The Criterion Collection presentsThe Third Man
(1949)
Holly Martins: Have you ever seen any of your victims?
Harry Lime: ...Victims? Don't be melodramatic. Down there--would you really feel any pity if one of those dots stopped moving forever? If I offered you twenty thousand pounds for every dot that stopped, would you really, old man, tell me to keep my money, or would you calculate how many dots you could afford to spare? Free of income tax, old man. Free of income tax. The only way you can save money nowadays.
- Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles
Stars: Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli, Orson Welles, Trevor Howard
Other Stars: Bernard Lee, Ernst Deutsch, Siegfried Breuer, Paul Hoerbiger
Director: Carol Reed
MPAA Rating: Not Rated for gun violence
Release Date: 2007-05-22
Genre: mystery
Style Grade |
Substance Grade | Image Transfer Grade | Audio Transfer Grade |
Extras Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|
A+ | A | B+ | B+ | A |
DVD Review
The Third Man is one of those classic films in which everything simply came out right. That it's such a well-loved film, considering the dark nature of the story and the emotions at its heart, attests to the quality on display. Criterion first took a crack at the film on DVD back in their initial batch of releases on the format, and the disc was a perfectly solid representation of the film with some good extras. In the DVD age however, nothing is forever, and Criterion has gotten around to refurbishing many of their early releases, leaving us the beneficiaries, for this new edition of The Third Man looks better and is crammed with bonus material befitting its status as an iconic film.The story revolves around Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten), an American author of cheap western novels, and his arrival in post-war Vienna to look up his old friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles ). Holly is shocked to discover that Harry is recently dead, killed after being struck by a car. Left without much of a reason to stay, Holly decides to investigate what seem like loose ends in the story of Harry's death, and uncovers far more than he intended.
The Third Man has many strengths, but let's begin by mentioning the cast, which is uniformly strong. Cotten and Welles form the central pairing of the picture, and complement each other well, as they did in so many Mercury Theater projects. Cotten plays the naïve dupe to Welles' worldly crook, and watching Holly and Lime, you can understand both characters as you see their past friendship (un)easily resume. The actors had already played a similar pairing once before, in 1942's Journey Into Fear, which also saw Cotten as the naïve American abroad. As the love interest, Alida Valli brings an air of mystery to the role that suits the story and the setting, and Trevor Howard plays Major Calloway with a flinty edge that makes it all the more enjoyable when his moments of heart peek through the hardened exterior.
I remain amazed at the subsequent popularity of Harry Lime, such that the character was spun off into radio and television series. Much of this must be due to Welles' charismatic, amusing performance, as audiences obviously forget how heinous Harry is. Or at least I hope they do, given the horror Lime's penicillin racket wreaks on children like the ones Calloway shows to Holly. Lime's willingness to sacrifice anyone who might get in his way is almost a positive trait compared to that. Of course, Lime was heavily sanitized in his later incarnations, becoming a lovable rogue rather than this soulless racketeer.
The Third Man is a film that can be enjoyed again and again, and this new edition provides plenty of reasons to keep going back for more. I am forever hesitant to label films as perfect, but this is one that comes really close. As I said at the start, it's a film in which everything comes together to make a magnificent entertainment—one that shouldn't be missed.
Rating for Style: A+
Rating for Substance: A
Image Transfer
One | |
---|---|
Aspect Ratio | 1.33:1 - Full Frame |
Original Aspect Ratio | yes |
Anamorphic | no |
Image Transfer Review: Criterion's new edition doesn't look markedly different from the previous one, at least to my eyes. It has, according to recent company practice, been slightly windowboxed in order to cater to the masses with overscan. That said, the picture looks fine but not spotless. It's absolutely acceptable.
Image Transfer Grade: B+
Audio Transfer
Language | Remote Access | |
---|---|---|
Mono | English | yes |
Audio Transfer Review: The original mono track is on hand as expected, and it does the job just as the previous edition did.
Audio Transfer Grade: B+
Disc Extras
Full Motion menu with musicScene Access with 23 cues and remote access
Subtitles/Captions in English with remote access
1 Original Trailer(s)
1 Deleted Scenes
Production Notes
3 Documentaries
4 Featurette(s)
2 Feature/Episode commentaries by 1) Filmmaker Steven Soderbergh and Tony Gilroy; 2) film scholar Dana Polan
Packaging: Digipak
Picture Disc
2 Discs
1-Sided disc(s)
Layers: dual
Extra Extras:
- Two radio shows: Lux adaptation of the film, and an episode of "The Adventures of Harry Lime" series
- Booklet with three essays
Also present are the following: Graham Greene: The Hunted Man (56m:23s) is a BBC production from the 1960s that weaves clips of Greene adaptations into an interview with the author. Who Was the Third Man? (29m:15s) is an Austrian documentary about the film that has some good stuff in it without encroaching on the longer making-of. There's more that is gathered into different catagories, including two radio shows, one a Lux adaptation of the film itself, the other an episode of the Welles-starring Harry Lime series. The Lux is so-so, but the Welles show is worth hearing if only to see how Lime was lightened up to make him more roguish and less blatantly evil.
Moving on, we get to see Anton Karas play the zither (02m:56s); a brief documentary on Vienna's "sewer cops" as seen in the film (01m:49s); and a slide show on Vienna after the second world war. Finally, the film-related background materials include Insider Information (08m:48s), which is narrated production history material set to photos; a comparison of the US and UK opening sequences; and a segment that translates the German dialogue in a couple different scenes.
On Disc 1, Peter Bogdanovich introduces the film, and there are two commentaries, one with director Steven Soderbergh and screenwriter Tony Gilroy, and the second with scholar Dana Polan. The former is an off-the-cuff appreciation of the film and its craftsmanship; the latter is an interesting analysis of its thematic concerns. Both are worth a listen. Lastly, there is an abridged reading of Greene's treatment, read by actor Richard Clarke.
All in all, plenty for the interested viewer to dig into, covering just about every aspect of the film.
Extras Grade: A
Final Comments
Simply put, this is an excellent edition of a classic film. If you're a fan, you'll want to upgrade, and if you don't already have a copy, then you need to get one. I can’t say it much plainer than that.Jeff Wilson 2007-05-23