Snow Falling on Cedars | 
| Director: Scott Hicks Actors: Ethan Hawke, Youki Kudoh, Reeve Carney, Anne Suzuki, Rick Yune Studio: Universal Studios Category: DVD
List Price: $9.99 Buy New: $3.36 You Save: $6.63 (66%)
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Rating: 126 reviews Sales Rank: 13832
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Dvd, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language) Genre: 0 Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) ESRB: Teen Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 DVD Layers: 2 DVD Sides: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 128 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.7 x 0.7
MPN: D20558D ISBN: 0783240325 UPC: 025192055829 EAN: 9780783240329 ASIN: 0783240325
Theatrical Release Date: January 7, 2000 Release Date: May 30, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description New - Shrinkwrapped
Amazon.com Australian director Scott Hicks's follow-up to his widely beloved Shine comes as a small shock. Based on David Guterson's bestselling novel, Snow Falling on Cedars is far removed from the character-driven, pure storytelling of Shine and a comparative plunge into moody atmospherics. Action insinuates itself through the director's determined eye for watercolor composition and free-floating perspective, like random shoots of new growth in an overwhelming rain forest. It's impossible to be complacent as a viewer because Hicks's meditative style paradoxically forces one to locate and make the story happen internally. The approach makes good aesthetic sense in that Guterson's story couches courtroom drama in dreamy textures, and Hicks is determined to reflect that even if it means turning an audience's idea of narrative on its head. He also gets a lot of help from the weather in the Pacific Northwest: the setting is one of Washington State's San Juan Islands, where rain embraces earth and sky in a singular, introverted personality. There, a Japanese American war hero (Rick Yune) stands accused of murdering a white fisherman in the years following World War II. His wife (Youki Kudoh) is the former childhood sweetheart and lover of a local newspaperman (Ethan Hawke) whose bitterness over the loss--as well as his helplessness during the internment of Japanese Americans, and the crusading legacy of his journalist father (Sam Shepard)--prevents him from coming to the defense of the accused man. Layered emotions, layered sensations, layered clouds. This is historical fiction of a sort that works best as an experience of time's relativity: flowing, stopping, trickling. Ironically, the film's most commercial element, the trial, is the least interesting aspect, though old pro Max Von Sydow makes those scenes great fun as a wily defense counsel. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews: Read 121 more reviews...
Lost in the dark cedars May 11, 2009 Johnny Boy (Sudbury, Ontario Canada) I found this movie to be rather interesting but the fact that almost the whole movie was so dark ruined it for me.This is a problem in a great many movies and can't understand why.
The Good & Bad Of 'Cedars' April 29, 2009 Craig Connell (Lockport, NY USA) I was totally blown away and dazzled at the fabulous cinematography in thss film. Man, this is one of the prettiest movies I've ever seen and would love to see it on a sharp Blu-Ray disc. I also enjoyed the two lawyers in this film, played by James Rebhorn and Max VonSydow. Sometimes those two were riveting to watch. But, to be frank, most of the story was anything but riveting, way too slow and with way too much time used on flashbacks. This story could have been told in a much more presentable way which could have kept the audience's attention. It's also a little too politically-correct. We were beaten over the head with the prejudice against Japanese. Everyone here, except the Liberal newspaper editor and his son, is portrayed as extremely bigoted. Overall, a spectacular visual film - one of the best ever - but a biased story that takes interminably long to tell.
Snow Falling on Cedars November 21, 2007 yukon ho (vermont) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
excellent story involving atrocities suffered by the Japanese at the hands of ignorance and the us govt. scenery is spactacular!
layers upon layers of ghosts November 3, 2007 R. M. Williams (tucson, arizona USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The movie is about ghosts. First, the ghost of the dead fisherman and the trial of the Japanese-American accused of his murder. Second, the ghost of a long ago childhood forbidden love affair between the small town newspaper editor/publisher's son and the now-wife of the accused. Third, the ghost of Pearl Harbour, WWII and the racial prejudice that resulted in the concentration camps for Japanese Americans. The three ghosts are completely twisted together, the newspaper editor can't move on from his childhood love, the community can not rise above the racial profiling it engages it. It's a depressing, period piece, sad with the quiet street full of Japanese-Americans, now war hysteria internees walking down the small town's mail street to be ferried to Manzanar for the duration of WWII. The movie is at least 75% flashbacks, it is very non-linear, very literary, not your usual movie fare. There are two heroes, the defense lawyer and the small town publisher, but they are completely overwhelmed by the masses of people demanding that something be done. But the story is not about them, it is about the two main characters, moving on and letting go of their old ghosts. This movie, like movies such as Farewell to Manzanar, are necessary to dispose of our society's old ghosts. Showing them in the light of what happened, and hopefully why it happened, in order that it won't happen again. Ghosts don't seem to die if you just ignore them, bury them away and try to forget. Just as he has to forget his childhood love, understand that she is married and has a life of her own without him, the island people have to come to grips with the fact that they transported their friends and neighbors to camps in the hysteria of the moment. Every WWII movie i see, i ask the question of "how could the good Germans not know, not fight the evil around them?". This movie partly answers that question with the answer of "it happened here and very few spoke up", the scene of their transportation by ferry will be as rememberable as all those scenes of German Jews marched to their death. This scene is the climax of the movie, moving, saddening, and i'm afraid all too true and prone to be repeated each generation, only with different faces and different "reasons". The music, the cinemagraphy, the plot and literary basis, the acting, all well above average, very well integrated and deeply moving.
A Timeless Film May 12, 2007 G. Johnson (CO USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a great movie. It has everything: great scenery and background music, courtroom drama, young love, suspense, and human interest. I view it over and over again, learning something more each time about human frailties and prejudices. It is vastly superior to the trash being produced these days that relies on sex, violence, special effects and ear shattering sound without a plot and very little acting.
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