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Showing posts with label todd field. Show all posts
Showing posts with label todd field. Show all posts

Todd Field- In the Bedroom (2001)- DVD9 (NTSC Format)

todd field- in the bedroom
In understanding that there are plenty of "GOD...AMERICAN DIRECTORS SUCK!!!" posts on this site, here is one of a handful of American directors that "DON'T SUCK!!!". Todd Field is a genius, and I can't wait to see how he handles adapting Blood Meridian to the screen. I trust that he'll do just fine. But first, here's In the Bedroom.


todd field- in the bedroom

From Marcy Dermansky:

Todd Field's directorial debut "In The Bedroom" is relentlessly sad. Before I get to the many admirable things I have to say about this film, it's important to understand this basic fact. "In the Bedroom," based on a short story by the late Andre Dubus, takes you into the world of the Fowlers, Matt (Tom Wilkinson) and Ruth (Sissy Spacek), a refined, professional couple living in a working class town in Maine -- and truth be told, this is a world you might not want to enter.

The story begins when the Fowler's son Frank (Nick Stahl) comes home from college for the summer and begins a relationship with an older single mother (Marisa Tomei). From the opening scenes, Field lures you into the longing for a film "In The Bedroom" will never be: Stahl and Tomei on the grass, kissing in the late afternoon light, a gentle breeze lifting Tomei's hair, the ocean in the distance. A romance. The parents don't approve, the ex-husband is a bit rough, but you trust that the lovers will be able to overcome all obstacles. Nick Stahl is a winning young actor, and there is nothing not to like about him, from his open face to the faded patches in the crotch of his blue jeans. Marisa Tomei, better known for her eccentric parts in urban romantic comedies, is wonderful as uneducated local woman, convincing in her affection for the younger, privileged Frank, her gentle disbelief in the future of their relationship.


todd field- in the bedroom

But romance is not what this movie is about. "In The Bedroom" has the weight of fiction: attention to detail, the slow, steady development of character, and careful plotting that goes beyond expectations and into the unknown. What happens offscreen is almost as important as what you see. The second act of the film takes a sudden, surprising shift. Tragedy strikes, the younger lovers fall into the background, and the film turns to the parents.

First-time director Todd Field is better known as an actor. He was the sensitive, trombone-playing boyfriend in Victor Nunez' "Ruby in Paradise," and the influence of Nunez seems clear in this film. Where Nunez' story is about class conditions and the texture of life in Florida, Field focuses on Maine. The cinematographer gives loving attention to the seaside town, the ocean, the trees, the woods, and the Victorian home of the Fowlers, filled with wood furniture, walls lined with books and covered with art. Like Nunez, Field takes time and care with each scene.

"In The Bedroom" brings to the screen subject matter that's considered terribly unsexy in American filmmaking. The intricacies of a middle-aged couple, class difference, friendship among men, grief, and domestic violence is presented without affect. This is strong work and not what you would expect from a young filmmaker at all. The performances are routinely strong. Sissy Spacek and Tom Wilkinson won the Special Jury Prize for acting at Sundance. Nick Stahl is more appealing than any young man I've seen on screen in a long time. The story is unnervingly compelling. The end will surprise you. What more can you ask from a movie? Maybe the relief of not sitting in a dark theater filled with dread, thinking: "Oh, no. Oh, no."



todd field- in the bedroom

Technical Information:

Title: In the Bedroom
Year: 2001
Country: USA
Director: Todd Field

Source: DVD9 Retail
DVD Format: NTSC
Container: .iso + mds
Size: 7.56 GB
Length: 2:10:55
Programs used: Unknown

Resolution: 720x480
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Video: MPEG2 @ ~7200 kb/s
Frame Rate: 29.97 fps

Audio 1: English- Dolby AC3 5.1 @ 448 kb/s
Audio 2: French- Dolby AC3 5.1 @ 384 kb/s
Subtitles: Spanish, French, cc-English

Menu: Yes
Video: Unknown
DVD Extras: None on source


todd field- in the bedroom

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In the Bedroom Megaupload Links



Todd Field- Little Children (2006)- DVD9 (NTSC Format)

todd field- little children
This was going to the the second post of our back-to-back Todd Fields, but for some reason it seemed perfect as a follow-up to Lolita. Maybe I don't want to go there (leclisse can make all the "boring white people" jokes he wants, but the mere suggestion of a Pedophile Week and he's freaked out that I'll scare everyone away). Suffice it to say that this is a great movie with a great cast from one of the best American directors working today. And that this may be my favourite use of voiceover ever.


todd field- little children

From Stephen Holden at the New York Times:

FEW directorial debuts in recent years have raised such high expectations as “In the Bedroom,” Todd Field’s adaptation of the Andre Dubus short story “Killings.” That drama won five Oscar nominations, including best picture, actor and actress (for Tom Wilkinson and Sissy Spacek); and Mr. Field received an award from the New York Film Critics Circle for best first film. Now, five years later, comes “Little Children,” his screen adaptation of Tom Perrotta’s satirically edged 2004 novel of contemporary suburban life and its discontents.

In light of its forerunner the choice makes perfect sense. As he demonstrated with “In the Bedroom,” Mr. Field, an actor turned director, scans the depths of his characters’ souls and sees them whole. This psychological radar is a gift he shares with Mr. Perrotta, with whom he wrote the screenplay for “Little Children.”


todd field- little children

The double-edged title refers not only to the suburban kids who more or less run their parents’ lives, but also to the 30- and 40-something adults whose needy inner children cry out for release. One of its wistful themes is that, like it or not, having children brings your own youth to a crashing halt; you’re no longer at the center of things.

The story’s emotional lightning rod is Ronald James McGorvey, a damaged middle-aged man who has recently returned to live with his mother after serving time for exposing himself to children. He is a pariah in their suburban Boston community and a focus of its collective fears, embodied by Larry Hedges, a disgraced former cop with a violent streak who wants to hound him out of town.

In one of the novel’s most disturbing scenes, Ronald’s presence at a public swimming pool on a brutally hot day precipitates mass panic among the assembled mothers watching over their children. In the film Ronald is played by the former child star Jackie Earle Haley. His powerfully creepy portrayal is a pointed departure from the standard screen image of the child molester or flasher as an ordinary guy with an unfortunate kink.


todd field- little children

Two mismatched couples fill out the rest of the film, which will be shown Sept. 30 at the New York Film Festival and is set to open on Oct. 6. Kate Winslet and Gregg Edelman play Sarah and Richard Pierce, and Jennifer Connelly and Patrick Wilson are Kathy and Brad Adamson. Noah Emmerich plays the former cop. The abundance of subplots in “Little Children” — more than are in “In the Bedroom” — is one reason that the film incorporates a sporadic voice-over (by an authoritative male narrator) to push the story along.

A major subplot in the novel, and its most satirical thread — Richard’s deepening addiction to Internet pornography — is alluded to, then dropped. The movie concentrates on the affair between Sarah and Brad (called Todd in the novel), who is so handsome the women refer to him as “the Prom King” when he shows up at the playground with his son.

Brad, who plays quarterback on the local football team and is entranced by teenage skateboarding culture, is a classic case of a man in the throes of Peter Pan syndrome. But in the movie’s kind and patient view, we all carry varying shades and degrees of arrested development into adult life.



todd field- little children

Technical Information:

Title: Little Children
Year: 2006
Country: USA
Director: Todd Field

Source: DVD9
DVD Format: NTSC
Container: .iso + mds
Size: 7.59 GB
Length: 2:16:38
Programs used: DVD Decrypter, ImgBurn

Resolution: 720x480
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Video: MPEG2 @ ~5800 kb/s
Frame Rate: 29.97

Audio 1: English- Dolby AC3 5.1 @ 448 kb/s
Audio 2: French- Dolby AC3 Stereo @ 192 kb/s
Subtitles: English, French

Menu: Yes
Video: Untouched
DVD Extras: None on source


todd field- little children

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Little Children Megaupload Links