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The Devil's Backbone (Special Edition)
The Devil's Backbone (Special Edition)

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Director: Guillermo Del Toro
Actors: Marisa Paredes, Eduardo Noriega, Federico Luppi, Fernando Tielve, Inigo Garces
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.94
Buy New: $8.25
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 110 reviews
Sales Rank: 4282

Format: Ac-3, Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: Spanish (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 106
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: COLD05676D
ISBN: 1404958754
UPC: 043396056763
EAN: 9781404958753
ASIN: B000274TLW

Theatrical Release Date: November 21, 2001
Release Date: July 27, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand New! Factory Sealed! US Retail DVD! Customer service is our #1 priority. Thank you for choosing MediaThrill.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 110
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5 out of 5 stars Classic Cinema   August 27, 2002
 9 out of 12 found this review helpful

In The Devil's Backbone, Guillermo del Toro delivers on of the best suspense/horror films ever made, right along side The Excorcist. American audiences that haven't been fully exposed to this masterpiece are really missing out.

The story involves a group of Spanish children who are taught and housed in an old villa, during the Spanish civil war. With war coming ever closer, and internal intrigue reaching a fever pitch, the main character, a young Republican orphan, is haunted by the apparition of a young boy. The movie is dark and chilling, with some really breathtaking scenes. The characters are interesting, with their own demons and problems. All this adds to the climax, which is amazing.

The best part of the Devil's Backbone is the aura and backround. This movie is one of the best shot pieces I have ever seen. A wonderful score plays along nicely, adding to the somber and dark mood of the film. The editor deserves an award. The set is old Spanish, a crumbling edifice that mirrors the ponderous horror of the picture. Del Toro is certainly a director to watch.


5 out of 5 stars Stunning, Genre Bending Movie   August 6, 2004
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

A Beautiful, Stunning, Genre Bending Movie

The Devil's Backbone is the antithesis of the Hollywood Big Picture. A beautiful movie, with a large cast of equally important characters who dictate the pace as the story unfolds. The amount of time devoted to character development is really quite astonishing - and may be slow moving for many American viewers. Another anti-Hollywoodism is director del Toro's refusal to confine his film into a specific genre, I've read and heard complaints from a number of U.S. viewers (and friends) "he doesn't make up his mind if it's a horror film or a drama."

The beauty of this picture is that it shows that life can have supernatural elements to it; that everything can't always be explained away by science - not even by men of science.

del Toro captures the wonderful horror and cruelty of innocence, sexual desire, romantic longings, dreams of fame and fortune, the atrocities of war and sets them in an orphanage far removed from the rest of the world - yet deeply scarred and affected by it.

Throughout del Toro endows his film with heightened tension allowing us that giddy nervousness that the greatest horror films provide. One of the best of these occurs when Jaime and Carlos sneak out, stealing to the kitchen in the dead of night, to refill their water pitchers which the ghost has emptied out. (It'll make you think twice about getting up in the middle of the night for a drink of water!)

del Toro isn't afraid of using an abundance of symbolism either. Far removed from civilization the orphanage is dry, parched, dust laden, yet so much of the film is filled with liquid, be it the enormous pool-sized well in the basement, the ghost Santi's liquid environment, Dr. Casares jars filled with rum and human fetuses (cocktail anyone?) or the rest of the cast's blood, sweat and tears.

The "dead" bomb in the middle of the courtyard serves the same role as a statue of the Madonna would in a more standard setting, a silent observer, a mysterious presence, something come down from the heavens and is equally as dangerous as any religious icon. A brilliant stroke.

At turns violent, heart warming, humorous and frightening, The Devil's Backbone, for those who give it the opportunity, will unfold before you like few things you've seen. Stunning.



5 out of 5 stars Del Toro's masterpiece   October 2, 2004
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Nowadays Guillermo Del Toro is best known for high-profile actioners such as "Hellboy" and "Blade 2" and while both of those films are excellent in my opinion they can't hold a candle to this 2001 Spanish film. "The Devil's backbone" is a sophisticated and stylish piece that effectively transposes elements of the classic ghost story, Victorian fairy tale, symbolic metaphors, and human tragedy into a bleak Spanish Civil War setting. It is, simply put, Del Toro's masterpiece.

The action takes place in 1939 towards the end of the Spanish civil war. Carlos, a young boy whose father was killed in the line of duty, is brought to a secluded orphanage in the middle of the desert. The orphanage is nothing fancy but it does the trick; every child has their own bed, there is enough food to go around and quality teachers to educate the children. The backyard of the orphanage however holds quite the ominous sight, a giant bomb stuck in the sand that somehow never exploded upon falling. On the day the bomb fell a child named "Santi" disappeared from the orphanage. Speculation ran rampant as to what exactly happened to Santi and it was speculated that the boy ran away and is now either safe with the sheppards or died at the hand of cutthroats. But Carlos and the other boys keep hearing strange noises at night that make them think that dead or alive, "Santi" is still lurking on the grounds of the orphanage...

The success of this film lies in the immaculous amount of detail and meaning Del Toro injects in almost every individual scene. The director's commentary track is a virtual lesson in the history of Spanish art, architecture and folklore. Every scene in the film is deliberate and full of meaning. The performances are phenomenal, especially the young kid who plays "Carlos". The kid is pure genius, much better than anything Joel Haley Osmond could ever muster. There's no "He's scared but he looks so cute" feel here. He looks scared but subdued at the same time, avoiding the overacting that tends to plague performances of young children in flight flicks.

At first Carlos is ostracized from the rest of the group and bullied around for being "the new kid". But when the ghost begins to appear, the group develop a sense of comraderie that becomes fascinating to watch. The group dynamics involved in fighting a common evil are admirable and we as viewers really get to love these kids. And then halfway through the film Del Toro throws a kicker, a major event that pulls the film out of its lull and turns things completely around. From then on, the movie becomes a triumph of style AND substance. And just when we start to forget about the supernatural elements in the face of the occurring human tragedies BAM! the ghost is thrown right back into the mix. Emotional and tragic, "The Devil's Backbone" is the kind of gutsy film experience so rarely seen nowadays. As well-deserved as Del Toro's current commercial success is, I hope he someday makes another film along the lines of this one.



5 out of 5 stars AMAZINGLY TALENTED   February 24, 2007
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

12 year old Carlos (Tielve) arrives to an isolated boarding school for boys closer to the end of the Spanish Civil War. New friends and bullies, a director of the school (Luppi) - old, wise doctor, who likes citing poems to his deputy (Paredes) and is clearly in love with her. Deputy director shares his love for poetry and secret sympathy for republicans (whom they're hiding some gold for) although prefers to seek sexual pleasure in the hands of a young caretaker (Noriega). There's only a blue sky above the orphanage and burnt out, lifeless Spanish prairie for miles around. Oh, I nearly forgot - children are telling stories about "the one who sighs" - a local ghost roaming vaults of the boarding school, and as we're to find out willing to tell some secret to Carlos.

War is in the air. There's no actual war in The Devil's Backbone, but Guillermo Del Toro's "Spanish trilogy" is about war so it's the main theme here. It's obvious the war is coming even to this remote corner of Spain. It's hanging over this place as Damocles' sword and reminds of itself even by way of a huge unexploded bomb sticking out of the schoolyard pavement. It serves both as a reminder and as a menace - no one knows if it's going to explode finally. As in later Del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth the war is shown here through the eyes of children and is seen as troublous times when you don't know whom to trust, when a neighbor can turn out to be your enemy, when everyone is against everyone else. Children can only trust other children and try to survive relying only on themselves albeit their attempts can seem naive and helpless. The line "They're grown-ups but we're numerous" will stick in your mind for a long time after you're finished watching. Like the old doctor who stays by the window with his shotgun to wait for the villains - his effort also looks naive, but we know he's still a child too. That's why he shudders seeing people being shot in cold blood by the wall - child's mind can't bear such an atrocity. It's the only manifestation of war in the film so we shudder along with the doctor and at this moment think war is something that can't be rationalized by our mind.

At first glance The Devil's Backbone looks a bit strange because nothing seems to happen in the movie, but as the film goes on we try to realize there's no excessive or needless scenes and shots here. Everything is done to convey the message, and I'd say Del Toro has more than one to deliver to us. And the ghost exists not just to attract viewers' attention to "another ghost story" because, frankly speaking, it's not a ghost story and much less a horror film. It's one of those pictures where there's no stipulated story-line, but where you understand after credits start rolling you've just seen an extremely talented work. That is how in intervals between making Blade and Hellboy Del Toro manages to create real masterpieces. The Devil's Backbone is surely a film not to miss, already with Pan's Labyrinth it forms a very strong dilogy. There's no doubt the third picture will be as powerful and profound as the previous two.



4 out of 5 stars A terrific piece of history   December 30, 2001
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

What is a ghost? There are so many in this movie. There is an actual ghost, a boy cloaked in bloody water, swimming through the orphanage where the action takes place. There is an old doctor in love with a woman whom he reads poems through the wall and whom he doesn't have the courage to touch. There is a principal of the orphanage who is saving the gold for the cause she doesn't even believe in any longer. There is a caretaker, "a prince without a kingdom," who is barely living in the present, concentrating on the past. All of them are frozen in time, none are truly there - and all are thrown into action by the force of history that doesn't stop ticking, like the bomb in the yard, who some believe is still going to detonate.

Guillermo del Toro lets us feel the history as it's happening, through the eyes of the boys growing up in the time of Spanish Civil War, when the airplanes are flying dangerously low. They are the best actors in this movie, each giving a terrific performance. Through their actions, they literally mature before our very eyes.

For those who are looking for a little more, you will find it... there was something for everyone: a warped love story or two, a truly frightening ghost, a mystery waiting to be unraveled and a wrongful death waiting to be avenged. For most of the movie, I was glued to my seat, breathless with either fear or worry for the characters - something I hadn't experienced for some time while sitting in the movie theater.

See it... it's worth the subtitles.

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