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Slipcover in Original Pressing
Altered Innocence | 2022 | 105 min | Not rated | Nov 29, 2022
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Video
Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.50:1 Original aspect ratio: 1.50:1
Audio
German: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
German: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 ( less)
Subtitles
English
Discs
Blu-ray Disc Single disc (1 BD-25)
Packaging
Slipcover in original pressing Inner print
Playback
2K Blu-ray: Region A, B (C untested)
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Price
List price: $27.95
Amazon: $16.03 (Save 43%)
New from: $16.03 (Save 43%)
In Stock
Movie rating
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7.1
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Blu-ray review
Movie |
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3.5 |
Video |
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4.0 |
Audio |
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4.0 |
Extras |
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3.0 |
Overall |
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4.0
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20% popularity
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Grand Jeté (2022)
Grand Jeté Blu-ray delivers great video and audio in this excellent Blu-ray release
In order to concentrate on her career, a ballet teacher lives estranged from her young son, who grew up with her mother. When she meets him again after years, an affection develops that goes far beyond maternal love. For more about Grand Jeté and the Grand Jeté Blu-ray release, see Grand Jeté Blu-ray Review published by Brian Orndorf on November 6, 2022 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.0 out of 5. Director: Isabelle Stever
Starring: Emil von Schönfels
» See full cast & crew
Grand Jeté Blu-ray Review
Reviewed by Brian Orndorf, November 6, 2022
"Grand Jete" is a German production about the timeless love between a boy and his mother. Well, perhaps not timeless. And "love" here means "a
sudden sexual relationship." Screenwriter Anna Melikova has the challenge of bringing Anke Stelling's book to the screen, making sense of incest and
profound psychological problems, which aren't easy to watch. Director Isabelle Stever tries to find her own way to approach such a sensitive topic,
electing to fully immerse the picture in a sensorial viewing experience, hoping to generate a special mood to best approach a troubling tale of
obsession. "Grand Jete" doesn't go full Haneke, but it comes close, making the viewing experience both compellingly and irritatingly uncomfortable as
Stever tries to put together a puzzle of mental illness, keeping away from dramatic structure for as long as possible.
Nadja (Sarah Nevada Grether) is a ballet teacher and former star of the stage who's fallen into depression. Her body is a mess and her mind is
burning, working to carry on with daily business. She's moved into her mother's apartment, reuniting with her son, Mario (Emil von Schonfels), a
maturing young man who's been estranged from his parent for most of his life, raised by his grandmother. Learning to be with each other again,
Nadja and Mario soon embark on a sexual relationship, giving the older woman an adventure of pleasures while an emotional breakdown seeps out
of her system.
"Grand Jete" doesn't carry big Kay Parker energy. It's much more of an esoteric endeavor, with the director defining her creative approach in the
opening act, which largely focuses on Nadja's skin and the sounds of her rituals. Cinematography focuses on movement, not always faces, observing
Nadja's decay and pain, working to maintain her position as a viable ballerina. This involves teaching as well, dealing with girls trying to achieve
their dream of dance, which involves strict instruction and weekly weigh-ins.
A reunion with Mario creates something approximating a story in "Grand Jete," with the estranged mother drawn to her son, who works in a local
gym and, during his free time, competes in penis weightlifting endurance trials (someone call the Olympic Committee). This confidence is catnip to
Nadja, who quickly seduces her willing child, even asking him his thoughts on being inside of her for a second time. "Grand Jete" doesn't create a
grand arc of corruption with the taboo pairing, instead examining behavioral quirks and acts of submission as Nadja slowly relinquishes control,
giving herself to a situation that excites her in ways she rarely feels anymore.
Grand Jeté Blu-ray, Video Quality
The AVC encoded image (1.50:1 aspect ratio) presentation delivers compelling detail throughout the viewing experience. "Grand Jete" is a movie of
surfaces and skin, and texture remains interesting as bodies and spaces are explored. Exteriors retain dimension. Colors are secure, with warmer living
spaces and more dynamic club visits. Clothing is also crisply defined. Skin tones are natural. Delineation is satisfactory. Grain is fine and film-like.
Grand Jeté Blu-ray, Audio Quality
The 5.1 DTS-HD MA mix offers clear dialogue exchanges and a compelling sense of atmospherics as the characters make their way through rooms and
around the city. Surrounds are subtle, with the listening event largely frontal, capturing growing intimacy. Music is crisp, exploring soundtrack selections
and club visits, though low-end deals lightly with dance music beats.
Grand Jeté Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation
"Grand Jete" isn't out to make a point. It prefers to wander through this dire relationship, which becomes a source of unintentional comedy as Stever
observes Mario eat a meal in real time, and there's a lengthy sequence concentrating on Nadja vomiting into a toilet. Euro Cinema extremes are present
(Nadja eventually masturbates with a pair of scissors) and not always welcome, but at the core of "Grand Jete" is a reasonably interesting study of
madness in its most subtle forms, providing strong character inspection in the midst of potent psychological violence and directorial indulgence.
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