Se7en (1995)
A Film by David Fincher
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 (720x576) | Scans | 02:01:39 | 6,30 Gb
Audio: English DTS 6.1 @ 755 Kbps, English AC3 5.1/2.0 @ 448/192 kbps
Subtitles: English, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish
Genre: Crime, Thriller | Nominated for Oscar + 23 wins | USA
A Film by David Fincher
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 (720x576) | Scans | 02:01:39 | 6,30 Gb
Audio: English DTS 6.1 @ 755 Kbps, English AC3 5.1/2.0 @ 448/192 kbps
Subtitles: English, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish
Genre: Crime, Thriller | Nominated for Oscar + 23 wins | USA
"Seven," a dark, grisly, horrifying and intelligent thriller, may be too disturbing for many people, I imagine, although if you can bear to watch, it you will see filmmaking of a high order. It tells the story of two detectives - one ready to retire, the other at the start of his career - and their attempts to capture a perverted serial killer who is using the Seven Deadly Sins as his scenario.
IMDB - Top 250 #26
After the abysmal failure of Alien 3, David Fincher held his breath for three years and made a new start with Se7en. His signature style of direction is all over it.
The plot explores the extreme pitch-black side of the human psyche and was entirely the creation of one writer. Andrew Kevin Walker, a former Tower Records employee, conceived, in hell, a heinous story of a serial killer who offs his victims in the style of the Seven Deadly Sins. What was he smoking when he came up with that idea?
Brad Pitt plays David Mills, a semi-experienced detective who is way ahead of himself. He uproots from a decent precinct, dragging his suffering wife (Gwyneth Paltrow) with him, to transfer to the worst in town - an unnamed, rainier-than-Glasgow Los Angeles - for no other reason than "to make a difference". Good luck.
Morgan Freeman is William Somerset, the most jaded and world-weary cop on the force. He only has a few days with Mills before retiring to a simple life in the country. Mills could learn a lot from him, and if he had any sense, he would. Sadly, this does not happen.
In Fight Club, Fincher exposed the rotten underbelly of a free society, the seedy flipside of American culture that most people pretend doesn't exist. Somerset says the only way to deal with a world this bad is to be apathetic. Mills is morbidly self-confident and believes he can make the world a better place.
Se7en is filthier than a dead stray dog at the bottom of a New Jersey toxic waste dump. It looks so miserable that people nailed to crosses seem happier.
Few scripts make for good reading, but Andrew Kevin Walker's writing is one of the film's many strengths. He explored dark, character-driven horror/drama in shockers such as Brainscan and 8mm, but this is the meanest - and 8mm was very mean indeed. The irony of each victims' death is made entirely justified by the killer's logic behind the madness. Of course, he does not believe he is insane. Just the world he lives in. Haven't you ever felt like that?
It is important for such movies to have an atmosphere and Se7en is so rank that you can smell it. Pitt and Freeman deliver great performances, although Pitt should learn to breathe through his nose and not have constantly pursed lips. It becomes quite annoying.
Se7en is definitely the film that kick-started Fincher's career. Had he made The Game right after Alien 3, there would have been no Fight Club, or Panic Room.
For that tiny minority who knows nothing of the film, it's high time you checked it out. Even if you don't enjoy, you cannot deny its power and effect.
Special Features:
- "The Stars" audio commentary by director David Fincher, actor Brad Pitt and actor Morgan Freeman
- "The Story" audio commentary by professor of film studies/author Richard Dyer, screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker, editor Richard Francis-Bruce, New Line president of production Michael De Luca and director David Fincher
- "The Picture" audio commentary by director of photography Darius Khondji, production designer Arthur Max, editor Richard Francis-Bruce, professor of film studies/author Richard Dyer and director David Fincher
- "The Sound" audio commentary, with isolated 5.1 music and FX cues, by sound designer Ren Klyce, composer Howard Shore, professor of film studies/author Richard Dyer and director David Fincher
Many Thanks to Original uploader.
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