Last Tango in Paris (4K Ultra HD Blu-ray & Blu-ray) (UK Import)
Last Tango in Paris (4K Ultra HD Blu-ray & Blu-ray) (UK Import)
As the successor to the Blu-ray Disc, the Ultra HD Blu-ray is an optical data storage device for movies in ultra-high definition format. The eponymous Ultra HD resolution is a maximum of 3840 × 2160 pixels. In contrast to its predecessor, it also supports a higher contrast range, a higher refresh rate and a larger color space. Normal Blu-ray players cannot play the new media. Ultra HD Blu-ray-capable devices are usually backward compatible.
Blu-Ray DiscThe Blu-Ray was developed as a high-definition successor to the DVD and offers a significantly increased data rate and storage capacity compared to its predecessor. Blu-Rays can therefore store movies with significantly better resolution and offer enormously high picture quality on corresponding screens. Blu-Ray players are usually backward compatible with DVDs, so that they can also be played.
- Country of origin:
- Großbritannien, 1972
- Age release:
- Dieser Titel ist nicht FSK-geprüft.
Delivery to minors is not possible.
Infos zu Titeln ohne Jugendfreigabe - Item number:
- 12759670
- UPC/EAN:
- 5060710976434
- Release date:
- 17.8.2026
- Genre:
- Drama
- Playing time ca.:
- 130 Min.
- Director:
- Bernardo Bertolucci
- Actor:
- Marlon Brando, Maria Schneider, Jean-Pierre Leaud
- Film music:
- Gato Barbieri
- Original title:
- L' ultimo tango a Parigi | Der letzte Tango in Paris (1972)
- Language:
- Englisch
- Picture:
- Widescreen
- Subtitles:
- Englisch
- Specials:
- Booklet, Commentary: Eugenio Ercolani and Troy Howarth, Documentaries: 'Where the Tango Took Place', Interviews: Bernardo Bertolucci (director); Francesco Barilli (film-maker); Robert Perpignani (co-editor); Maurizio Porro (critic), Limited Edition rigid slipcase featuring new artwork by Tommy Pocket, Trailers
- Overall sales rank: 6581
- Sales rank in Ultra HD Blu-rays: 165
When Last Tango in Paris was first released, famed critic Pauline Kael said it, "has altered the face of an art form." But others called it simply pornographic. It's remained famously divisive ever since - in fact, now more so than ever. Marlon Brando (Apocalypse Now) stars, in what might be the greatest performance of his seismic career. He's Paul, an American in Paris whose wife has just killed herself. Lost in grief, and tortured by guilt he embarks on a strange relationship with Jeanne (Maria Schneider, The Passenger), a young woman soon to be married: it will be exclusively physical, he says, and they'll share no details about each other, not even names. But things can never be that simple.