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Matador, The (HD DVD)

The Weinstein Company // R // December 19, 2006 // Region 0
List Price: $29.95 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Joshua Zyber | posted December 11, 2006 | E-mail the Author
"I kill people. Doesn't that seem a wee bit psychopathic to you?"

The Movie:
The Matador is one of those great little movies with all the right qualities that ought to make for a breakout hit, but somehow still flew right under most everybody's radar during its brief theatrical run. That's an oversight that can hopefully be remedied by home video. The movie is a wicked black comedy with great performances, witty dialogue, solid thrills, richly developed characters, drama, pathos, and outrageous humor. Better yet, it manages to balance all these elements in precisely the right measure. It's dramatic, it's funny, it's exciting, it's just a blast to watch. Go buy a copy right now, watch it, and tell all your friends to buy their own copies too.

Pierce Brosnan spoofs his super-suave James Bond persona as burnt out hit man Julian Noble, an elite contract killer suffering a profound bout of mid-life depression. Childish, rude, and vain, Noble's spent his entire life in the pursuit of superficial thrills while burying any trace of a conscience. The work is finally starting to get to him, unfortunately, and crippling panic attacks have caused him to fumble a couple of important jobs. The realization that he's never managed to form a friendship or relationship in his entire life doesn't help matters, and he just isn't able to bury his worries in his usual pleasures (booze and whores) the way he used to. Enter Danny Wright (Greg Kinnear), an uptight and utterly conventional Middle American nobody visiting Mexico City in a desperate bid to save his failing business. Things aren't working out so well for him either, but at least he can pretend to keep his shit together, which puts him three or four steps ahead of Julian.

Meeting one night in a hotel bar, Julian decides that he needs a friend and that Danny's just the man for the job, being that he's, you know, right there. For his part, Danny is at once fascinated and repulsed by this obnoxious yet devilishly charming man who keeps making wildly inappropriate comments and jokes. When one insensitive remark goes too far, Danny tries to brush Julian off, after which Julian makes it his mission in life to win over his new best friend. Naturally, in Julian's mind the best way to go about that is to show him the most effective way to kill a person. Strangely, Danny finds this kind of intriguing. So begins a dysfunctional buddy movie about a meek businessman who gets a peek at the wild side and an amoral killer who learns to appreciate the value of life. If that sounds a little pat and sophomoric, the movie is anything but.

Writer/director Richard Shepard uses the templates from familiar suspense and buddy pictures and turns them on their heads. The Matador actually has a brain, as well as a heart. The movie gives us compelling characters with genuine personal problems and dilemmas. More importantly, it's funny as hell. Brosnan is a riot as the neurotic, socially inept Julian. The actor fearlessly lampoons the debonair image he's carefully crafted his entire career. Julian is crass, boorish, gaudy, and simply a mess. Yet Brosnan keeps him on just the right side of believability, reining him in whenever he threatens to turn into too much of a cartoon. We actually start to feel for this guy, and when we see him curled up in a blubbering ball, unable to complete his latest hit, we want the morally-conflicted Danny to give him that inspirational pep talk that will allow him to get back on the horse and kill that random stranger he came for. This is dark comedy at its finest.

The wonderful Hope Davis (American Splendor) also has a role as Danny's supportive wife who expresses just a bit too much interest in seeing Julian's gun. She's sublime. The movie takes us on a tour of Mexico City not seen from the usual gringo's perspective. In films like Traffic, the area looks like a filthy, violent cesspool, but Shepard shows us a city that's vibrant, colorful, and alive. The Matador is a celebration of life in the midst of death, a notion particularly appropriate to director Shepard, whose career looked to be stalled after directing bombs like The Linguini Incident and thankless cable TV movies until writing this script. If the movie has a flaw, it's that for all its talk of danger and death the film is oddly bloodless, which unfortunately feels like a cop-out. We're given hints about Julian's dark side, but the movie pulls back from showing it. The director was obviously afraid of making the character too unlikable, and perhaps he has a point, but it's the one element that feels lacking in a movie otherwise firing on all cylinders. In any case, The Matador is a gem just waiting to be discovered by more people. Don't let it fall into obscurity.

The HD DVD:
The Matador debuts on the HD DVD format as one of the premiere launch titles from The Weinstein Company Home Entertainment. Unfortunately, the studio doesn't seem to have worked out all the kinks in their authoring software yet. The disc used for this review had some serious playback glitches. To start, it took no less than three solid minutes to load in my HD-A1 player. Worse, there was a catastrophic freeze-up at the movie's 65-minute mark that the player cannot read through despite repeated attempts on several days. It always freezes at the exact same spot. The trouble area seems to last approximately two minutes. The only way to get past it is to reboot the player, restart the disc (with another three minute delay), skip ahead to the following chapter, and then backtrack to the 67-minute mark. Of course, I missed two minutes of movie in the process. The disc was also glitchy in its general menu navigation and bonus features, but nothing else that I couldn't force my way through by backing up a few seconds and replaying the footage.

[Update: Since upgrading to an HD-XA2 player, I found this disc to play without incident. Cleary the HD-A1's hardware is at least partially at fault, but I do still suspect that there's something wrong with the disc authoring as well. How the disc will function on other players, I can't say.]

The interactive menus are accompanied by annoying gun-loading sound effects for every selection that cannot be turned off. The menus are also not well thought out. The Scenes Selection options, for example, are ridiculously tiny even on a large projection screen.

Just to throw one last gripe out there, they've also given the disc cheesy and misleading cover art. Who's that sexy female silhouette supposed to be? The artwork reminds me of the equally horrid cover on the Miramax DVD for Infernal Affairs. I bet they were designed by the same PhotoShop dropout.

HD DVD discs are only playable in a compatible HD DVD player. They will not function in a standard DVD player or in a Blu-Ray player. Please note that the star rating scales for video and audio are relative to other High Definition disc content, not to traditional DVD.

Video:
The Matador HD DVD is encoded on disc in High Definition 1080p format using MPEG4 AVC compression. The movie is presented in its theatrical aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 (regardless of what the packaging says) with letterbox bars at the top and bottom of the 16:9 frame.

This is a terrifically sharp and vibrant transfer. The movie has great cinematography featuring plenty of wild, eye-popping colors (bold yellows, reds, and purples make up a large portion of the palette). Flesh tones are spot-on accurate, and the picture also has solid black levels and good shadow detail. It's a very slick and glossy production, with minimal film grain visible and no noise or compression artifacts on the disc. Fine object detail is perhaps not rendered with the clarity of the very best High-Def discs, but this is certainly a pleasing image and a great show-off piece.

The Matador HD DVD is not flagged with an Image Constraint Token and will play in full High Definition quality over an HD DVD player's analog Component Video outputs.

Audio:
The movie's soundtrack is provided in Dolby Digital Plus 5.1 format. The volume level for dialogue and the majority of the sound mix is set rather low, but the movie has one big explosion and a few other notable sound effects that are an order of magnitude louder than the rest of the track. These moments definitely provide a certain "Wow" factor, especially if you aren't expecting them, but the track felt unbalanced to me. The surround channels are used effectively, however, and dialogue reproduction is always clear and well-integrated. Some of the songs on the soundtrack sound a little thin, but that's more likely a fault of the original recordings than the disc mastering.

Subs & Dubs:
Optional subtitles – English captions for the hearing impaired, or Spanish.
Alternate language tracks - N/A.

Extras:
All of the bonus features on this HD DVD title are recycled from the DVD edition and are presented in Standard Definition video with MPEG2 compression. All of the supplements from the DVD have carried over.

  • Feature Commentary with Richard Shepard - The writer/director discusses his intentions for the movie and the technical logistics of making an indie film. Shepard is an engaging speaker and this track has a lot of worthwhile information.
  • Feature Commentary with Richard Shepard, Pierce Brosnan, and Greg Kinnear - The second commentary has a less serious tone than Shepard's solo track. The three men spend a lot of time joking around and reminiscing about the shoot. Some information and anecdotes are duplicated from the previous commentary, but this one has more of a focus on the characters and performances. It's another good listen.
  • Making The Matador (7 min.) – Aside from the abundance of swearing in it, this is a typical EPK fluff piece consisting of interviews with the cast and crew.
  • Deleted and Extended Scenes (16 min.) – 11 scenes are provided with optional commentary from Shepard. Much of this is good footage, but the director makes a strong case for why it wouldn't work in the final cut.
  • Director Richard Shepard on The Treatment Radio Show (28 min.) – An audio interview hosted by former New York Times film critic Elvis Mitchell. Shepard discusses what he was trying to achieve with the film. Some of this is redundant to the two audio commentaries over the movie, but it's a good interview if you can stand Mitchell's grating pomposity.
  • Director Richard Shepard on Sundance Rollercoaster Radio Show (24 min.) – Another audio interview, this one conducted for The Business on National Public Radio. The focus here is on the depressing realities of trying to sell and market an independent film. Shepard discusses how his movie's reception at the Sundance Film Festival was overshadowed by Hustle & Flow, and how he almost didn't find a distributor despite positive audience reaction because his movie didn't have enough of that elusive quality known as "buzz".
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spot
Final Thoughts:
Matador is a hugely entertaining movie and the HD DVD offers nice High-Def picture quality plus a decent selection of supplements. Normally I'd be inclined to give it a Highly Recommended rating, but the disc's technical glitches temper that enthusiasm. I'll still give the disc a qualified recommendation.

Related Articles:
We Were Soldiers (HD DVD) - Greg Kinnear
HD Review Index
High-Def Revolution – DVDTalk's HD Column
Toshiba HD-A1 HD DVD Player

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