Certified copy

DVD - 2012

What seems at first to be a straightforward tale of two people getting to know each other over the course of an afternoon gradually reveals itself as something richer, stranger, and trickier: a mind-bending reflection on authenticity, in art as well as in relationships. Both cerebrally and emotionally engaging, reminds us that love itself is an enigma.

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DVD/MOVIE/WORLD/FRENCH/Certified
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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Feature films
Romance films
Fiction films
Video recordings for the hearing impaired
Published
[Irvington, NY] : The Criterion Collection [2012]
Language
French
Italian
English
Other Authors
Abbas Kiarostami (film director), Caroline Eliacheff (screenwriter), Massoumeh Lahidji (author), Marin Karmitz (film producer), Nathanaël Karmitz, 1978- (actor), Charles Gillibert (writer of added commentary), Angelo Barbagallo, Juliette Binoche, 1964-, William Shimell, Jean-Claude Carrière, 1931-2021, Agathe Natanson, 1946-, Gianna Giachetti, Adrian Moore, Andrea Laurenzi, Filippo Trojano, Manuela Balsinelli, Godfrey Cheshire
Edition
Director-approved two-DVD special edition ; DVD edition
Item Description
Originally released as a motion picture in 2010.
Special features: Disc 1. trailer. Disc 2. the film 'The report' ; interview with director Abbas Kiarostami ; 'Let's see "Copia conforme"', an Italian documentary on the making of Certified copy.
Includes accompanying booklet featuring an essay by film critic Godfrey Cheshire.
Physical Description
2 videodiscs (106 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in
Format
DVD, NTSC, region 1 ; Dobly digital 5.1 ; widescreen (1.85:1).
Audience
Not rated.
Production Credits
Cinematography, Luca Bigazzi ; production designers, Giancarlo Basili, Ludovica Ferrario ; film editing, Bahman Kiarostami ; sound, Olivier Hespel, Dominique Viellard ; line producer, Gaetano Daniele.
ISBN
9781604655766
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

An antiques shop owner (Juliette Binoche) meets an art scholar (opera singer William Shimell) at a lecture and takes him sightseeing around Tuscany, all the while engaging in conversation that segues from playful to contentious. Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami (Close-Up) can be enigmatic to the point of obscurantic in this thought-provoking exploration of reality vs. fakery in which the characters may in fact be long married. A year-end top-ten pick for many critics, this certifiable puzzler is for the intellectually leaning. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.