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Over the course of one hot summer, a group of children in the rural south are forced to confront a tangle of difficult choices in a decaying world. An ambitiously constructed, sensuously photographed meditation on adolescence, the first feature film by director David Gordon Green features breakout performances from an award-winning ensemble cast.
Original DVD Special Features
- New digital transfer, enhanced for 16×9 televisions
- Commentary by director David Gordon Green, cinematographer Tim Orr, and actor Paul Schneider
- Deleted scene with commentary
- Original theatrical trailer
-David Gordon Green’s short films, made while he was a student at the North Carolina School of the Arts, Pleasant Grove (with commentary) and Physical Pinball
- Charlie Rose interview with David Gordon Green
- Exclusive new video interviews with the cast
- Clu Gulager’s 1969 short film A Day with the Boys, an influence on George Washington
- English subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired
2014 Dual-Format Special Features
- Restored high-definition digital transfer, with 2.0 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray
- Commentary by director David Gordon Green, cinematographer Tim Orr, and actor Paul Schneider
- Deleted scene, with commentary by Green, Orr, and Schneider
- Two student shorts by Green: Pleasant Grove (1997), with commentary by Green, Orr, and Schneider; and Physical Pinball (1998)
- Charlie Rose interview with Green from 2001
- Interviews with cast members
- Clu Gulager’s 1969 short film A Day with the Boys, an influence on George Washington
- Trailer
- One Blu-ray and one DVD, with all content available in both formats
- PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by critic Armond White and a director’s statement
Criterionforum.org user rating averages
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I don't remember too many comments about this film on the old forum, and I put off watching because I was not sure what to expect. I finally watched it the other night and really fell in love with. I loved the tranquility of it (I thought I was watching "The Thin Red Line" during the opening), the pacing, the setting, and the use of music; all of which gives it a distinct flavor (despite the Malick influence).
I also really enjoyed the fact that race and age issues never came up in this film. These are people living in the same environment, black or white, young or old, and it gives the film an odd, almost utopian view of this group of people. I'm not sure what else to say right now because I'm still digesting it, but I hoped to get some kind of discussion going about it.