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From Monsters and Critics.com DVD Features The movie 'Walk the Line' portrays Johnny Cash in all his glory and all his excesses, over the course of three decades. It is richly underscored by the ongoing relationship struggle between Johnny and June Carter and their initial ill-fated timing in matters of love. It is their story that captivates your attention, and it's the heart and soul of this movie. James Mangold skillfully chronicles the details of Johnny Cash's hard life. Cash's humble, Arkansas sharecropper beginnings made bearable by young Cash's love of music and old-time gospel hymns and radio shows such as the Grand Ole Opry, the National Barn Dance and the Wheeling Jamboree-some featuring the famous Carter Family and a very young June Carter singing. A tragic event in Cash's childhood colors him with unresolved grief that haunts him throughout the movie. Mangold takes us to Cash's arrival on the music scene through successful recordings with Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee, where he is immersed in the intense touring and recording world alongside American music trailblazers Jerry Lee Lewis (played brilliantly by Waylon Payne), Roy Orbison, Waylon Jennings and Elvis Presley. The movie rocks with the flavor and sound of the forties, fifties and sixties with brilliant costuming and spot-on production design. Joaquin Phoenix does his own take on Cash's voice, one of the most distinctive in music history. Reese Witherspoon is even better as June Carter. Both their looks were the result of combined efforts of costume designer Arianne Phillips, and makeup department head Jane Galli, Reese's own make up artist, Brad Wilder, and hair department head Kathrine Gordon and Reese Witherspoon's own hairstylist- Anne Morgan. Monsters and Critics was fortunate to have a conversation with James Mangold to talk "Walk the Line" and the new extended DVD release.
M&C: How involved were you in putting the extended footage / scenes in this re-mastered copy? In that case, I was grateful to be able to release my original cut and have audiences see it. In the case of 'Walk the Line', my goal was to provide fans with a larger canvas of the musical sequences (performed beginning to end) and to reinsert some amazing dramatic scenes, scenes in which Joaquin, Reese and the rest of the cast do amazing work and further flesh out John's story. Frankly, I think audiences are getting more and more interested in exploring worlds deeper and deeper. James Mangold: It was very important that we recreate the moment when all these amazing talents were travelling together and taking the stage together. But it was equally important to underplay the "iconic" nature of them (Elvis, Waylon, Roy, etc) because they weren't huge stars yet (at the beginning of the film) and we wanted to capture the innocence when these kids first took the stage never knowing the stardom that was about to engulf them. I also love their first meeting at a diner early in the film. Lastly, the scene in which Joaquin auditions for Dallas Roberts playing Sam Phillips is an amazing and bold piece of acting (on both parts) that I never get tired of seeing. I really believe in the family you create on a set and particularly when you are trying to make something amazing happen against the odds and with too little money, it really helps to work with people you love and trust. Walk the Line (Extended Cut) is now available at Amazon. As of yet, there is not a release date for this version of the DVD in the UK. Visit the DVD database for more information. Click Here to enter to win a copy of Walk the Line (Extended Cut) © Copyright 2007 by monstersandcritics.com. This notice cannot be removed without permission. |