1080p Itunes downloaded H.264 video brought to you exactly as downloaded
5200k (approx) video bitrate)
with enhanced MULTI audio (all they gave were a couple of 112k audio tracks)
Audio tracks in English French German Italian and Spanish all in Stereo and
are variously between 192k and 224k depending on what was available. In addition
there are two commentary audio tracks (192k stereo) featuring Film Critic
Rogert Ebert one track and Movie Historian Rudy Behlmer featured on the other.
subs from itunes included download are:
Arabic Czech English (CC) Hebrew Hungarian Polish Portuguese
Added subs as follows: Bosnian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Danish, Dutch
English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian,
Lithuanian, (no Latvian, sorry) Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian,
Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, and Ukrainian Urdu
This great classic movie of all time, looks at the code of chivalry which is supposed to
exist between men and women and is slowly becoming a thing of the past in the minds
of all too many in today's genre of thinking equally on these matters I fear to say here.
A great wartime story, Humphrey Bogart thinks he has been jilted by his girlfriend of a
period of time played by the beautiful Ms. Ingrid Bergman. When he leaves Paris for
Casablanca and later runs into her again at his Cafe, he is unforgiving of the fact that
she left without explanation at the time they lost contact in France, and demands to know
if "she does this habitually?' suggesting she lacks some idea of "virtue" (even), as he asks "were there others in-between or aren't you the type that tells?" This is unacceptable behaviour in my own view, he is treating her with disgust and with a sense of moral indignation of dubious validity no doubt - as it turned out that she had left him to rejoin her husband - a war hero of the resistance movement, who she had previously feared dead, but was indeed alive.
Nonetheless, Bogart fails to give up on his bad feelings for having been disappointed, and refuses
to help Ilsa (Bergman) and her husband escape from the Nazis by giving them the transit visas he had
in his possession from a stroke of luck - providence as it turns out, because in the end, he does give them up,
but only after Ilsa feels forced to offer herself to him in exchange for seeing her husband get away alone instead.
Oh well, all's well that end well I suppose. next time they script a movie like
this one I hope it will be with a star who is willing to give a woman as good a break as she has
given him by grating him friendship and even intimacy for the time she had - as chivalry asks of
him and asks of us all men that are good and decent
I think so anyway.
Some great extras including a huge number of subtitles for everyone it seems
along with a lovely array of mp3 format renditions of the great song from the movie
"As time goes by". enjoy!
Be so kind as to seed - with thanks indeed!
Michael Rizzo Chessman
(moviesbyrizzo) |