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Director |
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Year |
2006 |
Country |
Anthony Edwards, Robert Downey Jr, Brian Cox, Mark Ruffalo, Jake Gyllenhaal
Certificate |
15 |
Length |
151 mins |
Label |
WHV |
Format |
DVD Colour |
Region |
2 |
Aspect |
16:9 Anamorphic Wide Screen |
Cat No |
DY11022 |
Main Language |
English |
Between 1968 and 1974, a serial killer calling himself the Zodiac terrorized San Francisco and its environs. Five murders are attributable to him; dozens of others are suspected. He was never caught, but what made him uniquely terrifying was his sustained campaign of public letter writing — to the San Francisco Chronicle and other papers he sent complex cryptograms that, when deciphered, taunted the authorities, warned of further murders and promised clues to his identity. The letters trailed off towards the mid-seventies, but at its height, the Zodiac affair sent the city into near-hysteria (one letter threatened a siege on a school bus). Movies like Dirty Harry, which pitted Clint Eastwood against a psychopath called Scorpio, quickly capitalized on this public mood.
David Fincher’s Zodiac owes more to Alan J Pakula’s All the President’s Men than it does to Dirty Harry, however (although one darkly ironic scene does take place at the San Francisco premier of the Eastwood movie). Fincher lets the parallel police and journalistic investigations into this peculiar one-man crimewave unfold with a careful, measured pace. And like Pakula’s film, Zodiac is never less than utterly compelling because of it, thanks to a script that ingeniously fuses endless files of case information with some deft characterizations. Mark Ruffalo gives his best performance yet as the beleaguered, Columbo-like cop on the killer’s trail, while Robert Downey Jnr, as Chronicle journalist Paul Avery, lends the proceedings some flamboyant light relief.
Shot with Thompson Viper Filmstream cameras, Zodiac is also something of a technical marvel: it is the first mainstream Hollywood film created without the use of film or digital videotape; files were recorded directly onto the system’s hard drive, and could be played back instantly in high resolution. This doesn’t in any way compromise the film’s meticulous look; indeed, it seems to enhance it. Zodiac evokes the colours and styles of its chronology with a dazzling precision — from the tatty, sixties Chronicle newsroom to the eerie moonlight of Bay Area nights — and adds a lyrical touch to a complex but absorbing narrative.
Julian Upton on 5th September 2007
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By Howard Schumann on 5th September 2007
Beginning in 1969 and continuing into the 70s, San Francisco papers were filled with stories about a mysterious serial killer who called himself the Zodiac. Taunting t... more >
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