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The Man Who Fell to Earth [1976] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
The Man Who Fell to Earth [1976] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
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Director: Nicolas Roeg
Actors: David Bowie, Rip Torn, Candy Clark, Buck Henry, Bernie Casey
Studio: Criterion
Category: DVD

Buy New: £20.51
Buy New/Used from £20.51

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(7 reviews)
Sales Rank: 64089

Format: Closed-captioned, Colour, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 139 minutes
Number Of Items: 2
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.5 x 1.4

MPN: PMIDCC1616D
ISBN: 1559409649
UPC: 715515016629
EAN: 9781559409643
ASIN: B000A88EVE

Release Date: September 27, 2005
Theatrical Release Date: 1976
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Bad Timing
  • Eraserhead [1976]
  • Withnail And I [1986]
  • Performance [1970]
  • Get Carter [1971]

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
While other films directed by Nicolas Roeg have attained similar cult status (including iWalkabout/i and iDon't Look Now/i), none has been as hotly debated as this languid but oddly fascinating adaptation of the science fiction novel by Walter Tevis. In iThe Man Who Fell to Earth/i, David Bowie plays the alien of the title, who arrives on Earth with hopes of finding a way to save his own planet from turning into an arid wasteland. He funds this effort by capitalising on several highly lucrative inventions, and in so doing becomes the powerful leader of an international corporate conglomerate. But his success has negative consequences as well--his contact with Earth has a disintegrating effect that sends him into a tailspin of disorientation and metaphysical despair. The sexual attention of a cheerful young woman (Candy Clark) doesn't do much to change his outlook, and his introduction to liquor proves even more devastating, until, finally, it looks as though his visit to Earth may be a permanent one. iThe Man Who Fell to Earth/i is definitely not for every taste--it's a highly contemplative, primarily visual experience that Roeg directs as an abstract treatise on (among other things) the alienating effects of an over-commercialised society. Stimulating and hypnotic or frightfully dull, depending on your receptivity to its loosely knit ideas, it's at least in part about not belonging, about being disconnected from the world--about being a stranger in a strange land when there's really no place like home. i--Jeff Shannon/i.


Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Serious Sci-Fi!   May 26, 2006
  4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Fact is stranger than fiction, so when it comes to sci-fi the best films are those which are more "down to earth".br /br /The Man Who Fell to Earth is, in my opinion, one of the best sci-fi films I have ever seen. Forget all those who describe the plot as being complicated or confused - this is really easy to understand. It is simply the way Roeg mixes flashbacks and unexpected, out of the blue snippets. Don't try to decipher this film as there are no underlying "messages" to find.br /br /This film is basically about an alien who comes to Earth to swap his advanced technological knowledge for water. His family are dying on his home planet so he doesn't have much time. Disguised as a human for his own protection, the alien pawns gold jewellery (we guess that gold might be as common as muck on his home planet) to fund the hire of a top lawyer to take on the patenting of his designs. This all takes time, of course, and time seems to take its toll on the alien as he soon discovers that he cannot avoid small temptations such as women and alcohol, even though he locks himself away from everyday life. We soon learn that the alien can watch multiple TV screens at the same time, that he can look into the past and that people from the past can see him. His life on Earth slowly pushes him to the verge of insanity, which seems to have an equal effect on his "girlfriend" as she goes insane with him.br /br /What happens when an alien visits Earth? Watch this film!br /br /


5 out of 5 stars An allegory   January 8, 2005
  2 out of 6 found this review helpful

This is a powerful film, with striking images that stick with one forever.pIt is an allegory of alcoholism. Those who succumb to it in the film 'fall to earth' - they can no longer achieve anything of value. Very sad, considering Roeg's own professional decline.pRoeg himself might not leave a huge catalogue of great films. But this is special. And, like all boys of that era, I thank him for leaving the image of Jenny Agutter swimming in that waterhole in Walkabout. (And she did that before The Railway Children!)pI hope you feel the same way too.


5 out of 5 stars Roeg's Double Bluff is a Win! Win!   June 25, 2003
  15 out of 17 found this review helpful

It was a teasing double bluff by Nicholas Roeg, the British film director, to cast David Bowie in the title role of his mind-bending masterpiece "The Man Who Fell To Earth".pHaving created his androgynous Ziggy Stardust persona during the early 1970's, Bowie on the face of it was a perfect choice for the part. But, was there a danger that Bowie had stamped on us a too indelible image of himself as Glam Rock fashion icon? Would we, the cinema-visiting public, be able to accept him and see him properly in the different guise of Mr Newton the self-contained, bespectacled, business-suited alien visitor from space? pRoeg had gambled and won a few years earlier, when he put the pop star Mick Jagger into the co-lead role of "Performance" (1970). Jagger was convincing in his then unaccustomed role of a movie actor - and like Bowie he portrayed an ambiguous and confused character. "Performance" was the film that put Roeg on the map. It was followed by "Walkabout" (1971), "Don't Look Now" (1973) and then "The Man Who Fell To Earth" (1976). All of these startling and vividly colourful films have become legends of post-war British cinema. The films share the same ingredients and qualities: they are breathtaking, disjointed, distracting, disturbing, hallucinating, haunting, provocative, refractive and spellbinding. pBowie has no cutlass, parrot or pigtails, but as he wanders through Middle America he is the epicene, emaciated, marmalade-haired space-pirate. What is the purpose of his mission on Earth? His laconic mumbling betrays few secrets, but occasional clues are provided. We learn that his own planet will soon be doomed, because of drought. He states that he is interested in energy. But the plot is largely baffling, and hard to follow. (One critic has called all of Roeg's plots "infuriating").pIn all four of his above-mentioned films, and particularly in "The Man Who Fell To Earth", Roeg juxtaposes time and place. Within the numerous, often bewildering flashbacks and flashforwards in time, we see dreamy glimpses of Bowie, his wife and two children shrouded in a chrysalis-like gauze, hugging and walking on their arid and flat planet. The soundtrack hisses silently, like gas escaping from the twin-canisters that are strapped to their backs. These little interludes exemplify a Roeg trademark: the discordant chapters and scenes in his films are paradoxically interspersed with serene, picturesque moments where Roeg allows the camera to linger on a visually-stunning image (tall buildings, lakes, landscapes, mountains, wildlife, sky).pMy instinct tells me that a painstaking study and understanding of the plot-puzzle wouldn't be an essential task, to secure enjoyment of "The Man Who Fell To Earth". Better perhaps to allow the vivid images and impressions to sear into my brain, and to overlook the obscure, rambling and apparently inconsequential sequences of action and dialogue that elongate this strange, uneven film. Better too, I suggest, to enjoy the performances of the two main characters. It's an open question: does Candy Clark, the hotel maid and eventual consort of Mr Newton, steal the show from Bowie with her compelling portrayal of the booze-addicted, simple-minded Southern gal, Mary Lou? I suspect that she does.pThe first time that I saw this film, I was entranced from the opening minute. But the first sequence that really blew my mind was Bowie stacking the multiple television sets in his hotel room, all tuned to different channels. In fact, there are two such sequences in the film. Another electrifying moment is when Clark jumps out of her skin, and so do we, when Bowie appears to unpeel his eye, in front of the bathroom mirror, and he then transmogrifies into his true, hitherto hidden body. But my candidate for perhaps the most arresting sequence of all in the film is Bowie and Clark's sex-romp to the blaring soundtrack remix of Ricky Nelson's "Hello Mary Lou". A shooting pistol and a banana serve as sex-symbols here, but the real shock-effect of this episode is its stark and saddening revelation that Bowie and Clark are going to end the story as hopeless alcoholics and losers. She has become a bloated, befuddled lush: and he has become a fading, failing Icarus.pThis explosive sequence is immediately followed by a bizarre one in which Bowie and Clark, dressed in whites, calmly play table tennis in a room that seems to be a forest. This surreal scene seems to belong more in a Ken Russell movie: Roeg and Russell of course were contemporary enfant terribles of British cinema in the 'seventies. Their controversial, barrier-breaking movies were feted with praise or condemned from the pulpits. Russell, too, raided the pop world: Roger Daltrey played the lead in two of his films.pWhen Ziggy Stardust, glittering costume, orange-streaked hair, was at his zenith, I had to credit my wife Nancy for some gentle debunking of the Bowie myth. Nancy imagined him backstage, the audience's adulation ringing in his ears after another spectacular god-like performance. "Oh gawd, Angie, help me off with these bloody Space Boots, they don't half pinch my feet. I could die for a cup of tea, luv". Curiously, there are moments in "The Man Who Fell To Earth" when Mr Newton relaxes with Mary Lou, puts his feet up, lets down his inscrutable mask and becomes an ordinary bloke for a moment or two. It's yet another tantalising facet of this extraordinary, nervous, unforgettable movie.


4 out of 5 stars A TRIUMPH FOR DAVID BOWIE...   November 11, 2002
  14 out of 14 found this review helpful

I first saw this film when it was released in the mid nineteen seventies. I recalled how much I had enjoyed it, when I saw that it was available in DVD. I wasted no time in adding it to my personal collection. pThe film itself, though somewhat abstract, is terrific, as it is not just a science fiction film with a twist. It is a film that explores themes that are timeless: desolation, alienation (no pun intended), and loneliness. At times, these themes are palpable, due to David Bowie's wondrously androgynous performance which is heartbreakingly moving at times.pThe plot is fairly simple. An alien, Davie Bowie, leaves his family on his dying and arid planet in search for water. He lands on earth and begins his project to send water to his devasted planet by amassing the wealth that he needs to do this. He patents numerous lucrative inventions which eventually find him at the head of a world wide conglomerate. He joins up with a kindly, though stupid and vapid woman who drinks gin like a fish, Candy Clark, with whom he begins a liaison of sorts. Yet, he is always lonely and melancholic, and like her, begins to spiral into an alcoholic haze, sometimes sidetracking him from his purpose here. pAt some point, excruciatingly sad and lonely, longing for his family, he reveals himself to her for who he truly is, shedding his earthly appearance, only to be met with absolute horror and repugnance by her at the sight of him. She ultimately tries to understand him, but it is truly beyond her ken. He is infinitely sad at this and longs all the more for home. pOn the threshhold of returning to his planet and loved ones, he is kidnapped by corporate raiders who take over his holdings, and it is here that the movie begins to disintergrate somewhat. Yet, it remains strangely hypnotic and compelling, and becomes a sort of "Lost Weekend" of betrayal, booze, and promises which will never be kept. A parable of wanting to belong, yet knowing that you truly never will. A story about wanting to go home, but knowing on some level that you truly can never go home again.


5 out of 5 stars Loving the Alien...   August 3, 2002
  10 out of 10 found this review helpful

I've been a long term appreciator of this film since it was regularly shown late at night on BBC2 in the 70's and 80's. Seeing it on DVD at its full aspect ratio is a revelation though, the composition of the images is wonderful and I kind of missed that on a 4:3 TV all those years ago. This is a quality movie with excellent performances from all the actors, even the bit parts. Anyone who ever claims that David Bowie cannot act should be forced to watch this and then to eat their words because he is quite frankly superb in the part of Thomas Newton. He conveys more 'other-worldliness' in a simple gesture than most actors achieve with the full Stan Winston latex treatment. Despite this being an SF film (with no major SFX, just intelligent scripting) it could just as easily be about anyone out of their environment and feeling alone and paranoid. They quite literally don't make em like this anymore. Instead we get MIB:2. Help!

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