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Apt Pupil |
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Led by the disc’s cover artwork, I was looking at “Apt Pupil” without paying much attention to the release, expecting yet another superfluous modern teenage horror film. I am still hopeful someone in the marketing departments of Hollywood’s studios will eventually recognize that the currently found uniformity in film packaging just doesn’t really sell the goods. It just makes every film look like a “scream” rip-off. Nevertheless, after having passed on the disc for a few times, I finally turned it over to read the copy and incidentally found it quite intriguing. As a result I decided to view the movie to see if it lends itself to a review, and boy, was I glad I did so, because Tristar Home Video’s “Apt Pupil” turned out to be pretty thrilling drama with a chilling edge. |
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Instead of informing authorities, the adolescent student approaches the old man and pressurizes him with his knowledge about the past. With morbid curiosity and honestly interested in what happened in these death camps, he forces the man recollect his |
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The film is based upon a short story by Stephen King and creates a quite intriguing setting by having two worlds collide. The innocence of the adolescent boy clashes with the ultimate evil of recent history. The clever placement in a quite and peaceful suburban setting adds additional tension to the story. The horror pours out in the place where you’d least expect it, and this is clearly one of King’s talents. Although you should think the story holds horror enough, the filmmakers have unfortunately added some quite unnecessary elements to add cheap shock value to the film. |
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own past for the better part of his life. He has a commanding on-screen presence and rules the film. Brad Renfro is also portraying the self-complacent attitude of teenagers, with an edge of invinciblity quite well, until he finds out the hard way that he is no match for the war criminal. Sadly the crippling and sobering effect this experience has on him seems to wear off very quickly. The boy turns into an even more self-complacent teenager with no morale when everything is over, a note in the film’s closing that left a bit of a sour taste in my mouth. |
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Tristar Home Video has now released “Apt Pupil” on DVD and it is another entry in their fabulous line of releases. The disc contains two absolutely flawless transfers of the best quality. One of them is an anamorphic widescreen transfer in the film’s original aspect ratio 2.35:1, while the other one is a heavily cropped pan & scan version. Although the fullscreen version is well done, it truly breaks the film’s well arranged photography and makes the film’s detailed production design a redundancy. The |
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The same is true for the disc’s audio tracks. The disc contains a very active 5.1 channel Dolby Digital English language soundtrack as well as a Dolby Surround soundtrack that is also in English. The Dolby Digital soundtrack is surprisingly aggressive at times making good use of the split surrounds with directional effects. Especially the nerve-wrecking clusters of the orchestral soundtrack are mixed in an extremely efficient way using the surround channels. Both soundtracks have a very good bass extension below 25 Hz, giving the soundtrack quite a bit of punch. Unfortunately the disc contains only English subtitles. French and Spanish language support is sorely missing from this release for some reason. |
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April 1999 |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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