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| Year of Living Dangerously [1982] | ![Year of Living Dangerously [1982]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51B0B440SML._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Peter Weir Actors: Mel Gibson, Sigourney Weaver, Bill Kerr, Michael Murphy, Linda Hunt Studio: MGM Entertainment Category: Video
Buy Used: £9.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 1828
Format: Pal Languages: English (Original Language), Tagalog (Original Language) Rating: Parental Guidance Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 110 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Discs: 1
EAN: 5013119102430 ASIN: B00004CKCM
Theatrical Release Date: January 21, 1983 Release Date: April 20, 1998 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: In excellent condition. Fast shipping by a UK based seller.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Couple of hours of Watching Safely June 11, 2007 Sigourney was hot, Mel Gibson Acted well and the actress Linda Hunt got an Oscar for Best supporting Actor...Story was a true adaptation of Indonesian President Sukarno's last days. An explosive package makes this film a couple of hours of Watching Safely.
Contrasts and meanings December 21, 2005 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
Peter Weir's film 'The Year of Living Dangerously' was shown at a campus film festival during my first year as an undergraduate (a few years after Linda Hunt had won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for playing a male character), sponsored by the departments of political science, journalism, and East Asian studies. The setting is 1965, Djakarta, during a time when Southeast Asia was high on the scope of European radar and coming into more prominence for American eyes. Indonesia was (and is) a big country, with population and resources (both underutilised) the envy of East and West. The dictator Sukarno was playing a dangerous game trying the balance the two, internally as well as in foreign affairs. In the end, it did not pay off for him, and Indonesia has only recently begun to work at achieving a prominence a resource-rich, 100+ million populated country can attain. Into this tight-rope situation dropped Guy Hamilton (Mel Gibson), of the Australian Broadcasting Service, a fresh-faced journalist out to make a mark for himself, sabotaged by his predecessor and professionally ignored by other Western journalists (who had their own headline-deadlines to meet). However, a strange American/Chinese man, Billy Kwan (Linda Hunt), befriends him, and attempts to help him both professionally, personally, and spiritually. Billy takes Guy on a trip through the slums of Djakarta, preaching Tolstoy, charity and compassion, and tries to get Guy to see beyond the headlines. Billy also introduces Guy to Jill (Sigourney Weaver), a British agent planning to leave Djakarta. The tale wanders through politics, personal strife and decision-making, and the beginnings of revolution, climaxing with Billy putting his words into action and suffering a martyr's fate trying to get Sukarno's attention for the suffering poor, and Jill and Guy making a mad dash for the airport before the runways are closed. Those of us with benefit of hindsight know that Guy could have stayed, the communist PKI in fact did not succeed, and he could have continued to write articles and make a mark. But that would not have been as romantic. This movie is one of contrasts--the elegance of a British Embassy cocktail party contrasted with the poverty of the native Javanese; the cooperation of Billy against the ignoring of the other professionals; the native spirituality (which isn't exploited nearly enough) against the materialistic West (made worse when adopted by a native such as Sukarno). The music from Vangelis is an interesting accompaniment (remember Chariots of Fire?) and the cinematography grand in many cases. But subtlety abounds here--you may miss much the first time through. This is an atypical Weir film (but of course, that may be an oxymoron, for is there a 'typical' Weir film?). Australian, but it doesn't always seem so; artistic, but it doesn't always seem so--there are many such attributes. Weir always tries to inject meaning into his films in many ways -- the injection didn't quite take in every way in this film, and some meanings are a bit overdone, but overall, there is a good balance. This is not an action film (despite occasionally being categorised in this group). If you're looking for bombs bursting in air, look elsewhere.
the great shadow play June 28, 2005 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
"The Year of Living Dangerously" is a film that is felt as well as seen; the steaming heat and stench of the hovel lined streets, the torrential rains, and the confusion and fear of being in the middle of a revolutionary coup become very real on a sensory level. Taking place during the Sukarno regime in 1965 Indonesia, it is also a marvelous love story, and the chemistry between Sigourney Weaver and Mel Gibson is palpable. There are many scenes that are as if we are glimpsing a private, intimate moment, and they are both such a stunningly attractive pair. Linda Hunt, playing a cross-gender role of a Chinese/Indonesian news photographer, won many Best Supporting Actress awards, among them the Oscar, for her superb performance as Billy. Billy sets the stage for the characters in this political thriller, using the people around him in the same way that he guides the intricate shadow puppets he is so fond of. When Guy Hamilton (Gibson) gets transferred to Jakarta as a reporter for an Australian newspaper, Billy shows him the ropes, making sure he meets beautiful British embassy attache Jill (Weaver), knowing that love between them will be inevitable.A brilliant re-teaming of Gibson, director Peter Weir, and cinematographer Russell Boyd, from the 1981 masterpiece "Gallipoli", this is an equally extraordinary film in its own way, and both films are works of art that get better with each viewing. Unfortunately, the recent releases of this film, whether on VHS or DVD, are of inferior quality, and do not have the clarity or color reproduction of an old VHS I used to own. Nevertheless, even a less than perfect transfer is better than nothing, and still worth owning. Filmed in the Philippines and Australia, it has an atmospheric score by Maurice Jarre, which includes an excerpt from Vangelis' "Opera Sauvage". Total running time is 115 minutes.
A Fine Film Despite Flaws August 19, 2004 6 out of 9 found this review helpful
Most of the film is fine indeed. Set in mid-1960's Indonesia before the fall (and death) of Sukarno, it follows a young Australian reporter (Mel Gibson)in his first overseas posting. He falls in love with Brit emabssy girl (and, it transpires) SIS officer Sigourney Weaver. Around them and falling into chaos, Indonesia, poverty-stricken, bizarrely fascinating, "socialist"-militarily ruled and fighting both Communist insurgents and US-leaning military conspirators.Other characters are believable, from the kilt-wearing Anglo-Scots idiot attache at the Embassy to the dwarf genius who eventually kills himself to make a desperate political point. The whole film is so much a masterpiece (albeit that it never addresses the typically useless SIS role of Miss Weaver's character) that it is a pity it is spoilt a little bit by one flaw: the sheer lack of sympathy one feels (well, I did) for both the Australian and the British woman played by Weaver. They are just not sympathetic characters.
Moron February 12, 2004 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Who is the moron who reviewed this movie as being set in a "fiction"(al) Asian state? Did he actually watch the movie? If he did, he has clearly never heard of Indonesia.One thing he is correct about though, is that this is one of the all time great movies and in time will come to be recongised as such.
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