Frantic | 
| Director: Roman Polanski Actors: Harrison Ford, Betty Buckley, Emmanuelle Seigner, Djiby Soumare, Dominique Virton Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $9.98 Buy Used: $0.59 as of 7/30/2010 08:06 CDT details You Save: $9.39 (94%)
New (46) from $2.49
Seller: _athenaeum_ Rating: 70 reviews Sales Rank: 18084
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 120 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.5 x 0.5
MPN: WARD11787D ISBN: 0790738554 UPC: 085391178729 EAN: 9780790738550 ASIN: 6305133476
Theatrical Release Date: February 26, 1988 Release Date: June 1, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description AN AMERICAN HEART SURGEON IS THRUST INTO THE ADVENTURE OF A LIFETIME WHEN HE ARRIVES IN PARIS FOR A CONVENTION AND HIS WIFE INEXPLICABLY VANISHES.HIS SEARCH FOR HER LEADS HIM INTO THE URBAN UNDERWORLD AND FORGES AN ALLIANCE WITH A BEAUTIFUL WOMANWHO HOLDS THE KEY TO THE MYSTERY.
Amazon.com Living in exile in Paris after eluding a controversial charge of statutory rape in America, director Roman Polanski seemed professionally adrift during the 1980s, making only one film (the ill-fated Pirates) between 1979 and 1988. Then Polanski found inspiration--and a major star in Harrison Ford--to make Frantic, a thriller that played directly into Polanski's gift for creating an atmosphere of mystery, dread, escalating suspense, and uncertain fate. Set in Paris (Polanski couldn't go to Hollywood, so Hollywood came to him), the story begins when an American heart surgeon (Ford) arrives in the City of Lights with his wife (Betty Buckley) for a medical convention. They check into a posh hotel, and in a brilliantly directed scene, Ford takes a shower and emerges to find that his wife has vanished. This mysterious disappearance--and a confusion between two identical pieces of luggage--leads Ford into the Paris underground and a plot that grows increasingly dangerous as he approaches the truth of his wife's disappearance. The plot gets too complicated, and the pace drops off in the cluttered second half, but in Polanski's capable hands the film is blessed with moments of heightened suspense in the tradition of classic thrillers. --Jeff Shannon
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 70
Reveals the true Paris! January 5, 2010 Vicky Gallas (Orlando, Florida) I love this movie and have purchased it several times over the years. Harrison Ford is excellent in his role and Emmanuelle Seigner was the perfect actress for her part. The club and street scenes remind me of the Paris that I know. Roman Polanski's directing style leaves you on the edge of your seat in suspense throughout!
I would recommend "Frantic" to any suspense lover!
1988 POLANSKI September 22, 2009 Dr. Feelgood (USA) Yes, this was the most Hitchcock type of film, directed by Polanski, even the title suggests that. The plot, pretty straight forward, mystery, suspense, which stars Harrison Ford, as a Doctor, who's wife, played by Betty Buckley (Eight is Enough, Carrie), mysteriously, disappears. Harrison Ford's character is thrown into a strange set of circumstances, that he must go through, in order to find his missing wife.
Near flawless Hitchcockian thriller September 17, 2009 Ricardo C. I happened to stumble on this great film by accident. I bought one those exculsive, two-pack DVDs that contained Firewall and Frantic as a bonus. After watching both films, I promptly threw out the wretched Firewall. Roman Polanski's Frantic is in the vein of great Hitchcock thrillers such as North by Northwest,The 39 Steps, and The Man Who Knows Too Much. Films that put intelligent yet common men in extraordinary, and sometimes down right perlious, situations.
Harrison Ford plays Dr. Richard Walker and paying homage to The Man Who Knew Too Much, He and his wife Sondra Walker, played by Betty Buckley, arrive to in Paris to attend a medical convention. However the day the couple arrives Sondra is abucted from the hotel room. Dr. Walker dosen't think much of her absence at first but as more and more time passes, he attempts to look for her. Walker's worst suspicions are confirmed when he sees his wife's bracelet in an alley and an eye witness account of her being abducted.
Most would think, after watching him in films such as Air Force One or The Fugitive, Harrison Ford would predictably possess the physical prowess and nerves of an action film star regardless of his occupation. However that is not the case here. Just like Hitchcock common man suspense thrillers, the protagonist is genuinely in over his head. Dr. Walker fruitlessly attempts to take advantage of the local athorities and when they fail, he decided to persue the matter himself. All Walker has is common sense and the will but the film reminds you that he is very much a common person, he hits a few dead ends with leads and is not exactly a fighter. He nearly falls off the roof of an apartment building and is beaten up by secret agents. At one point, Walker nearly gives up and in one touching scene he calls his daughter for comfort.
The film's flaw is lacking some of the tension and fun of those great Hitchcock thrillers. Hitchcock knew how to really put on the gloss with humor and dazzling camera shots and yet keep a well written story. Here Frantic seems almost like all work and no play. That fantastic panache to get the viewers attention simply is not that prominent. The film just seems,at one too many points, mundane.
Overall despite the sluggish pace, I would highly reccomend this movie Hitchcock fans and casual viewers alike.
Brilliance of Polanski... June 28, 2009 Niki Savage (LA, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
In addition to the great writing, directing, acting, music, etc... I appreciate how Polanski helps husbands exorcise their desire for going on vacation with someone other than their wife, in a safe manner and without having to feel guilty about wanting to do so.
As if in a dream --the doctor does actually fall asleep before he realizes his wife is gone-- Dick (Richard Walker) walks into a series of dangerous scenarios while on vacation in Paris. The authorities refuse to take him seriously as a man's conscience must in order for him to go on this adventure. To "get his wife back" Walker uses a phone number he finds on back of a matchbook, goes to nightclubs till "4a.m.", snorts the "white lady", secretly waits out a couple engaged in oral sex, pretends "Michelle" is a hooker as he asks the cop if he could "allow a married man some discretion", endures shameful stares of his associates at the airport who look at him and his company Michelle knowingly, sneaks into her apartment and gets into her bedroom and bed naked, etc...
To the Concierge, the Police, and anyone following him, it would look like in absence of his wife, Walker partied all night, trashed his room, paid a hot girl for sex, had "breakfast for two" in his hotel room the next morning, played a "crazy american" and got naked and in bed with the hot girl at her house, spent the day on a boat with a bunch of young guys in a band before going to a salacious bar and freak dancing with "the lady in red".
As Walker gets closer and closer to the end of his "trip" and getting his wife back, both of the women in his life are wearing the same red color dress. They pass each other by in the "exchange": Walker has had his fun and wants his wife back. Walker does fight for Michelle (his tendency for indiscretion) at the end and is pissed that she's gone but knows he has to give her up in order to have his life and marriage back. He and wife Sondra arrive back at the hotel with the same garbage truck and men in front of the cab as the first time they arrived at the hotel-- this "loop" in time and Walker's fantasy are over.
I'm sure all of above and much more that I missed up are in the dense pages of a film-theory-analysis book somewhere.
Once upon a time, there were brilliant provocative films being made... now I have to look forward to likes of Land of the Lost and New In Town... I'm sure they're filled with messages and meanings as well and I'm just too dull to pick those ones up.
Rose.
The 2004 transfer still lousy March 10, 2009 Cedilla 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
If you hope, as I did, that the 2001 and 2003 reviews that warn against the lousy transfer of this move do not apply to the 2004 edition, this is unfortunately not the case. The 2004 transfer looks like a bootleg made from a VHS tape. Why is Warner treating this movie so crappily? It is an excellent film and deserves a DVD release that does it justice.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 70
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