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| From Hell - Single Disc Edition [2001] | ![From Hell - Single Disc Edition [2001]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41NE3287JKL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Directors: Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes Actors: Johnny Depp, Heather Graham, Ian Holm, Robbie Coltrane, Ian Richardson Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: £17.99 Buy Used: £1.80 You Save: £16.19 (90%)
New (9) from £2.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 6583
Format: Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over Running Time: 117 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 5039036014939 ASIN: B0000DK4QK
Theatrical Release Date: October 19, 2001 Release Date: October 13, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk Review Heavy on atmosphere and light on everything else, From Hell is visually impressive while lacking the depth of the acclaimed graphic novel it's based upon. Making their third feature since 1993's Menace II Society, twins Allen and Albert Hughes approach the Jack the Ripper case with physical precision, re-creating the gritty Whitechapel district of 1888 London in meticulous detail. What they've forgotten is the sheer terror that gripped Whitechapel in the wake of the Ripper's slaying of five prostitutes, investigated here by a Scotland Yard sleuth (Johnny Depp) who uses opium, laudanum and absinthe to fuel his semi-prescient visions of the slayings. Heather Graham attempts a slippery Cockney accent as a would-be victim, while Ian Holm steals the show as a has-been surgeon with devilish delusions of grandeur. Violence is obliquely suggested or briefly graphic, but no matter how you cut it, From Hell is only marginally thrilling as it treads familiar territory.--Jeff Shannon On the DVD: From Hell on disc is presented in widescreen 16:9 glory with atmospheric DTS or Dolby Digital 5.1 sound options. The animated menus look nice but are more than a little confusing. The 23 deleted scenes, including an alternative ending, are all offered in black and white with commentary and justification for the cuts by Albert Hughes. Film commentary is offered by Albert Hughes, screen writer Rafael Yglesias, cinematographer Peter Deming and Robbie Coltraine. Disc 2 has a wealth of information including a "Victim/Suspect File" which takes you through Jack the Ripper theories from the 19th-century police investigation to modern speculations, including Allen Hughes' Elephant Man theory! The Production Notes show the locations in Prague and the "Tour of Whitechapel" is a murder-by-murder set visit with the Hughes brothers. There's a feature on the original graphic novel; "Absinthe Lovers" offer an insight into the psychedelic drink; and, finally, the HBO special "A View from Hell", with Heather Graham, is standard promotional fare.--Nikki Disney
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
a great film showing Johnny Depp at his best,recommended May 18, 2008 Johnny Depp plays a detective who is addicted to Opium.While spaced out he has dreams that have a habit of coming true.He sees faces and events involved in murders that he later has to investigate.The film tells the story of Jack the Ripper and gives a very believable account of a Royal being involved,along with freemasons and elements within the Police force trying to cover up a scandal that would lead straight back to the Queen.There is some bad language,a touch of nudity,a lot of violence,cleverly handled, but i think the 18 Cert is a little harsh.Both my wife and myself thoroughly enjoyed this film and we highly recommend it.
Utter garbage December 6, 2007 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
a more pleasant evening would be had by watching the insides of ones eyelids. Why do the Americans insist that if a story's worth telling it's worth telling inaccurately. I would have walked out of the cinema, but unfortunately my legs had also gone to sleep. I give it 1 star, because 0 was not allowed
Not a patch on the graphic novel August 13, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Although it may be surprising to some, the graphic novel of the same name by Alan Moore, on which this film is based, has a lot more depth and interest than the film itself. Both the book and the film draw heavily on the work of Stephen Knight, who for me, falls into the category of 'conspiraloon' when it comes to Jack the Ripper explanations, with his credulity straining 'Dr William Withey Gull/Masonic conspiracy' theory (personally, I have always thought Francis Tumblety to be a far more likely suspect), but such speculations were forgivable in such a rich graphic novel which included, for example, some wonderful material on the architect Nicholas Hawksmoor.
The film is something of a travesty in comparison, with the middle aged Inspector Abbeline, played by Johnny Depp as a young opium addict who has visions about each murder. Not that I have anything against Johnny Depp, mind you, it is just that the film bears little resemblance to the very interesting source material, and suffers in comparison. Filmed in Prague, doubling for Whitechapel, it has a suitably realistic 19th century slum quarter look and may be enjoyable in its own right, but I would recommend reading the graphic novel.
Poor relation to Moore's masterwork July 13, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
For those people who come to this movie via Alan Moore's amazing graphic novel will be very disapointed.
All the richness of Moore's plot, though undoubtedly some "Ripperologists" would shudder at it, is lost to create what is ultimately a kind of modern Hammer Studio horror flick. No bad thing in itself I suppose but having read the novel, you expect so much more.
Its true that the facts of the real murders feature in the film. There are acurate representations of the murder scenes too. Great for people with a serious interest in the case but the artistic licence taken with the pieces main players in order to make the characters interesting warps any historical worth the film has. Its a slasher movie on historic bones. That's all. And as a slasher movie, it's far from being a good example of its genre.
Depp's and Graham's tragic british accents finish it off. From Hell indeed...
I give the movie two stars for elements on the second disc where Rumbellow, the esteemed Ripperologist, recounts some truths of the case as it provides real interest in the real murders.
It was sickening however to watch the short tour of the murder sites sets with the films directors. Seeing these guys making jokes over the mocked up slahed victims laid in the authentic positions they were found in turned my stomach. These were real women, brutaly murdered. Just because it was nearly 200 years ago dosn't mean that fact dosn't matter.
new twist, old tale December 3, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
So, is the movie going world ready for yet another take on the Jack the Ripper story? On first impressions, the answer would probably be an emphatic yes. Based on the acclaimed graphic novel of the same name by Alan Moore (y'know, when you look, its surprising how many movies are based on "comics for grown ups", Road to Perdition, V for Vendetta and so on and so forth, but I digress), the film takes the celebrated murder case, and then runs with it in an initially stylish and breathless way. Directed with surprising ferocity by the Hughes brothers (Allen and Albert of Menace II Society and Dead Presidents notoriety), From Hell comes across at first as an interesting and visually stylish update. However, look a little deeper and the film lacks that most important thing, depth. Johnney Depp takes the role of Fred Aberline, an opium addicted Scotland Yard detective who uses his addiction to fuel his visions of crimes, allowing him to make amazing deductions and solve the unsolvable. Robbie Coltrane turns in an initially amusing turn as his partner Sgt Peter Goodley, a man who turns a blind eye to Depps dabbling, but knows that it will be the end of him. A further surprisingly stellar cast, including Ian Holm as Royal surgeon William Gull, Ian Richardson as Charles Warren, the then head of Scotland Yard and Aberlines superior, and Heather Graham as Marie Kelly (unfortunately hamstrung by a to say the least dubious cockney accent) give some weight to the film. The plot follows the known facts of the case fairly closely, and throws in a few of the more celebrated conspiracy theories that surround Jack the Ripper just for good measure (those in the know will know what I am talking about, but to say to much would be to give things away). Almost all of the suspected protagonists are featured at one time or another, but you can't help but feel that this plethora of suspects is thrown in to disguise what is essentially an exercise in style over substance. Whilst the violence can be very bloody, it is only briefly glimpsed or merely inferred, but no matter which way you look at this film, it is merely treading old ground.
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