Set in contemporary Moscow, Night Watch (Nochnoi Dozor) uncovers the other-world battle that upholds a 1000-year-old truce between the forces of Light and the forces of Darkness. For centuries, the undercover members of the Night Watch have policed the world's Dark Ones - the vampires, witches, shape-shifters and sorcerers that .. Read more
| Starring | Konstantin Khabensky, Vladimir Menshov, Valeri Zolotukhin, Mariya Poroshina |
|---|---|
| Director | Timour Bekmambetov, Timur Bekmambetov |
| Genres | Horror, World Cinema |
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Set in contemporary Moscow, Night Watch (Nochnoi Dozor) uncovers the other-world battle that upholds a 1000-year-old truce between the forces of Light and the forces of Darkness. For centuries, the undercover members of the Night Watch have policed the world's Dark Ones - the vampires, witches, shape-shifters and sorcerers that wage treachery in the night, while the Dark Ones have a Day Watch that in turn polices the forces of Light. The fate of humanity rests in this delicate balance between good and evil but that fate is in jeopardy...
| Starring | Konstantin Khabensky, Vladimir Menshov, Valeri Zolotukhin, Mariya Poroshina, Galina Tyunina |
|---|---|
| Director | Timour Bekmambetov, Timur Bekmambetov |
| Studio | 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 54 mins Blu-ray: 1 hr 49 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Horror, World Cinema |
| Language | DVD: Russian Blu-ray: Russian |
| Dubbed | English |
| Subtitles | DVD: English Blu-ray: English, Dutch, Norwegian, Finnish, French, German, Danish, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 24 Apr 2006 Blu-ray: 06 Oct 2008 Production year: 2004 |
| Format | DVD |
Reminiscent of Gaslight, this thriller stars Elizabeth Taylor as a woman recovering from a nervous breakdown who thinks she sees a corpse outside her window. Could it be the work of her husband (Laurence Harvey in his final film), who may or may not be having an affair with her best friend (Billie Whitelaw)? The actors give the tired plot all they've got, but director Brian G Hutton (Where Eagles Dare, Kelly's Heroes) is more concerned with action than atmosphere, abbreviating tension where it should be given time to accumulate.
Part Matrix, part Underworld, part Harry Potter, this sci-fi-horror-conspiracy-thriller action flick... read more on Time Out
A fun and imaginative movie along the lines of Constantine and Blade (but not as reliant on special effects), telling the story of a truce between the forces of light and dark policed on either side by the Night and Day Watches. Part of the appeal comes from the mundane and workmanlike way that both sides go about their jobs, frustating each other in petty bureaucratic ways. A good start to the trilogy.
This is a superb film. Unfortunately, this is a dreadful edit of it. For international release, Fox have added in some extra bits of prologue and explanation (which is great), but they've cut two huge segments and the result is an incoherent mess. One of the major sub-plots is pretty much removed, apart from one shot which just seems out of place, and the entire denouement of one of the major climaxes is taken out. If you can track down the original Russian release, it's very worth watching for its great story, fantastic FX, and unusual location, but this version is a big disappointment.
They say that Russia is in the ascendant again, flush with oil money and billion pound football teams. Next week sees the release of Timur Bekmambetov's first Hollywood film, Wanted, with Angelina Jolie. Bekmambetov is a Kazak, but his international hits Night Watch and Day Watch are as Russian as Vladimir Putin. Mongol, directed by Sergei Bodrov, is a German-Russian-Kazak coproduction, and as the title suggests, it's a Mongolian story. But the confidence and epic scale of the filmmaking make... Read more