought the R4 (which is EXACTLY the same DVD) of this about six months ago as I couldn't wait for the R2 release. The sound is now in 5.1 surround and the picture quality is much improved with the anamorphic widescreen. There is also a new featurette made for the DVD and various commentaries, including Gny. Sgt. Hartman himself R. Lee Ermey.

Incidentally most Warner Bros., Universal and 20th Century Fox R2 or R4 DVDs are actually both R2/R4. They don't always tell you this on the casing, but it means they only need to produce one PAL version of a DVD for the world.