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The Mummy |
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Universal’s super blockbuster of the summer and for its home video release on DVD it has been accordingly treated, giving customers the chance to choose from two different versions of the film. One in widescreen and one in fullscreen, but both packed with extras as part of Universal’s Collector’s Edition line. |
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the lost city, lead by Beni (Kevin J. O’Connor) another legionnaire who had almost caused O’Connell’s death for his own survival. Both parties race to the city to be the first to secure the riches but what they don’t know is that it is haunted by Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo), the ghost of an age-old Egyptian highpriest who had fallen from grace. By accident they find his mummy and without knowing it they bring his body back to life. Now, Imhotep, more powerful than ever has the seven plagues raging over the country, trying to find the reincarnation of his previous love Anck-Su-Namum. |
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allowed the filmmakers to give a face to a sandstorm, and an initially almost skeletal Mummy that restores as it drains the life out of other people, all the way to an army of skeletal priests that fight their way to Kingdom Come during the film’s furious finale. |
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Although very heavy on the visual effects, the film lives and breathes with its characters. Brendan Fraser has been a perfect cast to play Rick O’Connell with his boyish goofy charm. With every film I see him in, I am more impressed by Frasers ability to play a wide variety of characters. |
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seen on a big screen in order to appreciate all of its glory. The widescreen version on this DVD from Universal restores the film’s original theatrical 2.35:1 aspect ratio in a transfer that has been enhanced for 16x9 TV sets. The image is very sharp and highly detailed, but never appears over-enhanced at all, and doesn’t show signs of aliasing distortion. The print used to take the transfer from was in pristine quality, delivering a perfectly clean and undistorted image. The shadow definition is stunning, allowing you to see every little detail under all circumstances. Just as well preserved are the movie’s warm and rich colors. They have been nicely reproduced on this DVD without over-saturating, bleeding or washing out. They are powerful yet always well-defined and as smooth as the sand of the desert. The overall image quality of this disc is excellent and really has to be seen. |
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soundtrack presented in 5.1 channel Dolby Digital, the disc also contains a French Dolby Surround track and English closed captions. |
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computer generated images to enhance the film in general and of course to bring Imhotep to life. Deleted scenes, trailers and more information on selective special effect shots give the viewer a lot to go through when exploring this disc. If that’s not enough for you, take a look at the interactive game or the screensavers also found on the disc as part of the DVD-ROM content. |
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Don’t miss our exclusive interview with actor Arnold Vosloo and director Stephen Sommers |
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September 1999 |
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© 1997-99 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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