The Killing of John Lennon

The Killing of John Lennon

The Killing of John Lennon
List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $1.95
You Save: $18.00 (90%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $1.49 (click here)
Category: DVD
See more DVD details


(Click here)
Buy this DVD movie at online store in your country
Canada

DVD details

Actor: Gunther Stern, Jonas Ball, Krisha Fairchild, Mie Omori, Robert Kirk
Brand: Genius
Cinematographer: Roger Eaton
Composer: Makana
Composer: Martin Kiszko
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language)
Format: Color, DVD, NTSC, Widescreen
Picture Format: 1.66:1
Running Time: 114 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2008-08-05
Audience Rating: Unrated
Model: 81250
Studio: Ifc
Product features:
  • Mark David Chapman, a 25 year old security guard in Hawaii, bought a plane ticket to New York with the intention of killing the world s greatest musician and dreamer: The Beatles John Lennon. Camping outside Lennon s apartment in New York waiting for an autograph, Chapman s childlike obsession with this "celebrity phony" descends into madness. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rat

DVD Reviews of The Killing of John Lennon

DVD Review: I Saw a Film Today, Oh Boy
Summary: 4 Stars

Let's get this out of the way right now for the legions of Beatles fans who believe that this movie should never have been made. These fans, as I understand it, are outraged not only that the movie exists, but that it's been getting glowing reviews since it premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2006.

"The Killing of John Lennon" is not meant to please Beatlemaniacs. It's not meant to be in "good taste." It's not even meant to be entertainment in the traditional sense of the word. It is, rather, a difficult, disturbing, and at times nauseating movie to watch, even if you never cared about the Beatles or Lennon, even if you weren't yet born on December 8, 1980, and even if you have little sense of who Mark David Chapman--played with chilling accuracy by Jonas Ball--was, what he did, and why he did it.

Why did Chapman do it? Because he was an emotionally disturbed and probably insane individual. He wanted to steal Lennon's fame, his identity. He saw himself as the reincarnation of Holden Caulfield, the hypocrisy-hating narrator of J.D. Salinger's classic novel of disaffected youth, "The Catcher in the Rye." Chapman thought Lennon was a phony who deserved to die for misleading a generation. And, as I said in my own John Lennon biography "Nowhere Man: The Final Days of John Lennon," he thought that if he killed Lennon, he'd write Chapter 27 of "Catcher" in Lennon's blood--"Catcher" ends on Chapter 26--and literally disappear into the pages of the book.

Most of this is very well explained in the movie.

But let me make one other thing really clear, too: Writer/director Andrew Piddington has chosen to show the act of murder in graphic slow motion. Chapman's five bullets, fired at close range, are seen tearing apart Lennon's flesh amidst a shower of blood, in the archway of the Dakota, as the ex-Beatle and his wife, Yoko Ono, are returning from a recording session.

So what is this filmmaker up to? Piddington has said that he wants his movie to generate "controversy, adverse criticism, and scorn." Well, that may be his marketing plan, so to speak. But he's also said that it was his intention to put on-screen an unflinching presentation of the truth as seen through Chapman's eyes, as he goes from his dead-end job as a security guard in Hawaii to the aftermath of the murder and his solitary confinement in Attica. Piddington accomplishes this by basing his impressionistic and at times surreal screenplay on the murderer's journals, statements he made to the police and psychiatrists, interviews, depositions, and court transcripts. The director says that there's nothing in the script that he didn't corroborate three times.

That's an almost impossible standard to employ for any work of journalism, especially for a documentary-like feature film shot on a miniscule budget of $500,000. But it perhaps explains why a number of well-known events and crucial bits of information are missing from the movie. They include:

--Chapman's belief that his head and the walls of his room are populated by a civilization he calls the "little people."
--Chapman, on his flight to New York from Georgia, sees Lennon on the cover of the November 1980 Esquire magazine, and after reading the article describing the ex-Beatle as little more than a rich businessman, becomes even more enraged by Lennon's "phoniness."
--Chapman meets John's son Sean and his governess in front of the Dakota.
--Chapman, in his hotel, reads the January 1981 Playboy interview with Lennon and learns that sometimes he hires fans off the street to work for him.
--Chapman asks Lennon for a job as Lennon autographs his record album.
--Chapman, on the morning of the murder, sees Mia Farrow walk in front of the Dakota and takes that as yet another sign that he should kill Lennon. (Farrow played Rosemary, who gives birth to the devil in the Dakota, in the film "Rosemary's Baby.")

The absence of this information is, in the scheme of the film, a piddling criticism that takes nothing away from Ball's uncannily realistic portrayal of Chapman. And only people intimately familiar with the story (like me) would notice it's missing.

"The Killing of John Lennon," shot on location in New York, Honolulu, and Decatur, Georgia, is a minor miracle of genuine independent/guerrilla filmmaking and should be commended as such. It couldn't have been easy for Piddington to shoot in front of the Dakota, and that's undoubtedly why many scenes that in real life took place on the sidewalk directly in front of the building were staged down the block or across the street. And, presumably, it was beyond the limits of Piddington's budget to shoot the crowds of Lennon fans that haunted the Dakota daily, their numbers swelling after Lennon released "Double Fantasy," the album that marked his return to the public eye after five years of seclusion.

And even with its numerous anachronisms--the Virgin Megastore in Times Square, modern subway turnstiles, and the occasional 21st century car--the film doesn't look cheap; it looks real, and real scary. If anything, "The Killing of John Lennon" serves as an illustration of the problems associated with low-budget filmmaking and how they can be creatively overcome by a determined and talented filmmaker.
More The Killing of John Lennon reviews:
1 2 3
Bestsellers in DVD
The Story of Jeremiah [VHS] ImageThe Story of Jeremiah [VHS]
Vision Video; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Wresting With God [VHS] ImageWresting With God [VHS]
by Vision Video
Vision Video; Published: 1990-10-01; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $19.99
Study Bible Video with Workbook [VHS] ImageStudy Bible Video with Workbook [VHS]
Spring Arbor Distributors; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $7.95
Price in other shops: $44.00
Tempo:Childrens TV Favourites Video [VHS] ImageTempo:Childrens TV Favourites Video [VHS]
HarperCollins Audio; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $9.17
Price in other shops: $9.98
Tempo.Herbs:Parseley'Sb/Party Video [VHS] ImageTempo.Herbs:Parseley'Sb/ Party Video [VHS]
HarperCollins Audio; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Strike the Original Match [VHS] ImageStrike the Original Match [VHS]
New Liberty Films; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Price in other shops: $14.95
Medjugorje The Miracles and the Message [VHS] ImageMedjugorje The Miracles and the Message [VHS]
JPN Film Production; Release date: 1995-12-15; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Best price: $29.99
Mayo Clinic Echocardiography Review Course for Boards and Recertification DVD 2008 ImageMayo Clinic Echocardiography Review Course for Boards and Recertification DVD 2008
by Mayo
DVD
Price in other shops: $1,463.24
Pediatric Diagnostic Imaging DVD: Single User ImagePediatric Diagnostic Imaging DVD: Single User
by Oakstone
DVD
Price in other shops: $1,463.24
Cost Accounting [VHS] ImageCost Accounting [VHS]
by Charles T. Horngren, George Foster, Srikant M. Datar, Howard Teall
Pearson Canada, Toronto; VHS Tape; VHS Video
Similar DVDs, VHS Video, Audio CDs
The Dick Cavett Show - John Lennon & Yoko Ono ImageThe Dick Cavett Show - John Lennon & Yoko Ono
Sony; Release date: 2005-11-01; DVD
Best price: $2.77
Price in other shops: $24.99
The Tomorrow Show: John, Paul, Tom & Ringo ImageThe Tomorrow Show: John, Paul, Tom & Ringo
VIS; Release date: 2008-04-01; DVD
Best price: $5.88
Price in other shops: $24.99
Two of Us ImageTwo of Us
Paramount; Release date: 2003-01-21; DVD
Best price: $12.62
Price in other shops: $19.99
Imagine: John Lennon (Deluxe Edition) ImageImagine: John Lennon (Deluxe Edition)
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2005-12-06; DVD
Best price: $8.23
Price in other shops: $19.97
The U.S. vs. John Lennon ImageThe U.S. vs. John Lennon
Lions Gate; Release date: 2007-02-13; DVD
Best price: $5.05
Price in other shops: $14.98
Lennon NYC ImageLennon NYC
AAE; Release date: 2010-12-07; DVD
Best price: $9.97
Price in other shops: $24.95
Nowhere Boy ImageNowhere Boy
SON; Release date: 2011-01-25; DVD
Best price: $9.44
Price in other shops: $28.95
John Lennon: Love Is All You Need ImageJohn Lennon: Love Is All You Need
EBH; Release date: 2011-03-08; DVD
Best price: $3.06
Price in other shops: $6.99
American Justice - The John Lennon Assassination ImageAmerican Justice - The John Lennon Assassination
A and E Home Video; Release date: 2006-03-28; DVD
Best price: $4.98
Price in other shops: $24.95
Chapter 27 ImageChapter 27
Genius; Release date: 2008-09-30; DVD
Best price: $4.72
Price in other shops: $19.93
Compare prices and read customer reviews for more than one million DVD titles.
Oscar 2005 Winners