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VHS : Picnic at Hanging Rock
Digital Life Average Rating:  out of 5 stars


 : Picnic at Hanging Rock
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Picnic at Hanging Rock
starring: Rachel Roberts, Vivean Gray, Helen Morse, Kirsty Child, Tony Llewellyn-Jones
directed by: Peter Weir

Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9780780021266
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0780021266
Label: Homevision
Manufacturer: Homevision
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Homevision
Release Date: June 13, 2000
Running Time: 107 minutes
Sales Rank: 18292
Studio: Homevision
Theatrical Release Date: February 02, 1979




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Description:
This sensuous mystery made Peter Weir's (The Truman Show, Witness, Dead Poets Society) reputation and brought Australian film into the worldwide spotlight. Set in turn-of-the-century Australia, Picnic at Hanging Rock dramatize

Amazon.com essential video:
Situated somewhere between supernatural horror and lush Victorian melodrama, director Peter Weir's lyrical, enigmatic masterpiece is an imaginative tease. The setting is a proper turn-of-the century Australian boarding school for girls, a suffocating institution built on strict moral codes, repressed sexuality, and a subtle but enforced class structure. As the film opens, girls draped in immaculate white dress prepare for a picnic at the nearby volcanic formation, Hanging Rock, and Weir hangs an air of dark foreboding over the proceeding. 'You'll have to love someone else, because I won't be here very long,' says one virginal girl, Miranda, to her friend. Her words are prophetic: during the picnic, Miranda, along with two other girls and an uptight schoolmistress, vanish into the rocks. While a search party repeatedly returns to the rock to look for either the girls or the reasons for their disappearance, Weir leaves the mystery unsolved. Like Antonioni's L'Avventura, the vanishing is open to numerous interpretations--both rational and illusory--but Weir drops enough allegorical clues that it feels like a parable. He transforms the landscape and weather into menacing and eerie images; outlines of faces can be seen in the rocks, while the oppressive heat beating down on the picnic doubles as an atmospheric metaphor for the girls' unbearable social and sexual confinement. These images and other plot twists toward the end hint that this mysterious vanishing, on some level, was actually a form of spiritual escape--the only out, other than death, from the film's bleak, tightly structured community. Regardless of how you see it, though, this hypnotic puzzle remains the highlight of the '70s Australian New Wave. The DVD version presents the film in letterbox form. --Dave McCoy



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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Artistic but boring!
I saw this film when it first came out. It was such a boring farce. I kept watching the film in the hope that it would make sense, but it never did. Don't waste your money.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - My Favorite Scary Movie of All-Time
I adore scary movies! As a writer, I don't think I can afford to shut myself off from any human emotion, including horror. I love the first HALLOWEEN. I love the first NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET. THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT scared the bejeebers out of me and hey, I even enjoyed SAW! Instead of slasher pics, my true favorites are psychological thrillers like THE OTHERS and THE INNOCENTS. Which may be why I think PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK is the scariest movie ever made.

This 1975 Australian film from Peter Weir (who would later go on to make GALLIPOLI, WITNESS, DEAD POET'S SOCIETY and MASTER AND COMMANDER) is a lyrical, brooding masterpiece set at Appleyard College (an all-girls school) in 1900. When a group from the college sets out to celebrate Valentine's Day with a picnic jaunt to Hanging Rock--an ancient volcanic outcropping in Victoria--disaster ensues. While the other students are napping, four of the girls ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Another meditative outpouring of emotion from Weir
Peter Weir has directed some amazing and unique films--Cast Away, Truman Show, Dead Poets Society--and this one is another mesmerizing one to contemplate. Picnic at Hanging Rock is an engrossing true story that is still an unsolved mystery.
A group of young students at a female boarding school take a field trip to a scenic volcanic outcropping. This excursion turns disasterous as some students wander off and mysteriously vanish. A teacher goes after the trio and also disappears.
Now what makes this such a consuming mystery are the circumstances that surround this story. It happened on Valentines Day, Saturday the 14th. One student was found alive, with noticeable scratches on her hands and face. She couldn't remember anything. There was an extensive search with dogs but no bodies were ever found.
Superbly shot and executed, this movie really captures the subtle devastating effects this had on ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A Haunting Period Mystery
"People don't just disappear; not without a good reason," muses one of the characters in Peter Weir's excellent film. Yet, it appears that one day while on an outing to Hanging Rock, three students and one teacher from Mrs. Appleyard's boarding school do exactly this. Of course, to the film's characters the disappearance seems truely bizarre and irrational; yet to the modern viewer it seems perfectly reasonable to want to escape from the rigid, repressive Victorian world the ladies inhabit - a world where dancing, sewing, and memorizing poetry are the only activities available to young ladies on the verge of womanhood. Indeed, the dream-like scenes of the ladies in their orderly school uniforms as they move through the chaotic and untamed beauty of Hanging Rock further serve as a contrast to the absurd and artificial culture they inhabit. Not a thriller or a suspense film in the traditional sense, "Picnic at Hanging ... Read More

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