L' Italiana in Algeri
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #30839 in DVD
- Released on: 2008-01-29
- Rating: Unrated
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Formats: AC-3, Classical, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Subtitled, NTSC
- Original language: Italian
- Subtitled in: Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Running time: 157 minutes
Editorial Reviews
On the DVD
Picture gallery
Bonus tracks & an interview with Marilyn Horne
Trailers
DVD Menu
- Disc #1 -- Italiana in Algeri
- Start Programme
- Select Title
- Act 1
- Subtitles
- Italiano
- English
- Deutsch
- Fran�ais
- Castellano
- Chinese
- Subtitles Off
- Audio
- PCM Stereo
- Dolby Digital 5.1
- Dts 5.0
- Bonus
- Marilyn Horne Talks About Rossini
- Samson et Dalila: "Mon C�ur S'ouvre � Ta Voix"
- The Ghosts of Versailles: Samira's Scene
- Picture Gallery
- Trailer & Catalogue
- Trailers
- La Traviata (Salzburg 2005)
- Catalogue
- Portraits & Specials
- Concerts
- Ballets
- Operas
- Operettas
- Trailers
- Disc #2 -- Italiana in Algeri
- Start Programme
- Select Title
- Act 2
- Subtitles
- Italiano
- English
- Deutsch
- Fran�ais
- Castellano
- Chinese
- Subtitles Off
- Audio
- PCM Stereo
- Dolby Digital 5.1
- Dts 5.0
Customer Reviews
Horne in full cry
Most people will buy this for Marilyn Horne, and to that extent they can't go wrong. I'd heard her many times but not seen her before, and was more than pleasantly surprised. The quality of the voice is, of course, indisputable. Horne was one of the great mezzos of her, or any other generation and is in excellent form here. But what surprised me was her acting talent, her stage presence, even her looks. In still photos she comes across as a homespun, solid mid-west farmer's girl and even on the cover of this dvd that's the impression she gives. But on movie camera her vivacity shines through and her energy lends her an allure that the still camera just cannot capture. On top of that her Italian diction is excellent. So all-in-all she makes a very believable Italian Girl in Algiers.
Paolo Montarsolo has played the role of Mustafa world wide and hams it up beautifully here. Myra Merritt in the role of Elvira looks uncannily like Battle and sings impressively enough to cause Horne to give her a "cool it, sweetheart" look at one point. Allan Monk acts well and sings more than acceptably in the role of Teddeo. The one weak link in the cast is Douglas Ahlstedt as Lindoro, with a voice that is nondescript up to mid-range and downright ugly above that. Visually, he hardly convinces as Horne's beau. She would eat him alive.
Chorus and orchestra do an excellent job for Levine and I loved Ponnelle's production. Sets strike a fine balance between realism and symbolism and the acting is humorous without feeling forced. The "Pappataci" trio is hilarious. Through the entire 150-odd minutes the cast is evidently having a good time.
I was ready to make allowances for audio and picture quality, having gritted my teeth through some of those early Met telecasts. But by 1986 they evidently had it down pat and both are first-rate.
Extras are short but, with more Horne on show, worth having.
