DVD
Seven Years In Tibet£4.99 Free DeliveryRRP: £19.99 | You save: £15.00 (75%) In stock | Usually dispatched within 24 hours |

Average rating (3 reviews)
A very touching film!
Lector | 15/06/2008 | See all Lector's reviews (1) »
This film is one that could make you a Brad Pitt fun. I believe that someone that enjoys good films with real historical moments will enjoy this film as much as I do. Be careful you are not watching mr. and ms. Smith. The action is limited but the atmosphere of the film is astonishing. By far the best work of Brad Pitt. Recomended if you are a real friend of good movies and not someone that would think that Rambo should win 11 oscars!
Moving and beautifully filmed
CarolHaynes | 02/04/2008 | See all CarolHaynes' reviews (2) »
I don't know which film the earlier reviewer watched but it can't have been the film I saw. I watched the film with a German speaker who concurred that Brad's Austrian accent was surprisingly fine (if a little uneven at times). If you are watching this for high octane action forget it but if you want to see some beautiful filming and amazing acting (especially from the young Dalai Lama) then this is well worth the price and the effort required to watch it. It is a long film and does expect the viewer to have an attention span beyond that usually required from the cartoon generation but is rewarding for those who stay the course. John Williams score is polished and there are some interesting cameo performances (including the Dalai Lama's sister playing her own mother).
The only area of the film I find less than satisfactory is the early portrayal of Heinrich Harrer. He may well have been a bit egocentric and selfish to the point of obnoxious in his early days but the point is a bit laboured in the film with HH constantly being so rude and unpleasant to his climbing companions that it is surprising that anyone was prepared to spend a day with him - let alone a 4 month expedition.
The climbing scenes were unusually well done for Hollwood. As an ex-climber they seemed technically pretty accurate and authentic. It does help that the two leads obviously enjoyed the pre-filming training where they did actually learn to climb properly.
All in all a very good film and whilst its historical accuracy of Tibet has been questioned it does provide a good introduction to the culture that was all but swept away by Mao's Chinese hoards.
Dire
Long123 | 19/02/2008 | See all Long123's reviews (34) »
Dull, boring, very little action, poor acting - his Austrian accent is terrible, the plot is hopelessly flawed, there are no funny moments, no touching moments, no exciting moments. The end is not a let-down if you expect it to follow the rest of the film but is if you were expecting a powerful conclusion to make it all worth-while. Sheer waste of nine quid, the space on your shelf and the 2 hours ten minutes you'll spend watching it if you plan on buying this film. Unless of course you want something to send you to sleep...


















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