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DVD Extras for Art Of Passion
The DVD Special Features and Menu design was produced by
Visionary Productions
and authored by one of the best authoring software and encoding hardware available, Sonic Scenerist and Digital Vision
Bit-Pak at Advanced Media Post. They both did a
beautiful job. This is a dual layer DVD-9 with 80 minutes of extras. It was filmed entirely on Cape Cod, MA.
- Original Full Screen
- All Regions - NTSC
- Full Motion Menus
- Dolby Stereo English
- Dolby Stereo Spanish
- Director's comments
- Special Features menu
- Chapter Scene Access
- Interviews
- Trailers
- Extra Scenes
- Composer's Comments
- Close-up photo scans
- Production Photos
- Maps
- Talent Files
- DVD-ROM enhanced with Extra interviews & Wallpapers - viewable from a computer with a DVD drive
- There are also several hidden Easter eggs
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Arthur Bjorn Egeli's semi autobiographical Art of Passion (aka Unconditional Love) glows with an aura of emotional and intellectual
authenticity that lifts it above conventional coming-of-age stories. It also
benefits from its inviting Cape Cod settings, gracefully photographed by
Teresa Medina, and from its carefully selected cast. It is a modest, low-budget
little movie with an admirable simplicity of style that tackles some of lifes
big questions honestly.
Egeli's
alter ego is Steve Buchanan (Pablo Bryant) who is the prize pupil of Robert
Hoffman (David Ellworth), whom Steve regards reverently as the last great
Impressionist painter left. That's what he tells his summer next-door neighbor
Mary (Aleksandra Kaniak) as she's about to turn Steve's life upside down.
Mary is the classic Older Woman - glamourous, worldly, witty, foreign-accented,
and in this instance an abstract painter who prepared to liberate Steve from
traditional art via passionate beliefs and equally passionate sex.
Steve
is in need of being shaken up. He obeys his doctrinaire teacher without much
thought and takes a casual view of his affair with a lush young model, Theresa
(Jessica Brityn Flannery), who has fallen in love with him. Similarly, he's
fairly oblivious to a lovely fellow student, Melissa (Isabelle Dahlin), who
has a crush on him and who considers herself inferior to him in talent.
If
Steve is to any degree a self-portrait, Egeli - who comes from a family of
distinguished portrait painters - does not flatter himself, which is
the very reason why the film works. Egeli doesn't hesitate to depict Steve
as egotistical, self-absorbed and humorless, but that's the way lots of young
people are who take themselves and their goals seriously. Yet because he
is a nice-looking man who also happens to be talented, you can see why Melissa
and Theresa are caught up with him; indeed, they may be responding to his
surliness as a challenge. If they're vulnerable to him, he in turn is about
to learn from Mary what it is like to feel vulnerable.
Art of Passion goes beyond the romantic
as Steve and Hoffman clash over what kind of art an artist should create,
how important training is and at what point it loses its value and threatens
to become crippling. Egeli is then able to make the crucial connection between
self-knowledge and knowing what you want to do with your life. Carefully
crafted, well acted - Bryant never asks for sympathy for Steve - Art of Passion
has a lot of substance beneath a deceptively simple surface.
Video
Clips
Windows
Media
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Real
Video
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Quicktime
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Promo (1.1 MB)
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Promo (1.5 MB)
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