From Hell (Two-Disc Special Edition)

From Hell (Two-Disc Special Edition)
by Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes

From Hell (Two-Disc Special Edition)
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DVD details

Actor: Heather Graham, Ian Holm, Ian Richardson, Johnny Depp, Robbie Coltrane
Director: Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes
Producer: Albert Hughes
Producer: Allen Hughes
Writer: Alan Moore
Writer: Eddie Campbell
Writer: Rafael Yglesias
Writer: Terry Hayes
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Original Language)
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD-Video, NTSC, Widescreen
Picture Format: 2.35:1
Running Time: 122 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2002-05-14
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Studio: 20th Century Fox

DVD Reviews of From Hell (Two-Disc Special Edition)

DVD Review: From Hell: Director's Limited Edition
Summary: 4 Stars

Please note: I'm here reviewing the two-disc "Director's Limited Edition."

It's hard to believe this movie's almost ten years old; seems like yesterday it was released, but it was filmed in 2001. Other than the fact that it co-stars Heather Graham (who hasn't co-headlined a major motion picture in quite some time), there's very little about this film which seems dated. In fact it's probably improved with age. Staying close to the template of "Se7en," producers-directors the Hughes Brothers adapt Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell's graphic novel with aplomb, bringing the late 19th Century to life in all its opium-den decadence.

I'm sure a lot of viewers have issues with how this movie strays from the source material, but I prefer to look at it as a wholly separate entity. And it works well. In Moore's version the reader quickly knows who Jack the Ripper is, but the Hughes Brothers make this more of a traditional mystery. The viewer can, however, pretty easily figure out who the murderer is. You can expect that this film will be violent - any movie about Jack the Ripper would have to be - but it reminded me more of "Chinatown" than anything else. The web of intrigue, period details, and twisted conspiracies are all very well panned out and executed, making this much more than the grisly hackwork it could've become.

Acting is good throughout - Johnny Depp is fantastic as usual in his role, as is Heather Graham, though I have to wonder why the producers couldn't at least have gotten an English actress for the role. The actor playing Jack the Ripper is as malevolent as you could want, and I love the detail of his expanded irises when he's in "Ripper" mode, as if he's a demon in human guise. The Hughes' directing is also stylish and confident - lots of tracking shots and well-done establishing shots which pull you into the sordid world of 1880s London. I also appreciate how they filmed the gruesome murder scenes, leaving much to the viewer's imagination. Again, this could've easily become some cheap gorefest, but the Hughes have made it a bit more highbrow, going for a macabre approach that works perfectly for the material. The things the Ripper did to his victims were unthinkable, and certainly unfilmable - certainly things I'd never want to see in a film, at least.

But let's talk about the drugs. I'm all about the mystique of those Victorian-era opium dens, with the velvet walls and plush rugs and languorous addicts puffing away in contentment. Depp's character is an opium addict, so we get a few scenes in Chinese-operated dens, and the Hughes brothers bring these places fully to life. And since Depp's character solves his cases via opium-induced trances, we get a neat tripping scene, complete with worshipful close-ups of an opium pipe being prepared, fired up, and toked. But the later absinthe scene goes even further, and glorifies drug use moreso than any other scene in recent film. Depp prepares a glass of absinthe in the classic "Prague ritual" method, with laudanum-dosed sugar cube placed over a slotted spoon, doused with fire, and then plunged into the drink itself. This scene about made me want to rush out and buy an overpriced bottle of absinthe. In fact, I'm still considering it.

I'd say this movie is a good purchase, as it is one you could watch at least a few times. The first viewing you're moreso occupied keeping up with who's who, figuring out who the Ripper is, and piecing together the strands of conspiracy. And it is an enjoyable movie, despite the subject matter and the numerous prostitute-butcherings. It even has a somewhat "happy" ending that doesn't seem tacked on just to appease the Middle American market.

As for the DVD release, the movie is on disc 1 and looks and sounds great. Disc 1 also features a plethora of deleted scenes, none of which are more than two minutes long. There are about twenty of them, and they're basically little pieces that either set up scenes or provide more resolution for others. None of them stand out, and none of them were integral to the movie. That being said, since none of them are that pertinent, they could've easily been integrated back into the film, which would've truly given us the "Director's" edition promised on the cover. The only incongruous scene is the one that couldn't be integrated back into the film - an alternate ending which is the same as the one in the film itself, only taking place in a different location and a different time. It's filmed in a gorgeous Shanghai opium den (complete with a gorgeous and nude Chinese woman, about whose rear Hughes expounds upon at length in the optional commentary) and has some of the best shots in the film, but was understandably dropped in favor of the "real" ending.

Disc 2 features several making-of documentaries, including one about the Moore/Campbell graphic novel, a "tour of the murder sites" (which is a tour of the film's set rather than the actual murder locations in London), a "first look" documentary hosted by Heather Graham (which features the most annoying camera pans and zooms this side of MTV), and an insider's view into absinthe (which was still illegal when this film was made, but is now legal pretty much everywhere...even here in the US! Yep, I'm gonna buy that bottle after all.).

DVD Review: Johnny Depp rules
Summary: 5 Stars

I realize a lot of people might not agree.. but I loved this different look at the Jack the Ripper typical movie.. and of course Johnny Depp can do no wrong as far as I am concerned, and I am not a teeny bopper groupy , I am a grandmother, haha..

Joann in Sapulpa Oklahoma

DVD Review: Wicked!
Summary: 5 Stars

I love this movie!! Thought Johnny was great in it! I would DENITLEY buy buy it. The plot was very good and it's just an all around good movie.

DVD Review: What you see is....what you want to see.
Summary: 4 Stars

Having watched this 2001 DVD again the other night, and again reading through several of the myriad published histories of The Ripper crimes of 1888 Victorian London, I thought I'd add one MORE perspective on this variably-received movie, now 8 years past its initial release. As a brief background, I (like so many others) have always been fascinated by the crime story, have read a lot (by no means all) of the critical histories (some good, ie: Philip Sugden's materpiece....some acknowledged to be bogus, though entertaining, ie: "The Diary of Jack the Ripper"), and have seen several of the movie adaptations, of which "From Hell" is the most recent, and arguably the most entertaining (my other choice being the 1988 TV miniseries with Michael Caine, which for some reason is STILL not available for USA DVD's).

After reading a number of the reviews on this site (which are not unexpectedly quite varied, from one to five stars), I thought I'd offer that what you see/like/enjoy/appreciate in "From Hell" is likely mostly what you wanted to see before viewing it- not unlike the Ripper case itself, which still draws a multitude of opinions now 120 years after the fact.

First, for those reviewers who didn't find the storyline of "From Hell" believable: The published critical histories of the Ripper crimes, including the most critically acclaimed work by Sugden, all at least mention the possibility of the Crown Prince/William Gull/government conspiracy theory, as in the movie- including even the Annie Crook/Crown Prince secret marriage. While not generally considered by most serious historians to be the "answer" to the Ripper crimes(Sugden especially provides rather convincing evidence that it is sheer folly), its worth remembering that the real Ripper never was caught, or even close to being conclusively identified (not yet, anyway), so the movie is entitled to its own take, and shouldn't be overly criticized for that alone. It is also rather instructive that the more likely suspects (Montague Druitt, George Chapman, for just two examples) to have been The Ripper (Abberline, in fact, suspected Chapman) wouldn't necessarily make for as entertaining a movie, compared to the always fetching idea that a high government conspiracy is involved. So remember, "From Hell" is not a documentary (it IS based on a graphic novel, after all), nor does it intend to be a critical assessment of the published histories and police facts: it's just meant to be entertaining- and at that, I'd argue it succeeds well enough.

Lots of criticisms of Heather Graham's choice for the role of the Ripper's final (well, maybe) victim, Mary Kelley, as well as her acting performance in the film. Many criticized how beautiful she is in the film, which is out-of-sorts for an East End London prostitute in 1888. True, but it is also worth noting that all of the histories also point out that of the 5 murdered prostitutes commonly attributed to The Ripper, that Kelley was singularly attractive, including the hair. So the movie chooses to embellish her beauty: so what? For me, since I knew I wasn't watching a documentary, that bit didn't ruin the movie for me- I recognized it for what it was: just another plot device to make the movie "more viewable" for most people (though clearly not all). As far as Graham's acting, and so-so accent: again, not deal-breakers for me. It does help to be able to understand the dialogue in a movie, after all- if the cockney accents and slang were taken to the historically accurate extreme, the dialogue might well be nearly unintelligible. So get over it, and enjoy the movie for what it intends to be: entertaining.

Comments about the violence portrayed in "From Hell" seem to also run the gamut from "gratuitous" to "you got off easy" (ie: not enough). Read the actual police accounts of the crimes (and the one memorable still photo of Mary Kelley's mutilated corpse at the scene of the crime), and you'll have to agree that the movie was very circumspect and reserved as far as depictions of the actual violence goes. Any movie about The Ripper has to include some images that convey the extreme violence of the crimes, which most investigators concluded increasingly suggested a murderer rapidly losing his sanity altogether. Indeed, one prevailing opinion at the time for why the crimes abruptly stopped after Kelley's murder was that the Ripper's mind had snapped completely, and that he likely committed suicide (the Druitt hypothesis, especially). For me, this movie did a good job of conveying the horror of the crimes, without bathing the viewer in gratuitous violence: but, to each his own, I suppose.

I thought the acting performances overall were quite good, though not exactly classics in moviemaking. And again, the real Abberline was neither psychic nor an opium addict, nor was he romantically involved with Kelley- anyone who knows even a little about the history ought to recognize all that as just movie-making- whether you like it or not, it's there to make the story more interesting for some. Personally, I didn't think it added much to the entertainment value of the movie- I'd rather have seen more time devoted to the real Abberline's sleuthing in this case.

A lot of comments about the music in "From Hell"- many found it annoying largely because of it's persistence in every scene. I generally pay quite a bit of attention to musical scores in movies, and some of my favorite flicks typically are marked by their memorable scores. In no way would I call the score in "From Hell" memorable, but neither did I find it annoying, as did so many others. To me, it was another non-factor in my enjoyment of this film.

I thought the sets (with modern day Prague simming nicely for Victorian London) were effective at creating an everpresent sense of doom and dread- my wife of 30 years came out of the theatre when we first saw this in 2001 saying that she "never wanted to watch that movie again", mainly because the atmosphere was so evil and foreboding that it made her very uneasy throughout. I call that good movie-making, when it affects someone so much.

When I ask myself why I only give this movie 4 stars (3 1/2, actually), it's because I was wanting something that stuck a little closer to the known facts- not about who the Ripper might have been, mind you (since that's still fair game to this day), but about the principals involved, especially Abberline's character, and perhaps the prostitutes individually. Perhaps I was also wanting a few more of the possible suspects run by me during the film, just to keep me guessing (as was done in the 1988 TV miniseries).

But these are just my hopes/biases before watching "From Hell", and not valid criticisms of the movie as it is offered. When considered that way, it largely succeeds, and is worth viewing.

DVD Review: Slow, it goes nowhere.
Summary: 2 Stars

From Hell starring Johnny Depp is set against the backdrop of the famed killer, Jack the Ripper. Depp is a great actor but even his unique talent can't save this boring, slow-moving train wreck. Who cast Heather Graham?! She is one of the worst female actors ever!! She can't even pull off any kind of accent, her performance is painful to watch. This film tries to be scary and grounbreaking but I lost interest halfway through, snooze...

Description of From Hell (Two-Disc Special Edition)

Heavy on atmosphere and light on everything else, From Hell is visually impressive while lacking the depth of the acclaimed graphic novel it's based upon. Making their third feature since 1993's Menace II Society, twins Allen and Albert Hughes approach the Jack the Ripper case with physical precision, re-creating the gritty Whitechapel district of 1888 London in meticulous detail. What they've forgotten is the sheer terror that gripped Whitechapel in the wake of the Ripper's slaying of five prostitutes, investigated here by a Scotland Yard sleuth (Johnny Depp) who uses opium, laudanum, and absinthe to fuel his semiprescient visions of the slayings. Heather Graham attempts a slippery Cockney accent as a would-be victim, while Ian Holm steals the show as a has-been surgeon with devilish delusions of grandeur. Violence is obliquely suggested or briefly graphic, but no matter how you cut it, From Hell is only marginally thrilling as it treads familiar territory. --Jeff Shannon

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