Babel | 
enlarge | Director: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu Actors: Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Mohamed Akhzam, Peter Wight, Harriet Walter Studio: Paramount Category: DVD
List Price: $29.99 Buy Used: $1.72 You Save: $28.27 (94%)
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Rating: 374 reviews Sales Rank: 3195
Format: Ntsc, Widescreen Languages: Arabic (Original Language), English (Original Language), French (Original Language), Japanese (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language), English (Published) Rating: R (Restricted) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 143 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 097363459842 UPC: 097363459842 EAN: 0097363459842 ASIN: B000MCH5P4
Theatrical Release Date: November 10, 2006 Release Date: February 20, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: All of our used items are 100% Guaranteed to play. Ships 1st class!!
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Product Description Tragedy strikes a couple vacationing in Morocco which sets off a chain of events linking four groups of people vastly separated by culture and distance. Genre: Feature Film-Drama Rating: R Release Date: 31-JUL-2007 Media Type: DVD
Amazon.com Brilliantly conceived, superbly directed, and beautifully acted, Babel is inarguably one of the best films of 2006. Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu and his co-writer, Guillermo Arriaga (the two also collaborated on Amores Perros and 21 Grams) weave together the disparate strands of their story into a finely hewn fabric by focusing on what appear to be several equally incongruent characters: an American (Brad Pitt) touring Morocco with his wife (Cate Blanchett) become the focus of an international incident also involving a hardscrabble Moroccan farmer (Mustapha Rachidi) struggling to keep his two young sons in line and his family together. A San Diego nanny (Adriana Barraza), her employers absent, makes the disastrous decision to take their kids with her to a wedding in Mexico. And a deaf-mute Japanese teen (the extraordinary Rinko Kikuchi) deals with a relationship with her father (Koji Yakusho) and the world in general that's been upended by the death of her mother. It is perhaps not surprising, or particularly original, that a gun is the device that ties these people together. Yet Babel isn't merely about violence and its tragic consequences. It's about communication, and especially the lack of it--both intercultural, raising issues like terrorism and immigration, and intracultural, as basic as husbands talking to their wives and parents understanding their children. Inarritu's command of his medium, sound and visual alike, is extraordinary; the camera work is by turns kinetic and restrained, the music always well matched to the scenes, the editing deft but not confusing, and the film (which clocks in at a lengthy 143 minutes) is filled with indelible moments. Many of those moments are also pretty stark and grim, and no will claim that all of this leads to a "happy" ending, but there is a sense of reconciliation, perhaps even resolution. "If You Want to be Understood... Listen," goes the tagline. And if you want a movie that will leave you thinking, Babel is it. --Sam Graham Beyond Babel  Other Interweaving Storylines on DVD |  Other DVDs by Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu |  Why We Love Cate Blanchett | Stills from Babel (click for larger image)
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| Customer Reviews: Read 369 more reviews...
What was good about this? July 19, 2008 Wow, what a stinker. I was told this was like "Crash." I liked Crash - a lot. This movie drags like molasses as we are shown several different stories that so obviously interconnect that you would have to be a simpleton not to connect most of them long before the reveal.
But mostly, in between long boring scenes which are supposed to teach us about other cultures I suppose, you get to watch stupid people make stupid decision after stupid decision.
My wife and I were talking aloud during the last 30 minutes without even pausing the movie as we discussed the stupid things that were happening and how annoying the whole thing had been.
THEN, they wrap it up with a Hollywood ending that leaves almost no one paying real consequences for their actions and even contradict what you have supposedly known the entire movie.
This was just plain pathetic. I'm disappointed in humanity that this is considered an acclaimed movie.
Interesting and it kept my attention July 14, 2008 No big review here, just that it was interesting and involved 4 separate yet linked events going on around the globe. Brad Pitt more angry than concerned of his wife being shot while Cate Blanchett didn't really get to do much acting, besides laying there. The kids in the village were the key to the movie.
What the hell was that? July 1, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
That's 2 hours and 23 minutes that I'll never get back. Highly overrated and overblown, there are some great scenes and some great acting in this movie, but at the end of the day, you'll be shaking your head. I especially loathed the story of the deaf-mute Asian girl and her sexual difficulties. Critics and Amazon scribes fell all over themselves praising this "epic". Maybe if it was an hour shorter. I kept wanting to fast-forward. Cate Blanchett is wasted in this role and to call this Brad Pitt's best performance, is just laughable.
Bad things happen to stupid people June 8, 2008 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
This movie is both stupid and pointless. It is one long and dreary series of bad decisions by stupid people. It is sad and depressing for no good reason at all. There is no redeeming value to the pain and misery inflicted on the characters. It isn't worth making or watching a movie merely because the characters in the story suffer. For pointless suffering I can watch the news.
Unless you are a masochist or need to become depressed, don't buy this movie. I am shredding my DVD to make sure it isn't inflicted on anyone else.
IT'S ONLY ME, BUT: June 1, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
THEIS FIM COVERS 5 STORIES AT ONCE, ALL GOING ON AT THE SAME TIME. NOT ENOUGH BRAD PITT IN IT. JUMPS AROUND TOO MUCH JM
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