Apocalypto (2006) [Blu-ray]
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close  Apocalypto (2006) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  R 
Starring: Dalia Hernandez, Morris Birdyellowhead, Jonathan Brewer, Rudy Youngblood.
Director: Mel Gibson
Genre: Action | Adventure | Drama
DVD Release Date: 05/22/2007

Tagline: No One Can Outrun Their Destiny.

From Mel Gibson, director of the Academy Award®-winning Braveheart (Best Director, Best Picture, 1995) comes Apocalypto, the thrilling historical epic that will shock and awe you as never before on Blu-ray Disc. Dubbed "totally mesmerizing" by Dark Horizons, this adrenaline-drenched action-adventure reaches new levels of intensity in this extraordinary format. In the twilight of the mysterious Mayan culture, young Jaguar Paw is captured and faces a harrowing end. Driven by the power of his love for his family, he makes a heart-racing escape to rescue them and ultimately save his way of life. Experience both the pristine beauty and the unparalleled savagery of this ancient world in eye-popping clarity. Hear the rustle of every leaf and the cries of fierce warriors with spectacularly advanced audio technology. Embark on this mind-bending, gut-wrenching journey back in time with Blu-ray - HighDefinition.

Storyline: In the Maya civilization, a peaceful tribe is brutally attacked by warriors seeking slaves and human beings for sacrifice for their gods. Jaguar Paw hides his pregnant wife and his son in a deep hole nearby their tribe and is captured while fighting with his people. An eclipse spares his life from the sacrifice and later he has to fight to survive and save his beloved family. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Greg Maltz, July 20, 2007 -- Once upon a time, the Mayans flourished. They invented elaborate art and architecture, contributed to mankind's advances in agriculture, math and astronomy and developed the only true written language native to the Americas. But watching Mel Gibson's Apocaylpto, we mainly learn that Mayans hunted and murdered each other in the most brutal ways imaginable.

The film opens with an eerie vocal while we read the words of historian/philosopher William Durant: "A great civilization is not conquered from without until it has destroyed itself from within." Viewers hoping for a serious exposition on this thesis are soon disappointed. Apocalypto quickly degenerates into a celebration of pain, dismemberment and death that speaks to Gibson's vision, not Durant's.

At one point, prisoners tied to a tree trunk are walking along a precipice. The last man in the line is near death and his legs give out, swinging him over the cliff's edge and jeopardizing all the men tied to the trunk. The captors can easily save their prisoners, but a cruel leader says, "Wait. Let's see what happens."

This voyeuristic perversion is the true thesis of the movie: let's put people in horrifying situations where their lives hang in the balance, and watch what happens in excruciating detail. That these people are Mayan seems almost irrelevant. Gibson's facial expressions and vocal inflections are stamped all over the unknown actors. In the end, the characters seem the same as in any Lethal Weapon movie--distinguished only by different costumes, sets, weapons and language (the film was in Mayan, with English subtitles).

As you may have gathered, my HDTV brethren, your mild-mannered reviewer is not a fan of Mel Gibson. I don't mind violence; but Mel's handling of the violence is disturbing. I appreciate the gangster carnage in Sopranos, the gunslinging swagger of Unforgiven and even the modern warfare blood and guts of Black Hawk Down. But where David Chase shows the unpredictability of violent eruption, where Eastwood shows the machismo of might makes right and where Scott shows the harsh reality of war, Gibson shows something else: unflinching inhumanity. Gibson has no redeeming quality there.

Watch the way the more gifted directors choose to frame the action and then watch Apocalypto. Not once does Gibson shy away from showing a scourging or bloodletting. If you follow the camera, you know what is coming. Why force the viewer to see every detail? And it is not simply the glee with which Gibson captures an injured or dying character. Mel amplifies the carnage with excess: a cracked skull rhythmically gushing blood; a spewing heart still beating after being ripped from the murdered victim's body.

Where a gifted director like Hitchcock would show blood swirling down a drain, Gibson celebrates it pouring out of the human body in unrelenting detail. Granted, Hitchcock's time was more than 40 years ago and now we are in a different time. But in following a man going over a waterfall, most directors would simply show the water without the man emerging from it. Or at most, the water turning a bit red. The audience gets the message that way. What does Gibson show? He gets an underwater camera and indulges in the man's skull cracking against rocks, with blood diffusing into the water.

Most disturbing about Gibson's films is not the technical focus on blood and guts, but the overarching focus on death over life. In his film prior to Apocalypto, Gibson cared nothing for the life or message of the most influential figure of the past 2000 years, but he cared a great deal about the death. Mel missed an opportunity to explore the teachings of love, peace and forgiveness central to the subject.

Similarly, in Apocalypto, any number of focal points in Mayan culture could have been meaningfully explored, while still yielding a violent adventure. Instead, we get a film that explored the very worst of that civilization, in the most superficial and sadistic way. At the end, Gibson tried to redeem himself. He failed. High marks for Blu-ray video and audio done right, but it's like the proverbial silk cap on a pig.

Cast Notes: Rudy Youngblood (Jaguar Paw), Dalia Hernández (Seven), Jonathan Brewer (Blunted), Morris Birdyellowhead (Flint Sky), Carlos Emilio Báez (Turtles Run), Amilcar Ramírez (Curl Nose), Israel Contreras (Smoke Frog), Israel Ríos (Cocoa Leaf), María Isabel Díaz (Mother in Law [as Isabel Diaz]), Espiridion Acosta Cache (Old Story Teller), Mayra Serbulo (Young Woman), Iazua Larios (Sky Flower), Lorena Heranandez (Village Girl), Itandehui Gutierrez (Wife), Sayuri Gutierrez (Eldest Daughter).

IMDb Rating (02/06/10): 7.9/10 from 76,262 users

Additional information
Copyright:  2006,  Disney / Buena Vista
Features:  • Backstage
  - Feature Commentary By Writer/Director/Producer Mel Gibson And Writer/Co-Producer Farhad Safinia
  - Becoming Mayan: Making Apocalypto
• Deleted Scene
  - (Can Be Viewed With Optional Commentary By Writer/Director/Producer Mel Gibson And Writer/Co-Producer Farhad Safinia)
Subtitles:  English SDH, English, French, Spanish
Video:  Widescreen 1.85:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
MAYAN: PCM 5.1
Time:  2:18
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  786936726145
Coding:  [V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  Yes
Other:  Producers: Mel Gibson, Bruce Davey; Directors: Mel Gibson; Writers: Farhad Safinia, Mel Gibson; running time of 138 minutes; Packaging: HD Case.

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