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Rumble Fish (Special Edition) (1983)

Matt Dillon , Mickey Rourke , Francis Ford Coppola  |  R |  DVD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (88 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: Matt Dillon, Mickey Rourke, Diane Lane, Dennis Hopper, Nicolas Cage
  • Directors: Francis Ford Coppola
  • Writers: Francis Ford Coppola, S.E. Hinton
  • Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Roos, Doug Claybourne
  • Format: AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, NTSC, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Dubbed: French, Spanish
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: Universal Studios
  • DVD Release Date: September 13, 2005
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (88 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0009R1TI6
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #11,210 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Learn more about "Rumble Fish (Special Edition)" on IMDb

Special Features

  • Deleted scenes  - 6 total and new to DVD
  • On location in Tulsa: The Making of Rumble Fish- A making-of featurette with new interviews with Producer Doug Claybourne, Cinematographer Steve Burum, and other cast & crew members
  • Rumble Fish: The percussion-based score - Contemporary and archival footage and interviews with Composer Steward Copeland, Sound Designer Richard Beggs, and Director Francis Ford Coppola.
  • "Don't Box Me In" Music Video - written by Stewart Copeland, featuring clips of Rumble Fish
  • Feature Commentary with Director Francis Ford Coppola

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

The second of Francis Ford Coppola's films based on the popular juvenile novels of S.E. Hinton (the first being The Outsiders), Rumble Fish split critics into opposite camps: those who admired the film for its heavily stylized indulgence, and those who hated it for the very same reason. Whatever the response, it's clearly the work of a maverick director who isn't afraid to push the limits of his innovative talent. Filmed almost entirely in black and white with an occasional dash of color for symbolic effect, this tale of alienated youth centers on gang leader Rusty James (Matt Dillon) and his band of punk pals. Rusty's got a girlfriend (Diane Lane), an older brother named Motorcycle Boy (Mickey Rourke), and a drunken father (Dennis Hopper) who've all given up trying to straighten him out. He's best at making trouble, and he pursues that skill with an enthusiastic flair that eventually catches up with him. But it's not the whacked-out story here that matters--it's the uninhibited verve of Coppola's visual approach, which includes everything from time-lapse clouds to the kind of smoky streets and alleyways that could only exist in the movies. The supporting cast includes a host of fresh faces who went on to thriving careers, including Nicolas Cage, Christopher Penn, Vincent Spano, Laurence Fishburne, and musician Tom Waits. --Jeff Shannon

Product Description

Matt Dillon, Nicolas Cage, Mickey Rourke. S.E. Hinton's bestseller gets Francis Ford Coppola's unmistakable treatment in this brilliant adaptation of one very troubled juvenile delinquent trying desperately to fill the shoes" of his older brother who was the legendary ruler of the street gang in this small Oklahoma town. 1982/b&w-color/95 min/R.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
50 of 52 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Rumble Fish: a world without coventional distance April 6, 2005
Format:DVD
There was a time, before and after the "Godfather" Parts I and II, when Francis Ford Coppola was a highly experimental filmmaker who could approach subjects on a smaller, subtler scale that would loom soulfully large in close-up. "Rumblefish", like "The Conversation", is a very good example. It's the story essentially of Rusty James, a 16-year-old living in a tenement in Oklahoma. Despite his youth, he has the vices of a much older man--drinking, smoking, fighting, and womanizing without any interference from what few adults remain in his life. His father is a lawyer, living on welfare, an alcoholic. His mother left when he was too young to remember. And he has only the memory of a legendary brother to give him guidance. Unfortunately Rusty hasn't the reputed intelligence of his mother or father or older brother, and so misunderstands the aura surrounding the legend and the stuff of which it was built. Rusty thinks the great accomplishment of his brother, otherwise known as the "motorcycle boy", was his presiding over a gang at a time when the gangs ran the streets. And he wants desperately to follow in that path. But little by little, his friends, his father, and the returning "motorcycle boy" himself show Rusty that he hasn't the intellect to lead the gang or the soul to be his brother. The "motorcycle boy" is regarded on the streets as royalty in exile. His father sees him as a great miscast figure in a play: as someone able to do anything, but unable to find anything he wants to do. And, in a final dispiriting mission, the "motorcycle boy" tells Rusty that he's wasted his time waiting for his return. He's no one's hero; no one's answer; no one's leader. If you're going to lead a people, you have to have somewhere to go. And it is perhaps at this point that we realize we're not so much watching the story of Rusty James as we are the world of the "motorcycle boy". We're really looking at the world through his eyes and ears, through the eyes and ears of a man who is colorblind and mildly deaf. We're looking at a world shot in black and white, where figures are back-lit to look gunmetal gray against flat backdrops, and move like white clouds racing across the gray sky in sequences shot through time-lapse photography. Shadows appear as thick as the things they skirt, some of which Copola actually had painted on the walls in a kind of distorted monochrome that is reminiscent of early German Expressionist cinema. Angles are drawn sharp and askew, and background action is framed in deep focus--through, beyond, or around a profile, an arm or a broken figure. And all noises--great and small--pull forward, thwarting any sense of conventional distance, time or relative scale of values. We hear water dripping, billiard balls clacking, machinery turning, delivered in the thick half-echo of a blues harp, having no greater or lesser value than the dialogue it serves to syncopate. The sense is very strong that we are seeing and hearing things as the "motorcycle boy" sees and hears them: through a broken but acute sense of perception, as the father in a rare moment of lucidity calls it. There is always a sense that we are seeing and hearing the guts of the city, the innards of the compacted humanity, and all the mitigated impulses that surrender to drink and drugs and sex and violence for want of some bigger, wider, unprecious circumstance, such as the "motorcycle boy" suspects would prevent the Rumblefish, his term for Japanese fighting fish, from killing one another.
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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "He's like royalty in exile..." June 28, 2004
By Cubist
Format:DVD
Francis Ford Coppola's Rumble Fish was booed by its audience when it debuted at the New York Film Festival and in turn was viciously crucified by North American critics upon general release. They resisted the allure of such a dreamy, atmospheric film that works on so many levels. It is also Coppola's most personal and experimental project--on par with the likes of Apocalypse Now. Rumble Fish curiously remains one of Coppola's often overlooked films. This may be due to the fact that it refuses to conform to mainstream tastes and stubbornly challenges the Hollywood system with its moody black and white cinematography and non-narrative approach.

Rumble Fish curiously remains one of Coppola's often overlooked films. It refuses to conform to mainstream tastes and stubbornly challenges the Hollywood system with its moody black and white cinematography and non-narrative approach.

It was a movie clearly ahead of its time: a stylish masterpiece that is obsessed with the notion of time, loyalty, and family. Perhaps the most distinctive feature of Coppola's film is that it presents a world that refers to the past, present, and future while remaining timeless in nature.

Right from the first image, Rumble Fish is a film that exudes style and ambience. It opens on a beautiful shot of wispy clouds rushing overhead, captured via time lapse photography to the experimental, percussive soundtrack that envelopes the whole film. This creates the feeling of not only time running out, but also a sense of timelessness.

As always, Coppola assembled an impressive ensemble cast for his film. From The Outsiders, he kept Matt Dillon, Diane Lane, Glenn Withrow, William Smith and Tom Waits, while casting actors like Mickey Rourke and Vincent Spano, who were overlooked for roles in the film for one reason or another. They all fill out their roles admirably, but Mickey Rourke in particular is mesmerizing as the Motorcycle Boy. He portrays the character as a calm, low key figure that seems to be constantly distracted as if he is in another world or reality.

Every scene is filled with dreamy imagery that never gets too abstract but, instead, draws the viewer into this strange world. Coppola uses colour to emphasize certain images, like the Siamese fighting fish in the pet store--some of the only colour in the film--to create additional layers in this complex, detailed world.

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Chemistry and Vision February 23, 2001
By A Customer
Format:VHS Tape
What makes a five star film? How about a cast starring Matt Dillon, Mikey Rourke, Dennis Hopper (and a cameo appearance by Tom Waits!), a soundtrack by Stewart Copeland (with a bit of Stan Rigeway!), a story by S.E. Hinton, and directed by Fracis Ford Coppola. This film is magic. It is modern impressionism shot in a timeless realm- a blackboard sky. Its more than rouge street kid getting into rumbles, its a story of fish that need to be set free, so they can swim to the ocean where there are no dividing lines. When this movie first came out in the early eighties, it got negative reviews and a cold public welcoming. As you can see here -an almost five star consensus- it was very ahead of its time. This movie probably hit the establishment like a bomb, which at the time was very conservative. All that aside, this is an extraordinary film- a true art piece of the silver screen- livid, bullish, and moving.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the ten best films of the 80s
Of course, the American public wouldn't agree. They ignored this film when it came out. It's strange. It's dreamlike. It's cold. It's stark. It's... oh, no... artsy. Read more
Published 20 days ago by S. O. Baldrick
3.0 out of 5 stars NUEDITY
I WAS SO SURPRISED THAT THEY WOULD PUT NUEDITY IN AN S.E HINTION MOVIE BASED ON THE BOOK. VERY DISAPPAOINTED WITH THAT AND EMBARRASED WHEN WATCHING IT WITH MY SON.
Published 1 month ago by diesel shop
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this movie
The music will haunt you, nothing like it, and the young actors here were so good, and went on to great careers. A very good movie.
Published 2 months ago by ROSALIE
3.0 out of 5 stars Another Matt Dillon movie
It's a movie that doesn't make you clap at the end. It's a gang movie like the outsiders, but in black and white.
Published 5 months ago by Andrea
4.0 out of 5 stars less 1 star for lack of a stereo soundtrack and "Don't Box Me In"...
Rumble Fish has been deservedly released to Blu-ray - with a noticeably high quality 1080p transfer. Read more
Published 7 months ago by John Frame
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed
After reading the Outsiders I had high expectations for this book. I found it be to a quick and easy read but with no real plot.
Published 13 months ago by Helen Neas
5.0 out of 5 stars just beautiful
It's not that the movie has a stunning plot, action scenes or anything like that. It's just a beautiful piece of film work. The music, the camera framing - just beautiful stuff. Read more
Published 16 months ago by treesrock
1.0 out of 5 stars Sorry, An Awful Film
I had seen on IMDb this film had a 7 average rating and I am a big Outsiders fan. Unfortunately, in my opinion, this is an awful film.
Published 19 months ago by Jaime A. Sanchez
5.0 out of 5 stars On The Cusp Of Greatness
A bunch of young relatively unknown actors and washed out Dennis bring across a very believable story. Coached by a young hot shot Coppola this film is indie heaven. Read more
Published 22 months ago by dream factory
2.0 out of 5 stars Hard to follow
I read this book years ago and remember liking it well enough, but over time I have forgotten the storyline. Read more
Published on April 11, 2011 by Shades
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