Scarlett Johansson Movie:

The Black Dahlia Full Screen Edition



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Scarlett Johansson Movie:
The Black Dahlia Full Screen Edition



Movie
The Black Dahlia (Full Screen Edition)
The Black Dahlia (Full Screen Edition)
List Price: $9.99Label: Universal Studios

Salesrank: 49313

Released: December 26, 2006
Our Price: $0.49
Used Price: $0.01
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • DVD
  • Full Screen
  • Subtitled
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Josh Hartnett
  • Scarlett Johansson
  • Hilary Swank
  • Aaron Eckhart
  • John Kavanagh
  • Editorial Review:
    Two police officers find their lives changed when asked to investigate the gruesome murder of a struggling actress.
    Genre: Feature Film-Drama
    Rating: R
    Release Date: 1-MAY-2007
    Media Type: DVD

    Description of The Black Dahlia (Full Screen Edition):
    The Black Dahlia drips with film noir atmospherics as it unspools a lurid and complicated story taken from James Ellroy's true-crime-inspired novel of the same name. Two boxers-turned-cops--Lee "Mr. Fire" Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart, Thank You For Smoking) and Bucky "Mr. Ice" Bleichert (Josh Hartnett, Black Hawk Down)--are morally tested as they pursue the killer of a young would-be actress, grappling with corruption, narcissism, stag films, and family madness along the way. L.A. Confidential turned Ellroy's heated prose into a taut, compelling movie, but The Black Dahlia collapses like a soggy meringue. Director Brian De Palma (who once made such vibrant, entertaining movies as Carrie and The Untouchables) can't muster the energy to craft one of his trademark bravura action sequences and seems outright bored by the more mundane tasks of shaping performances and establishing mood. The actors flounder; Eckhart seems to be emoting for two, perhaps to compensate for Hartnett's bland lack of affect; even actresses as dependable as Scarlett Johansson (Lost in Translation) and Hilary Swank (Boys Don't Cry) give clumsy, unconvincing performances. The one exception is an unsettling performance by Mia Kirshner (Exotica) as the doomed actress, seen only in perverse screen tests and stag films. The story is incomprehensible (and when you can follow it, it's silly); the dialogue is atrocious; the characters make hardly any sense from scene to scene. The movie is, however, good for many moments of absurd camp, such as when Bucky enters the most lavish, palatial lesbian bar you'll ever see, featuring a Busby-Berkeley-style stairway of smooching babes and a crooning k.d. lang. --Bret Fetzer

    The Black Dahlia (Full Screen Edition) Reviews:
    A "niche" movie for Ellroy fans, no one else 4 Star Review
    2009-12-06 - If you're interested in this movie because of its title's reference to the actual historical "Black Dahlia" murder case, or you're looking for an entertaining stand-alone thriller, stay away from this movie. You'll just end up writing another one of those over one hundred one-star reviews.
    However, if you have read and liked James Ellroy's book, preferably recently, you should definitely give this movie a shot. I liked it a lot. You won't have any trouble following the story or handling the somewhat choppy editing, and can just enjoy the way Brian de Palma has quite successfully re-created the atmosphere of Ellroy's book. The recreation of 1940s Los Angeles is very convincing, even though the movie was shot mostly in Bulgaria. Usually, when I watch a movie after I've read the book, it rarely looks the way I had envisioned it while reading; that was not the case with this movie, which in many ways looked exactly the way I had imagined it. The necessity of reducing the book to about two hours has resulted in just enough changes to the storyline to give its suspense even though you know the overall story.

    Yes I know it isn't very much like the book .. 5 Star Review
    2009-10-12 - .. but it is, nevertheless, a well though out and scripted film which conveys much of the feel of the book and the seediness that was apparently (I wasn't there so I can't really know) a feature of LA in the 50s.

    Worst Ever...Seriously.... 1 Star Review
    2009-09-02 - Worst movie I've ever seen. Seriously. I actually got dumber during this film.

    Classic DePalma : Stylish but silly 2 Star Review
    2009-05-17 - If Brian DePalma would have focused solely on the murder and police investigation of the Black Dahlia this film would have been a near masterpiece. It certainly looks amazing thanks to production design by Dante Ferretti and photography by the Oscar nominated Vilmos Zsigmond. Everything else about it sucks. Set in the mid to late 40's the film resembles so many films from that era. Which is to say it's melodramatic and absurdly over the top in spots. Bucky Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) and Lee Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart) are two homicide detectives assigned to the murder case of Elizabeth Short (Mia Kirshner) a.k.a. The Black Dahlia so named because of her all black wardrobe and promiscuous nature. Bleichert is a by the book cop whereas Blanchard is a hothead zoned out on Benzedrine. He becomes obsessed with the Dahlia causing him to alienate his girlfriend Kay Lake (Scarlet Johansson) and letting a murderer go free. The film throws so many characters and motivations at us in the first half hour that after an hour and a half it's impossible to remember them when DePalma tries to tie up all the loose ends. It's a losing game because just when you think you've got it under control there is a gaping hole in the logic. Hilary Swank is useless in the role of Madeline Linscott a rich girl who keeps insisting she looks like the Dahlia when clearly she doesn't. Her and Bleichert have a steamy affair even though Buck is involved in a love triangle between Lee and Kay. All the sex scenes are ridiculously overheated. The whole film is laughable.The only things that save it are good looking femmes like Johannson, Rose McGowan, and Rachel Miner all of whom look good in the period costumes and hairstyles. The real highlight for die hard DePalma fans is his re teaming with the Phantom himself William Finley. What does Finley play? A disfigured killer of course. This film could have been something special instead of a film that looks great but is confusing and frustrating.

    This is a movie about the Black Dahila murder? Right? 1 Star Review
    2009-03-21 - I should have come to Amazon to read the reviews before I rented this movie. This has to be one of the most horrible movies I have seen in my entire life.

    First we begin with the Zoot suit riots. Why I'm not really sure..but we do. Then we have a boxing match between two young men who later become partners. Why we have this boxing match I'm not really sure. However, I was eating dinner at the time and I must have been more focused on my salad than the movie.

    Anyway, Lee Blanchard and Bucky Bleichert are cops investigating pimps, I think. They are partners and there is some sexual tension because Bucky like Lee's wife (at least I think she is his wife). Finally 20 or 25 minutes into the movie we finally get into the Black Dahila murder. Our detectives stumble upon the crime scene because they happened to be in the neighborhood.

    What happens next is mostly about the men's lives. We get bits and pieces of the Black Dahila's murder, but not enough to keep my interested in this movie and I nearly drifted off to sleep three times (after I finished eating). There are four different plots going on at once which makes this movie bloated.

    The detectives' storyline is the main plot to this story which was aggravating to this viewer. If they wanted the Black Dahila murder to be a subplot, fine, but could it have been a little more prominent than what we got?

    The book maybe better. I dont know because I haven't read it. Although books always tend to be better than movies. Still, go with the reviews on this. The majority of Amazon costumers believe this movie is bad, and they are right. Try the book before you rent this piece of garbage.










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