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The deer hunter [videorecording] / Universal Pictures and EMI presents ; a Michael Cimino film ; story by Michael Cimino & Deric Washburn and Louis Garfinkle & Quinn K. Redeker ; screenplay by Deric Washburn ; produced by Barry Spikings, Michael Deely, Michael Cimino, John Peverall ; directed by Michael Cimino.

Summary:

Five friends, Michael, Nick, Steven, Stan, and Axel, who are from a small town in middle America, work in the stifling heat and infernal din of a steel mill. They blow off steam after work at a neighborhood tavern. They go deer hunting every fall. One day late in 1968, Michael, Steven, and Nick leave for a tour of duty in Vietnam. Before they go, Steven marries the pregnant Angela; their wedding reception serves as the friend's farewell party. 30 years after it appeared, this film can still generate intense responses and controversy. Perhaps the best description of the subject was offered by film critic Roger Ebert, who said, "'The Deer Hunter' is said to be about many subjects: About male bonding, about mindless patriotism, about the dehumanizing effects of war, about Nixon's "silent majority." It is about any of those things that you choose, if you choose, but more than anything else, it is a heartbreakingly effective fictional machine that evokes the agony of the Vietnam time."

Record details

  • ISBN: 0783225997
  • ISBN: 9780783225999
  • Physical Description: 1 videodisc (184 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in.
  • Edition: Widescreen
  • Publisher: Universal City, Calif. : Universal Studios Home Entertainment, [2012]

Content descriptions

Creation/Production Credits Note:
Director of photography, Vilmos Zsigmond ; editor, Peter Zinner ; art directors, Ron Hobbs and Kim Swados ; music, Stanley Myers ; production consultant, Joann Carelli ; Vietnamese advisor, Eleanor Dawson.
Participant or Performer Note:
Robert De Niro (Michael), John Cazale (Stan), John Savage (Steven), Meryl Streep (Linda), Christopher Walken (Nick), George Dzundza (John), Shirley Stoler (Steven's mother), Chuck Aspegren (Axel), Rutanya Alda (Angela).
Date/Time and Place of an Event Note:
Originally produced as an American motion picture in 1978.
Target Audience Note:
MPAA rating: Rated R.
System Details Note:
DVD; Region 1, NTSC; Dolby surround and 2.0; widescreen presentation, preserving the 2.35:1 aspect ratio of the original theatrical exhibition.
Language Note:
In English (surround or 2.0) or Spanish (mono.) with optional subtitles in English for the deaf and hearing impaired, French or Spanish.
Subject: Male friendship > Drama.
Vietnam War, 1961-1975 > Drama.
Soldiers > United States > Drama.
Vietnam War, 1961-1975 > Prisoners and prisons > Drama.
Man-woman relationships > Drama.
Military deserters > United States > Drama.
Vietnam > History > 1945-1975 > Drama.
Pennsylvania > Drama.
Vietnam > Drama.
Genre: War films.
Feature films.
Historical films.
Video recordings for the hearing impaired.

Available copies

  • 22 of 24 copies available at NC Cardinal. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Toe River Valley Regional Library .

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 24 total copies.
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Summary: Five friends, Michael, Nick, Steven, Stan, and Axel, who are from a small town in middle America, work in the stifling heat and infernal din of a steel mill. They blow off steam after work at a neighborhood tavern. They go deer hunting every fall. One day late in 1968, Michael, Steven, and Nick leave for a tour of duty in Vietnam. Before they go, Steven marries the pregnant Angela; their wedding reception serves as the friend's farewell party. 30 years after it appeared, this film can still generate intense responses and controversy. Perhaps the best description of the subject was offered by film critic Roger Ebert, who said, "'The Deer Hunter' is said to be about many subjects: About male bonding, about mindless patriotism, about the dehumanizing effects of war, about Nixon's "silent majority." It is about any of those things that you choose, if you choose, but more than anything else, it is a heartbreakingly effective fictional machine that evokes the agony of the Vietnam time."