Community Rating
Read Reviews (2) | Write a Review
Ranked #12 in Blu-ray
People who listed this
No additional images for this item.
What People are Saying
More Related Forum Threads and Articles ›Home [Blu-ray]
Studio: Tcfhe Release Date: 06/05/2009 Run time: 120 minutes Rating: Nr
If you are familiar with this product, please update the details list so it is complete!
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Binding | Blu-ray |
| Brand | Twentieth Century Fox |
| EAN | 0024543613435 |
| Label | 20th Century Fox |
| List Price | $29.99 |
| Manufacturer | 20th Century Fox |
| MPN | 2261343 |
| Product Group | DVD |
| Product Type Name | ABIS_DVD |
| Publisher | 20th Century Fox |
| Studio | 20th Century Fox |
| Title | Home [Blu-ray] |
| UPC | 024543613435 |
| Number Of Items | 1 |
| Format | Widescreen |
| Release Date | 2009-06-05 |
| Languages | French |
| Languages | English |
| Creator | Yen Le Van |
| Actor | Glenn Close |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 |
| Audience Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| Original Release Date | 2009-01-01 |
| Running Time | 118 |
| Theatrical Release Date | 2009 |
| Director | Yann Arthus-Bertrand |
| Additional Features | |
| Number Of Discs | |
| Region Code |
Many products have multiple models (e.g. black edition, white edition, etc.). If you know of any other models of this product with a different MPN/UPC, please add them below.
| Model Name/Type | MPN | EAN/UPC |
|---|
User Reviews: Home [Blu-ray]
July 31, 2009 at 6:55 am
Pros: gorgeous visuals; compelling information
Cons: somewhat repetitive in its censure
Cons: somewhat repetitive in its censure
A cautionary environmental tongue-lashing disguised as a nature documentary, Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s Home combines the expansive grandeur of Planet Earth with the severe censuring of human wastefulness found in something like Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth. Home makes its points with effusive efficiency all the while showing the awesome beauty and majesty of our planet on the verge of global catastrophe. Effective but repetitive at almost two hours, Home certainly gives one pause.
Glenn Close narrates this combination natural science documentary and sociological treatise on mankind’s foolish abuse of the Earth for the last fifty years, and the combination of hauntingly beautiful images with the cold, hard facts of the homo sapiens’ careless disregard of the planet’s careful balance of nature is quickly established and understood. “Balance” is the key word in all of the film’s careful point making, a balance that took four billion years to get right and only fifty years to change almost inexorably. Writers Yann Arthus-Bertrand and Isabelle Delannoy present a series of startling facts to make their case clear: twenty per cent of the Earth’s population use eighty per cent of its natural resources, one-half of the world’s poor live in resource-wealthy areas, there are one billion people who go to bed hungry each day, there is basically ten years left for us to repair the damage of the last five decades.
And yet, it’s not all gloom and doom (though that is the mood that dominates the film’s tone and Close’s insistent narration). After presenting all of its facts firmly and fairly (with awe-inspiring photography to capture breathtaking images of particularly threatened areas and their inhabitants), the film concludes with a summary of its findings and then some of the ways man has begun to adapt and change for the better with some encouraging improvements noted. Obviously, much more needs to be done, but a start has been made; the film purports that it needs to continue even more concertedly.
Photography was done in over fifty countries to capture the good, the bad, and the ugly, and the camerawork is certainly the equal of anything in Planet Earth though, of course, it lacks that series’ overall diversity. The director’s famed aerial camerawork gives these birds’ eye views a stunning sumptuousness that’s quite hypnotic. Yes, New York City, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas come in for a fair share of invective, but so do Shanghai, Dubai, and Lagos. No one is spared the rod of filmmaker Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s painful strokes.
Video Quality
Audio Quality
The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 sound mix is often very effective in combining Close’s narration in the center channel with the music from a variety of sources including grand opera and tribal chants that fills the surrounds (though occasionally opting just for the front channels). Some very effective use of the LFE channel is also notable.
Special Features
0/5
There are no bonus features on this disc, not even a trailer for this film or other Fox releases.
In Conclusion
Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
Post Comment
July 11, 2009 at 9:52 am
Article: Home [Blu-ray]
No one has edited this wiki yet - be the first! The headings below are just suggestions; feel free to make your own.
Related Media/Links:
Add related videos, links to item guides, etc.
Troubleshooting/Known Issues:
Had an issue other users should know about? Put it here.
How To:
Advice on installation, customization, and anything else.
Related Items and Accessories:
Not necessarily items within the community, just any other recommendations.



