Crumb (1995) - (The Criterion Collection - #533) [DVD9] [2010]
A Film by Terry Zwigoff
1 Original Dual-Layer DVD Image (.ISO) = 7.63 GB | DVD Scan (TIFF): 43 MB | 400 Mb RARs
Documentary | 1.33:1 | Color | English Dolby Digital Mono | English Subtitles | 120 min
A Film by Terry Zwigoff
1 Original Dual-Layer DVD Image (.ISO) = 7.63 GB | DVD Scan (TIFF): 43 MB | 400 Mb RARs
Documentary | 1.33:1 | Color | English Dolby Digital Mono | English Subtitles | 120 min
Terry Zwigoff’s landmark 1995 film is an intimate documentary portrait of the underground artist Robert Crumb, whose unique drawing style and sexually and racially provocative subject matter have made him a household name in popular American art. Zwigoff candidly and colorfully delves into the details of Crumb’s incredible career and life, including his family of reclusive eccentrics, some of the most remarkable people you’ll ever see on-screen. At once a profound biographical portrait, a riotous examination of a man’s controversial art, and a devastating look at a troubled family, Crumb is a genuine American original.
MOVIE:
DIRECTOR: Terry Zwigoff
COUNTRY: USA
YEAR: 1995
Cast & Credits
Cast
Robert Crumb
Aline Crumb
Charles Crumb
Maxon Crumb
Beatrice Crumb
Jesse Crumb
Sophie Crumb
Dana Crumb
Robert Hughes
Don Donahue
Dian Hanson
Credits
Director Terry Zwigoff
Producer Lynn O'Donnell and Terry Zwigoff
Executive producers Albert Berger and Lianne Halfon
Executive producer Lawrence Wilkinson
Coproducer Neal Halfon
Music David Boeddinghaus
Sound Scott Breindel
Rerecording mixer Walter Murch
Editing Victor Livingston
Cinematography Maryse Alberti
DVD:
DVD RELEASE: August 10, 2010
STUDIO: Criterion
CATALOG: 533
SYSTEM: NTSC
SCREEN: 1.33:1
Color
AUDIO: English Dolby Digital Mono
SUBTITLES: English
RUNTIME (MOVIE): 120 minutes
EXTRACTION:
ENGINE: DVD Decrypter
DVD: 1 Full Dual-Layer DVD
FILE EXTENSION: Image (.ISO) + MDS file
FILE SIZE: 7.63 GB
DVD SCAN (TIFF): 43 MB
INFO:
AMAZON
WIKIPEDIA
IMDB
CRITERION
DVD Beaver
Disc Features
DIRECTOR-APPROVED SPECIAL EDITION
New, restored high-definition digital transfer, approved by director Terry Zwigoff, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray edition
Two audio commentaries, one featuring Zwigoff from 2010, and one with Zwigoff and critic Roger Ebert from 2006
More than fifty minutes of unused footage
Stills gallery