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Imserba Webstore - Empire of the Sun

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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $7.70
Your Save: $ 7.28 ( 49% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Starring: Hiro Arai, Christian Bale, J.G. Ballard, Ray Charleson, Peter Copley
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Binding: DVD EAN: 9780790761657 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 0790761653 Label: Warner Home Video Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Warner Home Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2001-11-06 Running Time: 153 Studio: Warner Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 1987
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Remember, We're British Comment: Empire of the Sun
Based on J.G. Ballard's autobiographical book of the same name, "Empire of the Sun" follows the life of a young British schoolboy caught in the Japanese invasion of Shanghai. The British tried to recreate England in their enclave, complete with Church of England services and elaborate costume parties. As the Japanese advance the British evacuate, mostly by sea to Hong Kong and Singapore. The boy, James Graham,(Christian Bale in a remarkable film debut) is separated from his parents and is befriended by a couple of scruffy American blackmarketers (John Malkovich and Joe Pantoliano). They are interned in a Japanese camp for the duration of the war, where once again they re-create a microcosm of England, complete with its own economy, bartering, and social hierarchy. "Remember, we're British" as the camp doctor tells Jim, who quickly learns how to survive in a prison camp through bartering, bullying, and theft.
Evacuation and imprisonment is also the theme of Roland Joffe's "The Killing Fields," based on New York Times journalist Sydney Schanberg's friendship with his Cambodian interpreter, Dith Pran during the Khmer Rouge takeover of Phnom Penh. (Sam Waterston plays Schanberg, and Dr. Haing S. Ngor is Dith Pran, winning a much deserved "Best Supporting Actor" for his first film role.)
Spielberg also dealt with imprisonment in "Schindler's List" and, in a way, with the loss of the familiar in "E.T." (?)
In both stories, the Western superpowers abandon their native servants and compatriots. Schanberg manages to get Pran's family out of Cambodia on the last flight, but loses Pran, who ends up in a Khmer Rouge "Re-education" camp as part of Pol Pot's twisted sense of socialism. Overcome with guilt, Schanberg spends years trying to find Dith Pran.
Both directors convey a great sense of place; "Empire" was the first movie filmed in Mainland China since the Revolution, and it carefully creates the mood of 1940's Shanghai. "The Killing Fields" was shot in Thailand, where many of the Cambodian refugees ended up. Both films carry political messages - among them that the comfort zone of the establishment is easily undone by its hubris.
I give both movies four and a half stars. (5 Being for Genius)
The Killing Fields
Customer Rating:      Summary: HARD TO FIND STUFF Comment: I've been looking for this movie and its beautiful music for a long time and finally found it. I guess I just didn't look in the right places. I am now much wiser.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An Interesting and Inspiring Bit of History Comment: I first saw "Empire of the Sun" in the Lakes District in England with an Australian stranger named Alf. (I'm not making this up.) Though a literature major in college, this film made me realize how few in-depth, behind-the-scenes, real history lessons I learned in my regular high school and college classes. The film started me on a journey to learn more. I now teach Social Studies and English to high-schoolers and try to always make sure my students understand that history is people and people are stories.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Empire of the Sun, a drama of a boy's survival in WW II Comment: An excellent film that has been underrated in my opinion. Watching the young British boy mature amid the ravishes of World War II is a poignant experience. Stephen Spielberg expertly creates the era and the place and takes us into the heart of the boy Jim. This was Christian Bale's first movie. He was twelve or thirteen at the time and already had a strong enough screen presence to match John Malkovich scene for scene, and that's quite a feat. One caveat, Empire is not a movie for children even though it is about a child.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An outstanding achievement Comment: As someone who dislikes Spielberg movies for their triteness and reliance on mind-numbing plots, I forewent seeing Empire of the Sun for years because I assumed it would be another "Schindler's List" or worse. In fact, Empire of the Sun is the only Spielberg movie I can wholeheartedly recommend. The cinematography, acting, script, and direction are all virtually flawless. Other reviewers have rightly lauded Christian Bale's astonishing performance, but it must be said that there isn't a weak moment in the entire movie.
Even for those familiar with Ballard's original work, from which the movie is taken, won't be disappointed. This is very much a must-see movie for anyone who cares about great film making.
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