
The small one is 5.9″ x 3.4″ x 5.5″, and the big one is 7″ x 3.9″ x 7″. Regarding the size, it comes in two different versions.

Instead, it looks like an old, battle-scarred AT-AT, as if it has been sunken in the swamps of Dagobah. (There are dubbed prints and, as is usually the case, dubbing pretty nearly wrecks it.) This is a masterpiece.Still, it doesn’t sport a stunning silver finish like the original one in the famous scene from Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back. If you haven't seen it and it show up anywhere in the vicinityh, drop everything and go-and pray that it's subtitled and not dubbed. This film is thrilling, heartbreaking, thought-provoking, and beautiful-sometimes by turns and sometimes all at once. It was depressing to see this movie in Berkeley in the early 70s, and hear the audience cheer the "heroic" Algerian revolutionaries while booing the "villainous" French, in view of the great pains that had been taken to present a balanced viewpoint. bad guys" here-only of people trapped in a truly impossible set of circumstances, from which no escape is possible without confrontation and bloodshed. It is greatly to its credit that one never gets a sense of "good guys vs. If a film has better captured the harsh and ugly realities that are an inevitable part of a true revolutionary movement, I never saw it.

But, in light of the finished product, it's a remarkable statement.

The first time I saw it, I was a little put off by what I thought was a pompous disclaimer that "not one foot" of documentary footage had been used. I wish I could locate a videocassette of this film-subtitled, not dubbed.
