




Almost obliged to be huge, Gangs of New York marks the return to work of three much-admired creatives missing-in-action for the past few years: director Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio and Daniel Day-Lewis. Vast, impressive and challenging, it's unlike anything Scorsese has done in look and manner even as it is exactly the material he has obsessively turned over since his first films. A terrific 1846 prologue depicts a battle for supremacy over a district known as the Five Points between the "native-born American" mob led by William "Butcher" Cutting (Day-Lewis) and an Irish immigrant crew headed by "Priest" Vallon (Liam Neeson). The bloody outcome is the death of Priest and the rise to godfather-like prominence of the literally eagle-eyed Butcher (an eagle-marked marble replaces an eye he fished out in homage to his enemy!). Sixteen years later, Priest's son Amsterdam (DiCaprio) shows up intent on revenge, but finds himself distracted as he is drawn into the Butcher's inner circle much as another Scorsese Irishman hooked up with the mob in Goodfellas . The film covers an array of New York historical topics--from the corrupt government of William "Boss" Tweed to the riots that rocked the community when President Lincoln tried to impose military conscription--while the actual plot wobbles slightly as Amsterdam gets involved with a winsome pickpocket (Cameron Diaz) and wavers in his vengeful resolve. DeCaprio and Diaz aren't quite strong enough characters or players to hold things together--as in a few other recent Scorsese films, heroes are let off easily though they seem guilty of as many appalling crimes as the villains--but they have to compete with an award-worthy study in moustachioed menace and corruption from Day-Lewis and an array of the best supporting actors from either side of the Atlantic (Jim Broadbent, John C Reilly, Brendan Gleeson, David Hemmings). -- Kim Newman On the DVD: Gangs of New York comes with a decent set of extras on this two-disc set. Most notable is Martin Scorsese's commentary, the first of its kind on DVD. Taking a concise approach with some moderate pauses, Scorsese avoids a scene-specific analysis, but his rich knowledge both of the historical period and of cinema history is phenomenal, as is the account of his 30-year struggle to get the film made. Documentaries include costume and set design; a tour of the set with Scorsese and production designer Dante Ferretti (with optional 360-degree view); and a well-researched and insightful historical Discovery Channel documentary. "The History of the Five Points" is accompanied by some study notes and a vocab guide, all adding to the rich historical background that this extra material provides. Less insightful and more glossy are the obligatory trailer and "Making of" documentary, complete with husky voiceover. A choice of Dolby or DTS mixes are on offer sound-wise and, as you'd expect from such a beautifully filmed epic, the transfer is superb. -- Laura Bushell Martin Scorsese's Academy Award-winning film took nearly 30 years in planning and brought two major actors back onto the big screen after several years absence (Leonardo DiCaprio and Daniel Day-Lewis). 1846 New York and tensions have reached climactic and fatal proportions between the Irish immigrants and the British and Dutch inhabitants of the Five Points neighbourhood. William Cutting (Day-Lewis), aka Bill the Butcher, leads the inhabitants of Five Points and creates the 'Native Americans' gang, whilst the immigrants are led by Priest Vallon (Liam Neeson) and form 'The Dead Rabbits'. After a violent clash between the two gangs which leaves Vallon dead, his son Amsterdam goes missing only to turn up in 1862 under a new name and seeking vengeance for the death of his father. Amsterdam (DiCaprio) manages to integrate himself into Bill the Butcher's corrupt inner circle, which is now running the entire underworld around Five Points, and even becomes his right-hand man. However, his identity is soon revealed and a bloody showdown ensues. Review: Good film, good dvd - 2nd disc of special features has a lot of good stuff. As far as reviewing my purchase goes, its a dvd and it is all there in the box and everything and its the 2 disc edition with all the special features and stuff. If I am reviewing the film, I'd say Daniel Day Lewis is brilliant in it, Leonardo Davincicode's accent was a little inconsistent along with most of the american actors doing irish accents. Stephen Graham however managed a perfect scouse accent throughout. This is definitely one of my favourite films however it feels a little bit like the basic story could be a lot better or more interesting, perhaps told from a different characters point of view. It was fairly straightforward, cliché and hollywoody, but Scorsese has pumped enough money and expertise into it to make it a good film. I kinda wish he hadn't, then someone (probably Scorsese himself) could make a more successful spin off or remake from another character's point of view and use the skills and money to make that the huge epic that this should have been. Review: To make sure that it’s exactly as described on the website - Very good 😊
| Contributor | Cameron Diaz, Daniel Day-Lewis, Leonardo DiCaprio, Martin Scorsese, Roger Ashton-Griffiths |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,485 Reviews |
| Format | PAL |
| Genre | crime |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Entertainment in Video |
| Runtime | 2 hours and 48 minutes |
E**L
Good film, good dvd
2nd disc of special features has a lot of good stuff. As far as reviewing my purchase goes, its a dvd and it is all there in the box and everything and its the 2 disc edition with all the special features and stuff. If I am reviewing the film, I'd say Daniel Day Lewis is brilliant in it, Leonardo Davincicode's accent was a little inconsistent along with most of the american actors doing irish accents. Stephen Graham however managed a perfect scouse accent throughout. This is definitely one of my favourite films however it feels a little bit like the basic story could be a lot better or more interesting, perhaps told from a different characters point of view. It was fairly straightforward, cliché and hollywoody, but Scorsese has pumped enough money and expertise into it to make it a good film. I kinda wish he hadn't, then someone (probably Scorsese himself) could make a more successful spin off or remake from another character's point of view and use the skills and money to make that the huge epic that this should have been.
S**S
To make sure that it’s exactly as described on the website
Very good 😊
B**8
Amazing and very gripping from start to finish
This is great it follows the great struggle of the city of New York as it tries to forge it's identity as does the rest of America during this turbulent time period in the countries history. We start with the dead rabbits fighting the American Natives where the Irish gangs leader priest fallen is killed by Bill the butcher the leader of the natives and his son witnesses this and escapes to live in hells gate till his mid 20's where he arrives back to the city he left many a year ago, he plans to exact revenge on mr cutting the man who murdered his father many years earlier but instead becomes almost a son to him and he must then bide his time before making the kill, overall a love this as I did 12 years ago when I first saw it 10/10 for me as it's great to see a forgotten history shown.
B**R
An entertaining, very well-made film.
Being the "Victor Meldrew" that I am, I always read the worst reviews first, and this film has a lot on this site, mainly by people who didn't like the violence. I'm not too keen on graphic violence either, but in this film it probably has a purpose. Martin Scorsese is a serious, non-exploitive, film maker, so I'm guessing he might have been commenting on the "romancing" of violence by some people. 1. There are parallels in this film to the "Troubles" in Northern Ireland betwen the Catholic "Irish", and the Protestant supporters of the union within the United Kingdom. The Irish rebels are often romanticised by foreigners of Irish extraction, who fund rebel groups. The brutality of the violence in this film demonstrates that there is no romance to fighting. 2. Similarily, gang violence in modern America is also romanticised, and glorified by gangsta rappers. It is made to sound attractive. As this film demonstrates, there is nothing attractive about gang violence. I found the film very well-made and good looking. It could have been a Ridley Scott film, and I mean that as a compliment. There were some good performances, especially Daniel Day-Lewis and Cara somebody, who played Hell Cat Maggie, who made Sarah Palin seem like a teddy bear. In addition, Cameron Diaz was far more attractive in this film than she is wiggling her bum in films like she normally does, and her acting was the best I've seen her do.
J**G
BUY THE REMASTERED US IMPORT - YOU WILL NOT REGRET IT
If you are a true fan of this film you should really be buying the US import version, it is region free and therefore compatible with all UK blu ray players. Unfortunately the UK version was a very early blu ray release, and though I have not seen it myself and so cannot attest to it, all the expert reviews tell a very poor tale as regards to the quality of the picture transfer. After the poor reception of the original release, the US got a new remastered re-release of the film, but unfortunately this version has still not been released in the uk so unless you get the import UK buyers are lumped with the original rubbish version. Try searching for Gangs of New York [2002] [US Import] on amazon. You will likely have to pay a little extra but boy is it worth it. The picture transfer on the remaster is truly astounding, beautiful colours and great detail, amazing blacks, and no ugly compression artifacts or digital anomalies whatsoever (unlike the UK version). I was constantly blown away by the transfer, even compared to other blu rays. The sound on both versions is the same and fantastic. I cannot recommend the import enough, trust me and pay the extra, it is more than worth it.
S**W
Daniel Day Lewis and Leo C at their best.
Some of the best character acting I've ever seen. Lewis is absolutely convincing and ruthless as an anti-immigrant gang leader in the mid 1800s, and yes there is an unnerving sincerity and kindness in his treatment of "Amsterdam" (Leo's character), who unbeknownst to him is actually the son of his greatest rival. This is an incredible story of early New York, when it resembled the wild west more than a cosmopolitan global city. What a cracking film, but very raw and violent.. def not one to share with under 12s or faint-hearted family members.
R**Y
Amazing film, great DVD
Quite simply the film is an amazing piece of work. It's Scorsese, what do you expect? If you're thinking of buying this then you've either already seen it or you've been told time and again how good it is. If not, I'll tell you this again, it's an amazing film, get it. Now, the DVD is also pretty good. The quality isn't shoddy unlike some DVD's and it comes with all the usual bits and bobs but also includes some great extras. For example, the interactive tour of the Five Points. Director Martin Scorsese and set designer (who's name I cannot recall, nor find) take you on an interactive tour of the set, commentating all the way with interesting chatter. It's a great product all round and should definately be picked up. Immediately.
C**N
Less Grit than 'Who framed Roger Rabbit'!
A potentially great story spoilt by over egging the pudding. Too slick, too flashy, too theatrical, too hammed up by Daniel Day-Lewis and the other lead actors, too much indulgence it costume detail. The whole thing was so colourful and too brightly lit and all so clean! I get the impression the director really wanted to make a broadway musical! Give the grim subject matter of the story, there was absolutely no grit, no menace, no sleaze and no tension or terror. In fact when it comes to New York gang depiction, 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' had more white knuckle moments. Good DVD quality.
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