
Blue Velvet
(Terciopelo azul)
(USA, 1986) [Color, 120 m.].
Género: Thriller psicológico, Cine negro (Post-noir), Drama / Cine independiente USA
IMDb
Ficha técnica.
Dirección: David Lynch.
Guión: David Lynch.
Fotografía: Frederick Elmes (Color).
Música: Angelo Badalamenti.
Producción: Fred C. Caruso, Richard A. Roth.
Productora: De Laurentiis Entertainment Group (DEG).
Premios:
- 1986: Nominada al Oscar: Mejor director (David Lynch)
- 1986: Festival de Cine Fantástico de Sitges: Mejor película, fotografía
Sinopsis: Una mañana, Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan), después de visitar a su padre en el hospital, encuentra entre unos arbustos una oreja humana. La guarda en una bolsa de papel y la lleva a la comisaría de policía, donde le atiende el detective Williams (George Dickerson), que es vecino suyo. Comienza así una misteriosa intriga que desvelará extraños sucesos acontecidos en una pequeña localidad de Carolina del Norte. (FILMAFFINITY)
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"Otros directores trabajan mucho y duramente para lograr la febril perversidad que tan natural le sale a David Lynch, cuyo "Terciopelo azul" se ha convertido en un clásico de culto de forma instantánea (...) tan fascinante como extraña (...) confirma a Lynch como un innovador, técnicamente brillante y alguien con quien mejor no encontrarte en un callejón oscuro" (Janet Maslin: The New York Times)
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"Hay ocasiones en que un cineasta acierta a atisbar que es cierto que hay otros mundos, y también que están en éste. Sólo hace falta saber mirar. Terciopelo azul se abre con una inenarrable imagen de unos bomberos (...) Entonces se desata la magia del cine, un torrente de sensaciones que impulsan al espectador a un thriller desorbitado y fantasmal, a la pesadilla de las realidades que se ocultan en los pliegues de lo cotidiano." (Miguel Ángel Palomo: Diario El País)
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"Obra maestra" (Guillermo Cabrera Infante)
La calma del idílico pueblo de Lumberton se rompe cuando Jeffrey Beaumont descubre una oreja humana en su jardín. Con ayuda de Sandy, la dulce hija del policía local que investiga el caso, Beaumont descubre que el macabro hallazgo está relacionado con Dorothy Vallens, cantante atormentada por un sádico gángster.
Nada es lo que parece. Para el personalísimo director David Lynch, bajo la cómoda existencia cotidiana existe un submundo turbio e irreal. Esta premisa, también presente en otras de sus obras, como Corazón salvaje o la serie Twin Peaks, aparece por primera vez en este film, la película de culto por excelencia de los 80, y la que consagró a Lynch. El insano cineasta despliega sus toques surrealistas habituales, sin que esto impida que se pueda seguir claramente la trama central, a diferencia de algunas de sus obras posteriores. Protagoniza el film uno de sus actores fetiche, Kyle MacLachlan (DeCine21).


AMG SYNOPSIS: Director David Lynch crafted this hallucinogenic mystery-thriller that probes beneath the cheerful surface of suburban America to discover sadomasochistic violence, corruption, drug abuse, crime and perversion. Kyle Maclachlan stars as Jeffrey Beaumont, a square-jawed young man who returns to his picture-perfect small town when his father suffers a stroke. Walking through a field near his home, Jeff discovers a severed human ear, which he immediately brings to the police. Their disinterest sparks Jeff's curiosity, and he is soon drawn into a dangerous drama that's being played out by a lounge singer, Dorothy Vallens (Isabella Rossellini) and the ether-addicted Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper). The sociopathic Booth has kidnapped Dorothy's young son and is using the child as a bargaining chip to repeatedly beat, humiliate and rape Dorothy. Though he's drawn to the virginal, wholesome Sandy Williams (Laura Dern), Jeff is also aroused by Dorothy and in trying to aid her, he discovers his dark side. As the film nears its conclusion, our hero learns that many more indivduals are tacitly involved with Frank, including a suave, lip-synching singer, Ben (Dean Stockwell), who is minding the kidnapped boy. Director Lynch explored many similar themes of the "disease" lying just under the surface of the small town, all-American façade in his later television series Twin Peaks (1990-91). -- Karl Williams
AMG REVIEW: David Lynch's map of the terrain between wet dream and nightmare, Blue Velvet reaffirmed the director's status as one of the most vital talents in American filmmaking, and achieved a mood and tone which would indelibly influence popular culture for the remainder of the 20th century. Though much of the film revolves around a compelling, lurid mystery -- executed in a tense, economical manner that might have made Alfred Hitchcock proud -- Blue Velvet is more interested in the mysteries of desire and the horrors of unchecked deviance. Lynch uses the form, style, and mood of a film noir to challenge and ultimately subvert notions of innocence, sexuality, and love. Even the casting reflects the director's agenda: Lynch's fresh young heroes, as played by Kyle MacLachlan and Laura Dern, are like leads in a 1950s hygiene film; he pits them against two icons of a lost Hollywood, Isabella Rossellini and Dennis Hopper, the latter turning in a jolting, career-resuscitating performance. Though it specifies no particular time, Blue Velvet's "golly gee" milieu of Lumberton, replete with soda fountains, convertibles, and hardware stores, is a Reagan-era idyll, an exaggeration of the 1980s concept of the American Dream. But from the moment Lynch's camera delves underground (in a surreal, Buñuel-like moment) to take in a thriving community of ants, it's clear that the director is more interested in the Reagan of Kings Row (1941), and in the grotesque despair that lurks beneath the surface of placid middle-American life. The film was a breakthrough for Lynch in the way it melded the dream worlds of Eraserhead (1977) and Dune (1984) with the more literal, narrative approach of The Elephant Man (1980): its densely saturated, red-white-and-blue color scheme was stunningly photographed by Fredrick Elmes; the haunting, expressionistic soundscape was designed by frequent Lynch collaborator Alan Splet. -- Michael Hastings

Versión BDDRip HD 720p VO+SI 5,47 Gb. mkv.
Publicada por TravisBickLe en sharethefiles.
Subtítulos (descarga directa): castellano americano / inglés HI.
(1) Subs en castellano americano sincronizados par esta versión por e2fran a partir de los subidos por el gato.
Datos técnicos: (nfo)
Código: Seleccionar todo
▐█▓ Blue.Velvet.1986.720p.BluRay.x264-SiNNERS ▓█▌
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▐█▓ Release......: 2011.10.27 ▓█▌
▐█▓ Size.........: 5.46 gigs ▓█▌
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▐█▓ Source.......: Blu Ray ▓█▌
▐█▓ ▄ ▄███ ░ Video specs..: x264 @ 4981 kbps ▓█▌
▐█▓ ██▓█ Audio specs..: English 5.1 ▓█▌
▐█▓ ███▒▒███ - --> dts/1510 kbps ▓█▌
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▐█▓ █▒▒█ Subtitles....: English ▓█▌
▐█▓ ░▒▓▓ █▓▓█ ▓▒░ Runtime......: 120 min 32 sec ▓█▌



Extras: Blue Velvet Bonus Features 1986 720p BluRay x264-SONiQ.
Publicados por zweitplatzierungsboy en tehPARADOX / localizados por duby.
Enlaces sólo visibles para usuarios registrados.
Servidores: Netload / Fileserve.
Interchangeable Links, No Password.
Contenidos / Datos técnicos:
A Few Outtakes (720p)
Newly Discovered Lost Footage (720p)
Theatrical Trailer (720p)
Mysteries of Love (480p)
Siskel & Ebert 'At the Movies' (480p)
2 TV Spots (480p)
4 Vignettes (480p)
- I Like Coffee Shops
- Sita
- The Chicken Walk
- The Robin
Código: Seleccionar todo
2.0 GB x264 encoded at CRF19 Most of the SD Bonus Features are stretched to 16:9 on the Bluray. I encoded them at 4:3 to have them in their original aspect ratio. Repack Notes: Higher x264 settings. Previous SD videos were 480i, not 480p. Quality slightly increased. The previously included short documentaries were all part of Mysteries of Love, so they were pretty much unnecessary.
Terciopelo azul (David Lynch, 1986) DVDRip Dual SE (buen ripeo de la edición zona2 a cargo de Keyser)
Saludos.