Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Posted By: Someonelse
SD / DVD IMDb
Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Cronos (1992)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:32:22 | 7,65 Gb
Audio: Español AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: English (+SDH)
Genre: Art-house, Horror, Fantasy | The Criterion Collection #551

Director: Guillermo del Toro
Writer: Guillermo del Toro (screenplay)
Stars: Federico Luppi, Ron Perlman, Claudio Brook


Guillermo Del Toro has become one of the most interesting of the new auteurs. Over the course of just seven films in 18 years, he has established a definite, fluid, rich visual style and specific pet themes, not to mention a singular fascination and enthusiasm for a certain kind of genre film. He also manages the nearly impossible feat of juxtaposing personal comic book movies (Blade II, Hellboy) in Hollywood and more ambitious works of art (The Devil's Backbone, Pan's Labyrinth) elsewhere.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

I had seen his debut feature Cronos some time back, and I liked it, but it did not resonate with me, and I was glad for the chance to see it again now that I have become more familiar with Del Toro's work as a whole, and now that the Criterion Collection has released it on a spectacular Blu-Ray for 2010. Tellingly, it's an English/Spanish hybrid, with characters speaking both languages, and it begins Del Toro's fascination with gears and mazes.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Jesus Gris (Federico Luppi) runs an antique shop in Mexico. Inside a little statue, he discovers a beautiful metallic scarab. As he holds it in his hand and winds its key, it stabs him and slices open his flesh. Gris becomes agitated and tormented, and is drawn to the device again. Upon using it a second time, he discovers that he has begun to age backwards, and that he has never felt better in his life. Unfortunately, he has become somewhat addicted to the device and he begins suffering weird side effects, such as being unable to endure sunlight.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Meanwhile, a sick old man, De la Guardia (Claudio Brook), is looking for the device hoping to use it to restore his own youth and vitality. He has spent his life studying the device and knows its drawbacks. He also has a jumbo-sized nephew, Angel (Ron Perlman), who does the old man's dirty work, negotiating and charming people, and when that doesn't work, pounding and pummeling them.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Perlman is great here (he would go on to work with Del Toro three more times, notably as the lead in the Hellboy movies) but what really makes Cronos special is the inclusion of Gris' beloved granddaughter Aurora (Tamara Shanath), who helplessly watches her grandfather's transformation, and eventually decides to come to his aid. Del Toro doesn't exactly film from her point of view, but by including her, he adds a dimension of fairy tales, innocence and unreality to the otherwise horrific proceedings. She barely speaks, and there doesn't seem to be any worry over exposing her to gory, graphic images. Rather, she seems to enable them. Indeed, without her presence to ignite his curious, playful sensibility, Gris probably never would have discovered the scarab in the first place.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

The alchemist Uberto Fulcanelli is another clever invention, giving the movie a long sense of history and myth, not to mention setting the movie during Christmas and New Year's, providing a weird kind of decorative backdrop. The vampire images aren't particularly ordinary either; consider the scene in which Gris, during a New Year's celebration, follows a man with a bloody nose into the bathroom. He stares hungrily at the wound, and then considers licking the discarded blood from the rim of the sink. Before he can move, a man comes and washes it away, but there is still a little puddle on the floor…

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

I suppose that the overall story arc here isn't really that special or deep, but Del Toro conjures up a delightfully potent atmosphere and motion for it, born no doubt of a real appreciation for such things. One of extras on the new Blu-ray is a tour of Del Toro's personal museum, an astounding collection of movie memorabilia, sculptures, props, toys, posters, books, masks, and videos that would humble even Tarantino or Scorsese. Even if he's reaching into a grab bag of stories already told, Del Toro brings that same kind of intensity to the camera. And that's what makes him special.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Otherwise, the Criterion disc comes with a terrific early Del Toro short film, recently completed, called Geometria (based on a story by Fredric Brown). The movie comes with its opening narration available in Spanish, or the English version recorded for the 1993 U.S. theatrical release. There are two commentary tracks, many interviews, stills, and a trailer.

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Cronos is the first Guillermo Del Toro movie, and it is a great achievement. There's not much to say : it is a beautiful movie, a classical, beautiful and simple movie. There's some fantastic in it, but that's not all : the greatness of this movie is based on the characters : Ron Perlman and the man at the morgue are specially brilliant. It is dark, full of suspense, tensed, and extremely funny in the same time. With low budget and simple frames, Del Toro has managed to picture the true essence of cinema : a good story, good characters, and lots of blood, humor and cruelty. What else could we add ? Just watch this. This movie has been badly underrated. It is intelligent and honest. Far superior to lots of over intellectual or too much precious horror movies with over beautiful aesthetics. CRONOS is simply brilliant. Long life to Guillermo Del Toro !
IMDB Reviewer

Cronos (1992) [The Criterion Collection #551]

Special Features:
- New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Guillermo del Toro and cinematographer Guillermo Navarro
- Optional original Spanish-language voice-over introduction
- Two audio commentaries, one featuring del Toro, the other producers Arthur H. Gorson and Bertha Navarro and coproducer Alejandro Springall
- Geometria (06:28), an unreleased 1987 short horror film by del Toro, finished in 2010, with a new video interview with the director (17:35)
- Welcome to Bleak House (10:15), a video tour by del Toro of his home offices, featuring his personal collections
- New video interviews with del Toro, Navarro (12:36), and actor Ron Perlman (07:26)
- Video interview with actor Federico Luppi (05:26)
- Stills gallery
- Trailer
- New and improved English subtitle translation, approved by the director

All Credits goes to Original uploader.


–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––