| Features:
 
 
 Description:
 
 Conceived by the French director Adrian Maben as "an anti-Woodstock  film," Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii was shot in October 1971 in a  vacant, 2,000-year-old amphitheater--a venue chosen to accentuate the  grandeur and spaciousness of the band's Meddle-era  music. This disc contains a new, 90-minute director's cut as well as the  original 60-minute concert film, whose production and effects feel  inescapably dated. Maben's cut goes to great lengths to lend the film a  more contemporary feel, but it's the earlier version that makes this  disc such a gem, being more focused on the music and more wholistic in  vision. The anamorphic, 16:9 director's cut interweaves the Pompeii  performances with fascinating but distracting interviews and music  snippets filmed later (mostly during the recording of Dark Side of  the Moon). The movie was originally prepared in a 4:3  aspect ratio, however, and the widescreen version crops perfectly framed  images like the nine-square mosaic of drummer Nick Mason in "One of  These Days." The original offers plenty of closeups of fingers on frets  and keys, with shots that are often luxuriously long in duration. And  the picture quality from Pompeii is revelatory: outstandingly sharp and  clear, rich in subtle grades of light and color.
      Generous extras include everything from original posters, reviews,  bootleg album covers, and song lyrics to a 24-minute interview with  Maben. But for all the director's talk of the glorious acoustics in  Pompeii's amphitheater, there's little natural ambience to be heard. The  Dolby Digital 2.0 sound is clear, dry, and two-dimensional, though notably  better than any previous video release. --Michael Mikesell
 |