| | | "Newly Inspired, Faster Paced, More Action-Packed." Features: DVD, Pan and Scan (TV Format) Academy award winning director Oliver Stone presents a breathtaking new cut of his sweeping epic film, Alexander, the true story of the world's greatest warrior. Using new footage and dramatically reshaping dozens of scenes, he brings to life the overpowering forces and fierce personalities that forever changed history. Torn by the war between his parents (Angelina Jolie and Val Kilmer), Alexander (Colin Farrell) left Greece to face massive armies in Persia, Afghanistan and India -- and was never defeated. "Fortune favors the bold" Stone powerfully demonstrates in this bold new film, Alexander: Director's Cut. This DVD Giftset features the Alexander: Director's Cut DVD and the book Barbecue: 101 Essential Tips! "...stunning battle sequences!" Ken Fox, TV Guide "...full of brilliant highlights..." Wesley Morris, Boston Globe "...Farrell projects an appealing blend of weakness, strength, charisma, idealism and political shrewdness." William Arnold, Seattle Post-Intelligencer
 Editor's Note
 Director Oliver Stone chalks up an ambitious entry on his biopic resume (past entries include films about Jim Morrison, Richard Nixon, and JFK among others) with this cinematic treatise on the life of the mighty Alexander the Great. Despite his young death at 32, Alexander packed some unimaginable conquests into his limited years by ruling over a huge chunk of the globe. Stone draws on a voice-over narration provided by Anthony Hopkins, whose character is named Ptolemy, to aurally depict some of the battles. Thus, Stone shifts the weight of the film to focus on the personality of Alexander (Colin Farrell), a man who is stricken by overwhelming personal insecurities that come in direct contrast to his bold achievements. Complex dealings with his mother (Angelina Jolie) and father (Val Kilmer) plague him, as does his turbulent relationship with his wife, Roxane (Rosario Dawson). His connection with his best friend, Hephaestion (Jared Leto), is ambiguous, with Stone touching on their vaunted homosexuality via some shared tender moments. As these personal battles are played out, Ptolemy fills the historic gaps in the narrative by charting the incredible conflicts that raged at Alexander's behest. Eventually, Stone lets loose with an epic on-screen battle, which sees Alexander's troops rumble across India in another country-conquering quest. But while his minions struggle, and Alexander demands success, it becomes clear that he is his own worst enemy. With the only real threat to Alexander coming from a tempestuous struggle with his own ego, Stone's summation of the great historical leader paints a picture of an embittered and solitary figure who was able to rule everyone apart from himself.
| Features | Audio Commentary By Oliver Stone |  | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Giftset Includes The Book "Barbecue: 101 Essential Tips" |  | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Warner |
 | Release Date: 5/23/2006 |
 | Running Time: 167 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2004 |  | Catalog ID: 80721 |  | UPC: 00012569807211 |  | Number of Discs: 2 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Pan and Scan (TV Format) 1.33:1 [4:3] |
| Cast & Crew
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| | Professional Reviews | Uncut "[With] two huge, astonishing battles..." 09/01/2005 p.149ReelViews 4 of 10 To sum up Alexander in three words, I would choose the following: three-hour miscalculation. Although some aspects of Oliver Stone's sword-and-sandals epic are worthy of mention (and even praise), they are dwarfed by the missteps and examples of bad judgment. Instead of delivering a mainstream tale of battle and glory along the lines of Gladiator, Stone decided to re-imagine the great Alexander as a Hamlet-like figure. Rather than developing the title character as a larger-than-life individual whose flaws give him a more rounded personality, Stone turns Alexander into a character who is defined by those flaws. He is weak, indecisive, plagued by self-doubt, and obsessed. It's not credible that a man of this nature could conquer 90% of the known world by the age of 32, and therein lies Alexander's conundrum. By de-mythologizing Alexander, Stone has turned him into an unbelievable individual. We accept great deeds from great people, not from sniveling whiners. - James Berardinelli San Francisco Chronicle 5 of 10 Alexander, Oliver Stone's three-hour screen biography of Alexander the Great, is epic in scale but not epic in spirit, a wallow in carnage that fails to demonstrate what was so great about this conqueror, after all. It intersperses scenes of slaughter with scenes of Alexander, either exhorting his troops to kill yet more people or sulking because he's misunderstood. It becomes monotonous. - Mick LaSalle Chicago Sun-Times 5 of 10 When the mighty fall, it is from a greater height. So it was with Alexander the Great, and so it is with Oliver Stone's Alexander. Here is an ambitious and sincere film that fails to find a focus for its elusive subject. Stone is fascinated by two aspects of Alexander: his pan-nationalism and his pan-sexualism. He shows him trying to unite many peoples under one throne while remaining equally inclusive with his choices of lovers. - Roger Ebert
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